Sunday, February 1, 2009

Staph Infection Gallbladder

David's Spinach Cake

Note: you can également participer en français, plus d'infos ici.

Today it's Sunday, it's brunch day! And David Lebovitz the most Californian pastry chef living in Paris and and ice-cream magician is sharing a great fluffy recipe for a true Parisian chic brunch.



This blog: help-beat-sarcoma-a-thon is YOUR blog, and I would like all of you the share your story about your favorite Sunday lunch. Do you like to go out for brunch, can you only have your Mum roast? You name it :-) To participate just follow this link .

We're really happy to welcome him here and start our "share your brunch for a good cause" in English. Hope we will be able to feature a lot of YOUR brunches in English as well as we do in French .

Spinach Cake

Ten servings


Adapted from A Platter of Figs and Other Recipes (Artisan) by David Tanis


I liked this very much, but be sure to season the mixture very well, like, more than you think, before baking. I'm curious, and next time I'm going to add small bits of cooked bacon or proscuitto to the batter just after pureeing it in a blender.

David says to simply puree the spinach and custard mix until smooth, but I'm thinking it might be better a little "leafy" so will also blend it to the point where the spinach is fine, but not entirely smooth.


2 medium leeks (you could use two onions, or a bunch of scallions or green garlic instead)
2 tablespoons (30g) butter, salted or unsalted
salt and freshly-ground pepper
2-pounds (3/4kg) fresh spinach, well-washed and stemmed
big pinch of chile or cayenne pepper
whole nutmeg
2 cups (500ml) whole milk
6 large eggs
Parmesan cheese


1. Remove the green part of the leeks, slice each lengthwise, rotate them a quarter turn, then slice them lengthwise again, keeping the end intact. Swish the leeks in a bowl of water until they're grit free, and towel-dry. Cut into small pieces.


2. Melt the butter in a deep pan and sauté the leeks with a little salt and pepper, stirring occasionally, until they're translucent. While they're cooking, cut the spinach into ribbons.


3. Once the leeks are cooked, begin adding the spinach in batches, putting on the lid until the spinach has cooked down, then you can add more. Add salt and pepper as you go, and include a scraping of nutmeg and chile powder during the final batch.


4. When all the spinach is just barely wilted, turn it out into a large bowl (along with any juices) and let cool. Stirring it a few times will speed it up.


5. Preheat the oven to 400F (200C.) Liberally butter a 9- or 10-inch (23-25cm) deep round baking dish. I used a 2 qt (2l) baking rectangular baking dish.


6. Working in batches, puree the spinach mixture with the milk and eggs until almost smooth. (At this point, if you want to add some cooked bacon or chopped proscuitto, you can.)


David recommends adding more salt and pepper here, which is a good idea: you want the mixture pretty well-seasoned.


7. Pour the batter into the prepared baking dish. Grate a wispy layer of Parmesan over the top and bake for 45 minutes, or until a knife poked into the center comes out clean.


Serving: Let cool to room temperature, then serve.


photos and recipe copyright David Lebovitz .

Publi e by Babeth

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