Sunday, December 27, 2009

Sausage Breakfast Casserole

Our family's traditional Christmas breakfast includes cinnamon rolls and some sort of eggs or meat. I like the idea of a make-ahead casserole, but until now hadn't found one that appealed to my taste. Most are filled with bread cubes and are quite eggy, just not our style.

Last spring my sister-in-law served this dish at my nephew's First Holy Communion reception. It contains a LOT of sausage, with potatoes instead of bread cubes, and just 4 eggs. It was hearty and flavorful, so I decided to try it this week.

I prepared steps 1-5 on Christmas Eve. Before leaving for mass in the morning I mixed the eggs, milk, and biscuit mix, and put the casserole in the oven. I set the oven on delay start (and at a temperature lower than the recipe suggests) so it would begin baking while we were at church. When we got home I pulled out the casserole, baked the risen rolls, and we soon settled down for a delicious brunch. I hope you like it as much as we did.

Sausage Biscuit Bake (Don Gaspar Inn, New Mexico)

2 # Jimmy Dean sausage (I used reduced fat)
1 # frozen shredded hash brown potatoes
1 # shredded Mexican cheese blend
4 eggs
2 cups milk (I used skim)
1 cup Bisquick (I used my version of Leila's homemade mix)
  1. Fry sausage in a large nonstick skillet, breaking it up as it cooks, until it has browned.
  2. Spread sausage into a greased 9 x 13" dish, leaving the drippings in the pan for the potatoes. (The reduced fat meat was so non-greasy that I added some oil to the pan for the next step.)
  3. Add hash browns to the pan and cook, stirring occasionally, allowing it to brown nicely.
  4. Add potatoes to the baking dish, gently mixing to distribute evenly.
  5. Top with cheese. The dish may be covered and refrigerated at this stage.
  6. In a bowl, lightly whisk the eggs, then add milk and biscuit mix. Pour over the sausage mixture and bake at 400*for at least 35 minutes (it may take 45-50 min.) until the center is set and a knife comes out clean (no raw egg). Allow to sit for 10 minutes before serving.
This was so easy and tasty that it may become a Sunday tradition--no need to wait until Christmas comes again!