I will once again be flying in the Give Hope Wings fundraiser this year! Our June of 2024 flight will see us stop in many communities in Eastern Canada to raise awareness for this worthy cause. Last year 2023 we raised over $27,000 towards helping our neighbours - we made a positive difference in the lives of many. Here's the link to the 2024 fundraiser page: support.hopeair.ca/ghw2024/glens-hangar To learn more about the Hope Air Charity: hopeair.ca/
@ektran42059 ай бұрын
canadian version of rarebit
@ancooper68829 ай бұрын
I donated this year, such a worthy cause thanks for being a part of it
@GlenAndFriendsCooking9 ай бұрын
@@ancooper6882 Thank you for the donation!
@MarkDParker9 ай бұрын
(3:00) We who live south of the border live for the opening of a new bag of milk on Glen and Friends.
@EileenMeehan-q4g9 ай бұрын
True fact
@bronwenhintz77878 ай бұрын
We live in Michigan USA. For years we had a Dairy farm Cook’s Dairy. These bags were used we loved them then they went to the jugs it was a sad day …
@bronwenhintz77878 ай бұрын
Wasn’t ours it was in our community
@grenmoyo39684 ай бұрын
@bronwenhintz7787 must have been a them thing, I live in Michigan and have never seen a bag of milk outside of the Canadians. Plastic jugs cartons and glass for me
@Just1Guy10009 ай бұрын
Giving Julie the corner is true love. That corner crustyness is the best.
@DefAdm9 ай бұрын
“Why do people want to stuff meat into meat??” I’m with you, Julie - never understood that either.
@susandawson85279 ай бұрын
Maybe some dry mustard and westershire sauce like a Welch rabbit
@MichaelReidOttawa9 ай бұрын
I was going to suggest the same with a shake of Tabasco and Sprinkle of Paprika!
@heavybrambles7 ай бұрын
@@francescarroll8977 So an Australian recipe in Canadian cookbook is "old school English food", and it could be improved by turning it into actual old school English food (Welsh rarebit, despite its name, is not Welsh). What an odd comment.
@zaynamoore9 ай бұрын
Looks like a very simple strata to me. Bacon, spinach, onion...all would be great in this.
@cydrych9 ай бұрын
That’s what I always called it too. I do multiple versions. Ham and Swiss, spinach onion and feta, bacon jalapeño and cheddar. I did one with spicy Italian sausage, tomato and mozzarella with Parmesan on top. Bread, eggs and cheese is such a great canvas to start with. The possibilities are endless.
@WastrelWay9 ай бұрын
I haven't got to the end yet, but it seems to me to be sort of a baked French toast with cheese on top. Someone imaginatively deconstructed French toast to make a kind of casserole. No question about it, you could add more thin layers without hurting it a bit.
@LasOrveloz9 ай бұрын
One word: Garlic
@stevenelson26419 ай бұрын
Strata, yes.
@jetfromholland45339 ай бұрын
Hahaha, I was watching, and wanted to write: it’s a little bit like a savoury bread and butter, and just as I was typing, your wife said the exact same thing!😆 love from Holland🌷🌷🌷
@clairewright81539 ай бұрын
Hi from Australia 🇦🇺, I used to make this for my kids when they were little for lunch and as they got older would make individual ramekins for a snack after school. I would tear the bread into chunks add grated cheese, beat milk and eggs and if I had any a dash of cream. Place on a oven tray and bake at 180c for approximately 10 x 15 mins. We called this baked eggy bread. This recipe was given to me by an elderly neighbour who was in her 90’s. I’ve cooked this for my grandkids and they loved it.
@KiraRagged9 ай бұрын
ooooh i recognize this as "cheese casserole" which i learned to make from my Joy of Cooking book in the 90s. i made it all the time when i was pregnant and on WIC because if there's anything you get a lot of with WIC it's milk, cheese, and eggs. I loved this stuff!
@TamarLitvot9 ай бұрын
Yes -- this would be a great WIC recipe. Glad you got that when you were pregnant. It's a constant struggle to stop the program from being cut by people in Congress who would rather the money go to tax cuts for the wealthy.
@otroflores919 ай бұрын
Do you remember the cooking temp and time?
