Comfort souffle for summer

Photo: Peter McIntosh
Photo: Peter McIntosh
This is one of my favourite cheese-rich comfort foods — it has real oomph and is superbly flavoured.

I like the way it can be eaten as a starter, cut into small cubes and speared with a tooth pick or served as a main course for lunch or dinner accompanied by a salad. Perfect and practical for picnics. It travels well and can be sliced and served on arrival.

I don’t attempt to keep the "bake" hot. The flavours are more pronounced if at room temperature. Even though this is not instant it is definitely low effort. It can be cooked in advance and then either reheated or served at room temperature but not chilled.

The majority of ingredients are store cupboard so it’s a simple task to add these to the beaten eggs — they hold it all together ingredient. I do the mixing using an electric beater rather than the food processor. The eggs froth up well and once the other ingredients are added the mixture retains more texture and the prosciutto isn’t too finely chopped.

Cheese and Prosciutto Souffle-bake

Serves 5-6 for lunch

Ingredients

6 large eggs, size 7

250g cottage cheese (not low fat)

150g basil pesto

70g Feta cheese, chopped into small pieces

70g Parmesan cheese, grated

50g self-raising flour

100g prosciutto, cut into small pieces

Fresh herbs to garnish

Method

Preheat the oven to 180°C.

Line the base of an 8 cup capacity oven proof dish with non-stick baking paper and lightly oil the sides. I use an 18 x 26 x 5cm casserole dish.

Beat the eggs in a mixing bowl until thick and frothy — gradually add the cottage cheese, basil pesto, Feta and Parmesan. When well combined, add the flour and beat briefly until smoothly mixed. Very briefly beat in the prosciutto. Pour the batter into the prepared baking dish and level the surface. Bake in the pre-heated oven for 40-45 minutes (cover with baking paper if the top is browning too quickly after about 30 minutes) until golden brown and a knife inserted in the centre comes out clean.

Remove from the oven and leave to cool. The souffle-bake will deflate as it cools but it does not matter. When cold loosen the edges with a knife before turning out. Turn right way up on to a serving platter. Decorate with fresh herbs and serve.

The bake keeps for up to four days well wrapped in the fridge.

 

Seasons - By Alison Lambert  - Available for purchase now!

The Otago Daily Times and Alison have collaborated to bring you her first cookbook – Seasons.  

This book is the ultimate year-round cookbook. Seasons is filled with versatile recipes designed to inspire creativity in the kitchen, offering plenty of ideas for delicious accompaniments and standout dishes that highlight the best of what each season has to offer.  

 

$49.99 each. Purchase here.

$44.99 for ODT subscribers. Get your discount code here.