Skip to main content

Does Not Disappoint Breakfast Casserole

5.0

(1)

Breakfast casserole with sausage cubed bread greens and eggs.
Photo by Baxter Miller

The breakfast casserole genre frustrates me. On the one hand, what’s not to love? All the things that make breakfast feel traditionally American—eggs, meat, cheese, bread—get tossed together and baked in a streamlined, easy-Sunday-morning, one-dish-to-wash kind of way. Plus, breakfast casseroles are ideal for entertaining because you can assemble them the night before and bake them the next morning while you shove your family’s mess in a closet before your guests arrive.

But more often than not, I’m let down by the breakfast casseroles I encounter. They seem lazy rather than convenient. The ingredients, although clearly baked as one, somehow taste distinct and confused at the same time. They’re like a bedroom with a bed, dresser, side table, and chair that needs a rug to tie the room together.

In my version of the breakfast casserole, Red Weapons are that rug. They bring juiciness that mingles with milk and eggs to create a near-hollandaise effect. And they provide acid where you wouldn’t think it belongs. It’s that bring surprise, that acidic pucker, that pulls you back for another bite and makes my take on this genre one that does not disappoint.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Serves 4-6

Ingredients

1 pound breakfast-style sausage, loose or removed from its casing
10 ounces (about 5 cups packed) fresh spinach
1½ teaspoons kosher salt, divided
4 cups diced crusty bread, such as baguettes, sourdough, or ciabatta
10 ounces sharp cheddar cheese, grated or (my preference) cut into ¼-inch cubes
½ cup diced roasted red bell peppers
6 large eggs, whisked
1 cup milk
½ cup heavy cream
1 cup roughly chopped Red Weapons

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Preheat your oven to 350°F. In a 12-inch ovenproof skillet, brown the sausage over medium heat. You want hunks of moist sausage suspended in the finished dish, so take care not to overcook or over-crumble it this go- round. Scoop the sausage out of the skillet and transfer to a bowl large enough to hold all the ingredients. Go about wilting the spinach with ½ teaspoon of the salt
    in the same skillet. Squeeze as much liquid out of the spinach as you can without much trouble and transfer to the bowl with the sausage. Add the bread, cheese, and roasted red peppers.

    Step 2

    In a smaller bowl, whisk the eggs, milk, cream, and remaining 1 teaspoon salt till homogenous. Stir the Red Weapons into the egg mixture, then pour that into the big bowl with the sausage and other stuff. Stir it up and dump everything back into the skillet.

    Step 3

    At this point you could refrigerate the breakfast casserole overnight or you can go right to the business of baking it. Either way, whenever you’re ready, slide the skillet onto the middle rack of your oven and bake for 1 hour, until the top is crisp and browned in spots.

Cover of the cookbook featuring the chef in a denim jumpsuit sitting on a kitchen counter.
Excerpted from This Will Make It Taste Good: A New Path to Simple Cooking. Copyright © 2020 by Vivian Howard. Used with permission of Voracious, an imprint of Little, Brown and Company. New York, NY. All rights reserved. Buy the full book from Amazon or Bookshop.
Read More
This is what I call a fridge-eater recipe. The key here is getting a nice sear on the sausage and cooking the tomato down until it coats the sausage and vegetables well.
An ex-boyfriend’s mom—who emigrated from Colombia—made the best meat sauce—she would fry sofrito for the base and simply add cooked ground beef, sazón, and jarred tomato sauce. My version is a bit more bougie—it calls for caramelized tomato paste and white wine—but the result is just as good.
All the cozy vibes of the classic gooey-cheesy dish, made into a 20-minute meal.
Instead of searing one tortilla at a time, you'll cook eight at once under the broiler.
A glug of lemon-lime soda gives this pound cake a citrusy zip and tender crumb.
Fufu is a dish that has been passed down through many generations and is seen as a symbol of Ghanaian identity and heritage. Making fufu traditionally is a very laborious task; this recipe mimics some of that hard work but with a few home-cook hacks that make for a far easier time.
This cake was created from thrift and was supposedly named after its appearance, which reminded people of the muddy Mississippi River bottom.
Creamy and bright with just a subtle bit of heat, this five-ingredient, make-ahead dip is ready for company—just add crudités.