@joelmerrill9 ай бұрын
My great grandfather came to Wisconsin from Germany in 1871 and started a cheese factory. It is still in operation even though it has been out of the family for 100 years. Almost everyone on both sides of my family were dairy farmers so I also grew up eating a lot of cheese. I still eat a lot of cheese. it is my comfort food.
@RonOhio9 ай бұрын
I used to eat a ton of that name brand, orange "extra sharp cheddar". I am very grateful for the local Amish grocery where I can get cheese of all kinds without the additives, and the coloring, and the cost of the advertising tacked on.
@TheAciddragon0699 ай бұрын
videos like this make me glad that i live in Wisconsin with 3 artisan cheese stores within a half hour drive
@jessicastevens57829 ай бұрын
I read the 1st instruction as rubbing the TBSP of butter on the surface of the dish to make it non-stick
@VandrothSoryn9 ай бұрын
You showed us the goose chicken and tongue, now it would be cruel not to make it! 😂
@VeretenoVids9 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the breakfast "casserole" my mother would make in the 80s.
@MDPrepper9 ай бұрын
Blessed are the Cheese Makers!!!
@singerredeye66399 ай бұрын
I made something similar this past week. Ham and cheese sandwiches into a baking dish with a custard base poured over it. The ham adds a nice flavor.
@JanPatt3279 ай бұрын
Sort of an old version of beakfast casserole. I added some diced ham and some diced peppers & onion, salt, pepper etc because you said it needed some spices. Yours looked really good...im awaiting mine as it bakes right now. We'll see..haha. Thanks Glen!
@randallthomas52073 ай бұрын
I was raised in the Episcopal Church, and we moved several times while I was growing up. All of the Parishes, (Idaho, Wyoming, Oregon and Nevada), had this as the after services brunch on Easter Sunday. Two of the Parishes actually had standard recipes for it, and folks were upset at one because I added bacon bits to mine.
@jofelker76569 ай бұрын
Sounds like the beginnings of a great breakfast casserole!
@jamesellsworth96739 ай бұрын
You have my mind spinning! Glen suggests a layer of sausage meat on the bottom: how about a layer of sliced potatoes on top of that? Maybe a layer of onions in between? Glen mentions the need for other flavors: your favorite peppers could be mixed in with the potato slices.
@sammieriley85829 ай бұрын
So, my family did something similar, but in two ways: One was savory, called breakfast casserole, which is pretty much exactly how you made it, except the bread is cubed and bits of breakfast sausage was added(salt, pepper and herbs to taste). The second way we called "stuffed french toast" which was bread (cubed), custard base, but with cinnamon and chunks of cream cheese in it. With the stuffed french toast you eat it with syrup, with the breakfast casserole you eat neat, or with salsa/sour cream. We would use whatever bread we were finishing off because it doesn't matter in this context.
@badbusdriver71608 ай бұрын
This took me back to my childhood growing up in the Shetland Islands. Not the recipe, but the fact you have milk in bags!. We called them "coos eggs" (cows eggs)👍
@rebeccaturner55039 ай бұрын
A strata! bet it would work great for anyone with a iffy tummy. Some dried mustard in the egg custard mix.?
@shirleyannconfer96519 ай бұрын
A messy oven can taint a delicate food that is baked inside it. It’s more prevalent if you’re using a household oven to temper steel, in fact the gasses can change the color of the metal. One of my friends unintentionally made a beautiful purple kitchen knife for his wife, and couldn’t recreate it when she asked for a set! I love the end of the bread, too, especially with butter lightly melted in an oven or microwave. I always called it the heel, others have said that it’s the crust, but you’re the first I’ve heard call it the nub. This is a savory bread pudding, and it looks delicious.
@jellyosbahr9 ай бұрын
I used to eat a very similar thing as a child here in the UK. We’d make cheese sandwiches with good strong cheddar, pack them in the dish and pour the egg mixture over.
@Lynn557272 ай бұрын
My mother used to make this in the 60s -70s & going forward. Hers was called an egg soufflé, & we would put different fillings in, as well as bread on top, with the bread on top being buttered. You could also add some buttered Panko breadcrumbs for added crispiness. We made a seafood version, a ham & cheese version and I also made a vegetarian version for my cousin who did not eat meat. Hvarti was one of my fav cheeses to use. It has always been served with huge fresh fruit platters.
