Mushroom & Crème Fraiche Frittata
Recipe by Nici Wickes for NZ Eggs
Course: lunch, dinnerDifficulty: Easy
Servings
4-6
servingsPrep time
10
minutesCooking timeminutes
Total time
40
minutesIngredients
1/4 cup olive oil
1 onion, thinly sliced
400 g (approx. 2 medium-large) potatoes
5 medium-large eggs, lightly beaten in a large bowl
2 tbsps rosemary, chopped
1 tsp sea salt
1/4 tsp cracked pepper
100 g brown or white button mushrooms (about 1 cup sliced), sliced thinly
2 tsps fresh thyme, or 1 teaspoon dried, + extra to serve
1/4 cup crème fraiche (you can also use sour cream)
Directions
- Preheat oven to 170 C.
- Heat half the oil in a large (23-26cm) ovenproof pan and cook the onion until soft.
- Peel potatoes and either slice very thinly or, chop roughly and put in a food processor and pulse until chopped into pea-sized pieces (I use the latter method). Don’t overdo it or they will turn to mush.
- Whisk the eggs with rosemary, salt and pepper in a large bowl.
- Add sliced/chopped potatoes and toss well to coat.
- Stir in the sliced mushrooms, thyme and softened onions.
- Add remaining oil to the pan then pour in the egg/vegetable mixture. Reduce the heat to low and cook slowly until the edges are cooked – about 10 minutes.
- Finish cooking in the oven by baking for 20-25 minutes until golden brown or until set in the middle.
- Rest for 10 minutes before cutting into wedges or squares and serve either hot or at room temperature with crème fraiche and extra sprigs of thyme and your favourite chutney.
Nici’s tips:
- Follow these simple tips to making the perfect frittata:
- Always season your frtittata well (with salt, pepper, chilli flakes, herbs or wahtever your’re using) as starchy vegetables that form the base (potatoes, pumpkin, kūmara), will take a lot of flavour.
- Feel free to swap one starchy vegetable for another eg. Use pumpkin or kūmara in place of potato
- Always add the vegetables into the whisked egg and toss to coat well before sliding back into the pan. Many people make the mistake of pouring the egg over the vegetables in the pan and this leads to a frittata that won’t hold together.
- Simple is best. Don’t add too many different ingredients – it’s not a jumble sale!
- Cook the frittata well as undercooked frittata tends towards going soggy as they cool. Keep it golden brown around the edges for flavour and good form.