Showing posts with label breakfast panini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label breakfast panini. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2008

A Little Breakfast Panini Party

Smoked Salmon Bagel Panini

I've decided that panini-making is a lot of fun in a social setting. Everyone gathering around the grill, assembling made-to-order sandwiches (or, in many cases, watching mPanini Happy Classicse assemble their sandwiches to order), anxiously waiting to see those grill marks and melted cheese. I had a little bit of a crowd in the kitchen this past weekend, with my husband Mike, my sister Angela, my sister Julie and her husband Jay in town. They were all game for my latest Panini Happy Classics foray - a new twist on bagels and lox. Want to skip ahead? Click here for the final recipe.


Smoked Salmon Bagel Panini - Attempt #1

  • Bread: Bagel (everything)
  • Meat: Smoked salmon
  • Cheese: Whipped cream cheese
  • Condiments: None
  • "Goodies": Tomatoes, red onions, dill-watercress salad with balsamic vinaigrette

THE INSPIRATION: When I want to make something for Mike that I know he'll really enjoy, I can never go wrong with bagels and smoked salmon. It's his "desert island" meal. And when it comes to this meal, he's pretty much a purist - sesame bagel, not toasted, (a lot of) whipped cream cheese from the tub and a good layer of salmon. Never capers. On occasion he'll ask me to blend up a salmon-cream cheese schmear. So I thought he might appreciate a panini version of his fave. Plus, I'm still on a round panini kick.

THE PREPARATION: I envisioned these bagel panini with nice dark grill marks, and I knew Bagel with top and bottom edges removedthat to achieve them I'd have to have flat surfaces...which do not come naturally with puffy, tubular bagels. So my first task was to create some flat surfaces. First, I split an "everything" bagel - freshly procured from Einstein Bros. that morning - down the middle lengthwise, as I normally do, and then I went to cut off the top and bottom edges. Problem! The bagel was so soft and malleable that it was rather difficult to cut off the edges off the bagel halves without endangering my fingertips. I managed, but I wouldn't advise this method. Note for the final recipe: cut off the edges first and then split the bagel in half.

As I mentioned, my husband foregos any accoutrements when it cSliced red onionsomes to prepping his bagels, but when he orders them in restaurants I've noticed they're often served with rings of red onion and tomato. So I thought I'd include those on this sandwich as well. For the tomatoes, I removed the seeds to minimize the chance of wet bread, per Tip #4.

Next was the dill-watercress salad. I actually was inspired to include a salad after reading this post on the Cookthink blog - what a great way to incorporate greens on a sandwich with a little acidic kick! I pictured something with a small leaf and watercress seemed to fit the bill. The suggestion for adding dill came from my mother-in-law and I concurred - salmon and dill go so well together. So I washed a bunch of watercress and loaded it into a large salad bowl. Judging from the quantity of leaves, I thought 2 tablespoons of chopped fresh dill ought to be enough to disperse throughout the salad.

Then came the dressing - I wanted to do a balsamic vinaigrette. I did a little research and found out that the typical ratio for a vinaigrette is 3 parts olive oil to 1 part vinegar. Looking at my greens in the bowl, I thought I might need about 1/2 cup of dressing. I had to talk this one aloud at length with Angela to get the proportions right: to break 1/2 cup down into a 3:1 ratio translated to 1/4 cup + 2 tablespoons olive oil and 2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar (my head really spun on that one - I was a liberal arts major!). Additionally, I wanted a little garlic in there as well as capers - even though my husband doesn't really like them, they're pretty traditional companions to bagels and lox so in they went. I seasoned the vinegar mixture with salt and pepper and then whisked in my olive oil to finish the vinaigrette. Zesty!

THE CONSTRUCTION: As I often do, I brushed the outer sides of the bagel halves with a little melted butter - not a lot, just enough to ensure a little color and crispness upon grilling. I Bagel sandwich on panini grillspread a generous amount of whipped cream cheese inside both halves of the sandwich. On the bottom half, I added several rings of red onion, then about an ounce of smoked salmon (basically enough to cover the bagel) and a few slices of tomato. I closed up the sandwich and loaded it onto the grill at medium-high heat (375 degrees).