@kenmore019 ай бұрын
The look of horror on Jules' face when Glen shows her the "Boned goose, chicken and cured beef tongue" recipe is priceless!
@99dsm19 ай бұрын
I am originally from Indiana, and my mom did this with crumbled sausage on the bottom. No butter just didn't drain the sausage. Her grandma taught her the recipe, and mom was born in 1940, so it would probably be from the turn of the century. Mom eventually added diced bell peppers on the top and eventually changed that to jalapeños. Nothing is new. Thanks for taking me back to my childhood.
@KeithTheGeek9 ай бұрын
Sausage and jalapenos in this sounds amazing. I'll need to try that sometime soon!
@TamarLitvot9 ай бұрын
I was thinking that it needed some green peppers. Jalapeños would be even better!
@daniellecrevier9707 ай бұрын
My mom made a similar recipe cooked on baking sheet, bacon and tomate on top. I am pretty sure she was not told add milk. I am sooo making your for my family. Thank you once again. Love the old cookbook episodes. I have many books but always looking for more.❤
@jamesellsworth96739 ай бұрын
GLEN! This is an heirloom recipe from your youth: it deserves a better farm-made Canadian cheddar cheese. The oven in the right condition means a 'clean', well-regulated oven. This is a dish that will absorb smoky residue from previous cooking. HOW does this recipe compare to the one you LIKED from your childhood?
@dlbstl9 ай бұрын
Thank you. I was wondering the same thing. And I mean it in the most kind way possible and not as a criticism of Glenn.This is the old cookbook show, so I guess he has to go by the recipe? Maybe someday he could make it the way you suggested? In fact I am going to make it the way you suggested. That sounds delicious!
@heathergreenwood65039 ай бұрын
Sounds like the base for a "wifesaver" casserole assembled the night before and cooked for breakfast, often on Christmas morning. Ham or sausages added and savory items (onion and tomatoes) salt and pepper. Yum. Love the channel.
@allann.26329 ай бұрын
This brings me back. Our variation has a dash of garlic powder and smoked paprika in the egg mixture. For the cheese, we use pepperjack and smoked gouda in addition to sharp cheddar. It's a great way to up-cycle that stale loaf of sourdough. We also use a cast iron pan to get the cheesy edge to mate with the bubbly crust. 😋
@marym4349 ай бұрын
The Canadian milk situation gets me every time!
@zaynamoore9 ай бұрын
Hehe, some of us even reuse our milk bags. They make excellent freezer bags. :D
@josephdeveau41509 ай бұрын
Bagged milk is apparently on the way out in Canada. Most younger people don't drink enough milk to buy it in bags and instead use cartons or non-dairy alternatives. I also didn't know that not all provinces have bagged milk AND Canada isn't the only country with bagged milk! But I always love when Glenn busts out the bagged milk.
@gabriellakadar9 ай бұрын
@@josephdeveau4150 I make a mess with bagged milk, so I buy 2 litre cartons the ones with a screw top. I think he likes to have his American viewers heads explode every time he runs out and has to start a new bag. I see a LOT of bagged milk in Toronto supermarkets. The Canada food plate is for chipmunks but around here it seems people are entirely ignoring recommendations and buying lots of dairy products.
@marym4349 ай бұрын
@@gabriellakadar Haha! Yes, that's me.
@TheKitchenNinja9 ай бұрын
I kinda miss it! I moved to BC about 17 years ago and we don't have bagged milk here. Grew up with it in Ontario though.
@tammystratford70799 ай бұрын
I'm on Concession Street in Galt watching this right now!!! Wow. It's cool to be represented! I would donate but I was just terminated on Friday. Thank you, menopause and mental illness. 😟
@laurabailey20929 ай бұрын
I am so sorry for your situation, I was terminated in Oct of 2022, thanks rheumatoid arthritis, still not working as my small town every job is lift 50lbs, the RA is in my hands lol, and I lost my husband 3 weeks ago so income dried up.
@JimLambier9 ай бұрын
The downtown area near the river is always beautiful. We used to visit quite frequently when the factory outlets were there. I wish you well with your job situation. Being let go is awful. Make sure to get some legal advice if you haven't done so already. For me, it paid for itself multiple times over. There are also free legal clinics that can help.
