Asparagus Bread Pudding. Are you rolling your eyes and saying, “asparagus again, Greg?”
Well don’t. You look much cuter with your eyeballs sitting prettily in your face where they belong. Besides, it’s spring. My fancy turns to those fleeting spring veggies we all love. Big, fat, jumbo asparagus are (perhaps) my favorite of all the springtime vegetables.
Of course, you can get hum-drum (ho-hum) asparagus all year round in most places. It’s fine. I buy it. But it’s not the same. That’s because eating locally and honoring annual cycles really does make a difference with many kinds of fruit and vegetables. Artichokes, Rhubarb, Strawberries– all have a clear season that are worth waiting for. Asparagus flown in year-round from wherever it’s growing is perfectly fine. However to fully appreciate all the best qualities of asparagus it has to be eaten very quickly after picking– the sweet juice starts to dry up as soon as the spears are cut. The the longer they sit around, the drier and woodier they become. That’s why locally grown spring asparagus has no equal.
So yes. I’m doing asparagus again. This time “Ottolenghi Style”. It’s an asparagus bread pudding, or more correctly a bread and butter pudding, because it’s the chive buttered bread that drives a lot of the taste and texture of this terrific recipe. I’d never considered making a savory asparagus bread pudding before. Although there are some rather lowbrow breakfast casseroles I’ve enjoyed that could probably be considered bread pudding when served on some highbrow breakfast tables. So when I saw Yotam Ottolenghi’s version of Asparagus Bread Pudding I barely skipped a beat before I started breaking some eggs.
I used big, fat, jumbo (springtime) asparagus, but I’ll be honest this recipe for Asparagus Bread Pudding is so good you can make it all year round using hum-drum (ho-hum) asparagus. Let’s not kid ourselves hum-drum (ho-hum) asparagus is still a pretty special treat. GREG
Ingredients
- 24–30 Asparagus spears (medium to thick)
- kosher salt (as needed for boiling and seasoning)
- 4 tablespoon unsalted butter
- 3 clove garlic (peeled and roughly chopped)
- ½ cup minced chives (looseley packed
- 12 sourdough bread slices (about ⅓‑inch thick) divided
- 5 ounce crumbled feta
- 5 large eggs (lightly beaten)
- 1 cup heavy cream
- 2/3 cup milk
- ¼ teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
- ¼ teaspoon white pepper
- ¼ cup grated Parmesan cheese
Directions
Prep the asparagus: Using a vegetable peeler, lightly peel asparagus spears to within about 1‑inch of the tip. Trim the bottoms neatly to remove the woody ends. Fill a large pot with water; bring to a boil and add 2 teaspoons salt. Place the asparagus in the pot and blanch, uncovered, about 2 minutes. Don’t worry about fully cooking the asparagus just yet. Transfer the blanched asparagus to the ice water bath, then to a clean kitchen towel. Pat dry.
Set half the spears aside, cut the others crosswise into ¼‑inch slices.
Prep the bread: Put the butter, garlic and half of the minced chives in the bowl of a mini food processor or mortar and pestle; blend until smooth. Spread half of the mixture over both sides of 6 bread slices. Lay these in a single layer onto the bottom of a shallow 3‑quart baking dish (approximately 9x13). Scatter the asparagus slices and feta over the first layer of bread. Butter the remaining 6 slices of bread with the remaining chive butter. Place them, sandwich style, over the asparagus slices and feta.
Prepare the bread pudding: In a large bowl whisk together eggs, cream, milk, nutmeg, ½‑teaspoon of salt and a ¼‑teaspoon of white pepper. Pour over this mixture into the baking dish. Press down the top with your hands so all the bread is immersed in liquid, it might take a moment for the bread to absorb enough of the egg mixture to stop floating. Once this happens lay the whole asparagus spears decoratively on top. Cover tightly with plastic wrap and place a small tray weighed down with something just heavy enough to keep the bread submerged. Refrigerate at least an hour and up to overnight.
Cook the bread pudding: Heat the oven to 350 degrees F. Remove the weight, tray and plastic wrap from the baking dish, sprinkle with Parmesan and the remaining chives; bake about 50–55 minutes (cover the dish with foil at the very end if it gets too dark). Remove from the oven; let rest 10 minutes before serving.
This bread pudding looks crazy delicious! And I’ll have to agree with some of the others — this dish would be perfect for brunch. PS. Keep the asparagus recipes coming! I can’t get enough right now.
Wow, this is so creative! Love your asparagus recipes and keep em coming! I actually just bought some asparagus about an hour ago for a recipe I’m making tomorrow! Tis the season, right 🙂 pinned
Those of us of a “certain age” remember the days before ho-hum asparagus was available year-round… In fact, I remember the first Christmas my mother was able to get fresh asparagus to go with our Bœuf Wellington. We all agreed that asparagus in the winter seemed odd. Still, we all continue to eat it! Like many, I have sipped the Ottolenghi Koolaid and will eat just about anything made from his recipes. This one sounds particularly fine. Thanks, Greg!
Local asparagus can be so amazing, can’t it? I can never get enough of it! So as far as I’m concerned, as this time of the year it’s all asparagus all the time. 😉 Good stuff — thanks.
I love both fat and skinny asparagus. But only during the months of April through June. Other than that, it’s a no-buy zone! This bread pudding is fabulous! Love the savory twist.
You called me cute!
I’m dead.
I told you on google plus. A great potluck breakfast.
I’m with you, Greg. If a recipe has Ottolenghi’s name associated with it in any way, it is brilliant. Thanks for scouting this one out for me!
I male am asparagus bread puffing that is one of my most popular posts. it is all in the bread,bit in this case it is all in the flavour.
This looks unbelievably good! The perfect brunch side.
I must be cute. Eyeballs not rolling. I LOVE all things asparagus! And this recipe looks so incredibly scrumptious!
What a perfect dish to serve at a spring brunch. Beautiful photos Greg!
My eyes did not roll back in my head. I was totally captivated by the concept and your execution. Just love it and my mind is racing with ideas to create other savory ingredient bread puddings.
Definitely could get down with this. A lot of people forget that a savory bread pudding can be as good as the dessert-style pudding. Maybe better because you can eat it for almost any meal.
Does anyone ever really roll their eyes at fresh in-season asparagus? I really hope not. This bread pudding sounds amazing, especially with good sourdough!
Well, you had me at ‘Ottolenghi style’, and you didn’t disappoint! I agree with you about the fat jumbo asparagus, yum!
I will never be sick of asparagus!! Especially this time of year. This bread pudding is so unique and lovely, Greg. Can’t wait to try it!
This looks SO wonderful and I love what you said about seizing the day in terms of what is in season; AND I love what you said about going with what we’ve got, as in how good the ho-hum hum-drum can be. Absolutely making this for upcoming spring feasts. But no feta: one of the very few foods I don’t enjoy. Mozzarella? Cheddar? I’ll work around it. Always a treat here; Thank you, Mr. Sup!