The beauty of this type of sandwich is that since the cream cheese is already in a soft state, all I needed to do was get a nice toast on the bread. Two minutes and thirty seconds was all it took. I removed the sandwich from the grill and prepared it for the final step - inserting the dill-watercress salad. I turned the sandwich upside down, removed the bottom bagel half, piled on some salad and closed it back up.

THE RESULTS: Happy faces (and mouths) all around! I served the smoked salmon bagel panini with a little fruit salad and some OJ. My panini-testing guinea pigsSmoked Salmon Bagel Panini loved how the bagel came out nice and toasty on the outside while still soft on the inside. Julie mentioned that she actually appreciated that I'd cut off the top and bottom edges as it made the sandwich less "bready" than others she's had. Angela commented that the salad "made the sandwich". And even my purist husband appreciated my somewhat embellished version and gave it his stamp of approval. What more could I ask for?

Get the final recipe!

Check out more from the Panini Happy Classics Series:


Thursday, March 6, 2008

Did someone say French toast?



Do you ever open your fridge or pantry with nothing specific in mind and then a stroke of creativity hits? That happened to me the other morning when I discovered we actually, for once, had a good variety of staple items on hand. It was 10:00 AM and I was super-hungry. Doesn't it always seem that when you're hungry certain combinations all of a sudden sound good? My panini press was still set up from the night before and my brain started churning with breakfast panini ideas (check out my earlier creation: Egg, Cheese & Bacon Biscuit Panini). The results, I'm proud to say, were excellent (if a bit decadent for midweek)! Want to skip ahead? Click here for the final recipe.

Egg & Bacon French Toast Panini - Attempt #1

  • Bread: Sliced sourdough French toast
  • Meat: Bacon, two-egg omelet
  • Cheese: None
  • Condiments: None
  • "Goodies": None

THE INSPIRATION: My fridge and pantry. Believe it or not, it's a rather rare occasion when I have bread, eggs and milk in the kitchen at the same time. Staple items they may be, but I'm usually out of at least one. Anyway, once I realized I had the ingredients and saw that my panini press had not yet been stored away, I began to contemplate a grilled French toast. But I wasn't really in a "sweet" mood - I wanted something savory. So while the French toast was grilling, I brought out two more eggs and made an omelet. Then while I was at it, I nuked a few pieces of quick serve bacon! Fortunately, I then finally stopped myself. Whew!

THE PREPARATION: For my French toast egg mixture, I started with the usual beaten egg and a little milk. Then I decided to add in a little maple syrup - I love it when French toast has its own hint of sweetness. And since I wasn't going to be pouring maple syrup over the top this was my chance to sneak some in. I took a large slice of sourdough bread, cut it in half, dipped the halves in the egg mixture and set them onto the grill to press at 375 degrees.

While the bread was grilling, I whipped up a quick two-egg omelet: eggs, a little milk, salt and pepper. Really straightforward, nothing fancy. I wasn't exactly sure how long the French toast was going to take on the grill, so it was a bit of a timing challenge to finish the eggs just when I was ready to serve. Fortunately, assembly on this one was going to be super-quick.

THE CONSTRUCTION: Ten seconds in the microwave was all my two slices of quick serve bacon needed to heat up. I lay the bacon on one piece of the French toast, added the omelet and topped it with the other toast. That was it!

THE RESULTS: So good! Simple is often best and that was definitely the case here - this was one excellent breakfast sandwich. The crispy French toast with its hint of maple syrup gave a nice caramelized crunch as I bit into the sandwich. The saltiness from the eggs and bacon and slight heat from the black pepper made the whole thing a bit of a taste festival. I didn't add any cheese or condiments and I didn't miss them at all. The eggs, bacon and French toast were enough on their own to create a most satisfying breakfast treat.

Get the final recipe!

NOTE: Admittedly, this one pushed the limits of what would qualify as a panino. But, strictly speaking, panino just means "sandwich", and I did grill a major component, so there we are!

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Eggs and Cheese and Bacon - Oh My!