@dlbstl9 ай бұрын
Menopause is the worst. I can relate. I was so happy when I finally was finished with menopause. I wish you well and I really hope it gets better for you 💞🙏
@phranerphamily9 ай бұрын
Big hugs
@phranerphamily9 ай бұрын
@laurabailey2092 I'm so sad to hear about your loss. I don't know if you're in Canada or down in the States but if you were on social security and your husband was as well then you should be able to choose whose was more. But it's a horrible business in any case. Hugs
@rjones41909 ай бұрын
We make something very similar as a breakfast when guests are around, basically the same thing, with the addition of a pre-cooked sagey breakfast sausage layer, a bit of dry mustard and a couple of dashes of Tapatio or Valentinas in the eggs, put together the night before and baked the morning of.
@Blue_Camera_Cat9 ай бұрын
I listened to this on the ride home from work and made it when I got home with what I had in the fridge and it was amazing!! 2 tsb butter in 7in cast iron just warmed up enough to melt. 3 slices of french bread filled my pan nicely. 2 eggs and a few splashes of milk seasoned liberally with salt, pepper, cumin, chili powder, and some oregano. pour on and cover all the surfaces of the bread with the mixture that filled my pan about half way. topped with some very boring but perfectly ok orange sharp cheddar. top rack at 350 for about 15 mins and it got all bubbly and browned nice. It was delicious! There is decent texture contrast between the top of the cheese and the custardy bread in the middle. This is definitely going into my weeknight cookbook
@brianmeyer75099 ай бұрын
Grew up in N.W. Ohio and my mom's breakfast casserole was a holiday standard. Layer of buttered bread, then a layer of sausage or ham or bacon, shredded cheese, layer of buttered bread and shredded cheese. Cover with milk and egg mixture. Make night before, bake in the morning 350 for an hour. Can't believe that something we at in the 70's and 80's had its roots that far back.
@erikaatkinson93459 ай бұрын
Sounds delicious!
@scoates9 ай бұрын
My favourite Glen schtick is triggering the foreigners with the milk bag change. Well done yet again.
@spankyham96079 ай бұрын
Anything with cheese I am all for. The ingredients reminds me of a bread pudding but with cheese instead of sugar and raisins.
@S.A.K-c6d9 ай бұрын
My grandfather's aunt had a recipe for this with more layers, some finely chopped onion, salt, pepper & dry mustard, called "bread and cheese custard". It's great as a side dish with stronger flavors.
@kellierowe77069 ай бұрын
Had the same thgt
@brightmerope5 ай бұрын
Just found this video. I grew up with this as a variation on a cheese strata - we tended to add ham and mustard, but other variations occurred depending on what leftovers were. Is also very close to a dish called scalloped tomatoes - which was buttered bread broken in pieces mixed with canned or stewed tomatoes and topped with cheddar cheese.
@davislongsworth71509 ай бұрын
I am from Virginia. We used to have this during Lent on Friday nights. Ours had another layer of broken bread and cheese and the custard. We had a cook and she would make it in the morning and then baked it in the evening.It was so good.She called it a poor man's cheese souffle.
@janicehubbell76669 ай бұрын
This reminds me of “Nan’s French Fondue” - a recipe my Mom found, most likely in a women’s magazine in the 1960s.you use a Dutch oven or similar casserole dish. You layer bread slices that are buttered and smeared with mustard with cheese, then add a custard mixture that includes salt and pepper. It soaks overnight, then you bake it in the morning. It’s infinitely variable, depending on the type of cheese and mustard you use. You can also layer thinly sliced ham. It makes an amazing crust that really sticks. It’s absolutely worth the clean-up and is still a favorite in our family.
@danaridings63879 ай бұрын
Julie, I agree. I don’t understand either!! 😅 This does have great potential.
@ellefaye4489 ай бұрын
I added a thin layer of onion on the bottom and mixed in everything bagel seasoning and sprinkled on top. So good! I also used bread I make by using hot cooked rice and mixing in yeast, sugar salt and flour....it was next level in this recipe. Gonna make it with cinnamon and raisins tomorrow! Thanks!
@Warbler369 ай бұрын
I’m very curious about your bread with hot cooked rice, do you have a recipe or somehow I could look it up?
@halynamyers86649 ай бұрын
Great holiday breakfast recipe, small tomatoes on top, hot sauce on the side, maybe a sprinkle of basil. Aged white cheddar!