Don't tell your cardiologist!

Egg...cheese...bacon...biscuits...your arteries may not thank you, but your mouth sure will! In a continued effort to explore the different types of breads a panini grill can support, I decided to venture into refrigerated dough. Want to skip ahead? Click here for the final recipe.

Egg, Cheese & Bacon Biscuit Panini - Attempt #1


  • Bread: Biscuits

  • Condiment: None

  • Cheese: Cheddar

  • Meat: Omelet, Bacon

  • "Goodies": None

THE INSPIRATION: Some of my fondest memories of growing up took place on our annual weeklong summer family vacations. They weren't extravagant by any means - mostly road trips, visits to amusement parks, renting a house by the lake and the like. One hallmark of these vacations was fast food breakfast - we never ate it at any other time of the year but during our vacations we had it almost every day! Now, with my oh-so-refined palette I know that these meals should have been nothing to write home (or blog) about. But now they've taken on a highly nostalgic meaning to me. My favorite: the Bacon, Egg & Cheese Biscuit at McDonald's - a savory, gratifying concoction that just made you feel good. When contemplating options for a breakfast panini sandwich recipe, my mind turned immediately to this childhood fave.


THE PREPARATION: I know that panini sandwiches generally ought to require relatively little prep and that the easiest form in which to present the eggs would be to scramble them...but I was somewhat reluctant to have loose pieces of egg. So I decided to do an omelet instead. I whisked 6 eggs with 1/2 teaspoon of sea salt, 1 teaspoon of dried basil, 2 tablespoons of milk and 1/4 teaspoon of black pepper. When I looked at the mixture, I was a little concerned over the volume of basil - there was a whole lot of green floating in there! Oh well, it's an experiment.




I sprayed an 8" saute pan with cooking spray, poured in the eggs and cooked them over medium heat for 8 minutes. The bottom was well cooked, but the top was still pretty runny so I finished it off in the oven at 400 degrees for another 5 minutes. When it came out, I had a 1/2"-thick little basil frittata. I inverted it onto a cutting board and divided it into four pieces.


THE CONSTRUCTION: With the eggs prepared, it was time to build the sandwich; I turned on the panini grill to 350 degrees. I wanted to see whether it would be possible to simultaneously bake the biscuits and grill the sandwich on the panini grill. So I took an uncooked biscuit off of the roll of refrigerated dough and cut it in half lengthwise with a pair of scissors to create top and bottom halves and lay them on a piece of parchment paper. Starting from the bottom, I layered the bottom biscuit half, a piece of the omelet, ready-cooked bacon (one trip ripped into two halves), a slice of mild cheddar cheese and the top biscuit half.



THE RESULTS: I could tell this wasn't going to work before I even got the sandwich to the grill! The hot omelet had begun to melt the bottom biscuit half from the moment the two made contact - by the time I'd finished assembling the sandwich and lifted it up the bottom biscuit was a stretchy mess. Nevertheless, I went ahead and put it on the panini grill, in the 4th height position - may as well see it through! The cheddar melted after about a minute, but the biscuit was obviously not even close to done. The first Panini Happy failure :-)


Egg, Cheese & Bacon Biscuit Panini - Attempt #2


For Attempt #2, I decided to start with biscuits that were already baked. I also lowered the height to the 3rd position.


THE RESULTS: Terrific! The grilled biscuit got a nice crispy, toasted exterior while remaining soft inside. I had previously been concerned about how much basil was in the eggs, but I had no reason to worry - it gave great flavor while not being overpowering. The cheddar melted well and the bacon's salty-sweet flavor was a wonderful complement. If only the biscuit hadn't gotten so smashed - the bread had gotten bit thinner than I'd have liked, due to the pressing. So I decided to go for one more Attempt.


Egg, Cheese & Bacon Biscuit Panini - Attempt #3


Attempt #3 was nearly the same as Attempt #2, except I raised the height of the panini grill back to the 4th position.


THE RESULTS: Winner! With the higher grill height, the biscuit got crispy without getting too smashed down. Balance achieved!


Click here for the final recipe!