@ellenraguette46239 ай бұрын
We called it Cheese Strata: layered bread, butter and cheese with milk and egg poured over. You add the herbs and spices that you like ( meat if you want ). This a quick meal. Love it!
@Rostol9 ай бұрын
Just a small cuirosity, we use milk bags too, but the normal way to open them is to make a large cut on a corner like you did, but a small cut on the OTHER corner so air can go in the bag and milk comes out in a tidy not gurgling fashion out the large end. totally random but I found it intersting.
@palaceofwisdom94489 ай бұрын
Is there a reason for milk in a bag? This channel is the first place I've ever seen it.
@TheDriftwoodlover9 ай бұрын
@@palaceofwisdom9448less packaging?
@GlenAndFriendsCooking9 ай бұрын
@@palaceofwisdom9448 The switch happened when we changed to Metric in the 1970s - the dairies had to change out packaging machinery for the new sizes, and this was the low cost way of doing it. Less / cheaper materials, and no more washing / managing jug returns. Overall the bag (while still a vile plastic) turned out to be the lowest footprint for energy and materials used at each stage from the dairy to the fridge.
@timacrow9 ай бұрын
We (Pacific NW USA) always referred to the "nub" as the "heel of the boot," and yes, it is my favorite too. :)
@Wiencourager9 ай бұрын
My family would make a similar recipe called ‘cheese strata’, often prepared Xmas eve to have something that can just be popped in the oven in the morning for an easy breakfast, with a fruit salad and muffins or coffee cake.
@sus12219 ай бұрын
Looks like an egg casserole/strata type thing. I think dried mustard and sausage or ham would be nice additions. Definitely a strange version - but still looks tasty. Thanks for sharing it with us!
@RobotPorter9 ай бұрын
My family used to make a midcentury modern variant on this for holiday buffets. We called them "Quick Cheese Puffs." It was shreaded cheddar cheese with egg, salt pepper, and worcestershire sauce. Topped on Ritz Crackers and baked till golden brown. The worcestershire sauce or even a dab of marmite might work in this. Or, when no one is watching, mix in some anchovies.
@geneard6396 ай бұрын
I make something similar to this but, without the custard. I take some bread slices, butter one side and put that down on a sheet pan with parchment, and spoon some Peach Jelly on the bread and spread it thin, then put some diced ham on top, then muster for its stretch, and then sharp cheddar on top, 350 for 10-12 minutes. That alone is sweet and savory.
@joannesteven35539 ай бұрын
This reminds me of many brunch dishes I've seen which call for eggs, milk, bread (often cubed), diced ham, onion and shredded cheese. I believed it's often called a breakfast strata. Regarding orange cheddar, I can only eat the white version ever since an unfortunate incident many years ago during which I was about to bite into some (albeit cheap) orange cheddar on toast when I saw that the orange dye had leached out onto the toast. My appetite immediately vanished. But aged white cheddar? Yum!
@randallthomas52073 ай бұрын
Thoughts on variations: Hatch Green Chilis, corn bread, and Pepper Jack Cheese, with a a bit of cayenne sprinkled over the top; add fried and crumbled bacon bits; Crumbled Sausage; Basically anything which you add to quiche. I’m diabetic, and make crustless quiche in custard dishes as a quick microwave breakfast. So, anything along that line. Blanched spinach, diced ham and Swiss cheese.
@ccwest879 ай бұрын
Woke up, saw this, thought "Hmmmm... I have some left over sourdough from last weekend I need to use ASAP!" Added salt & pepper to the custard mix before pouring it in, and will say it came out pretty good! I would've done crumbled sausage if I had any, but after trying it "plain", I'm thinking spinach and feta 🤤
@graefx9 ай бұрын
I grew up with something very similiar to this we called breakfast casserole out of one of my mothers inherited cookbooks. Main difference was the bread was cubed and there was crumbled sausage mixed in. Very popular holiday brunch item. Definitely in the savory bread pudding family. That goose, chicken, beef tongue sounds delicious.
@callitags9 ай бұрын
This is the comment I was scrolling for! I don't know when, but at some point during my youth (70s/80s) my mother started making breakfast casserole at Christmas. Not sure, honestly, if we ever had it any other time, but she would put it together the night before, and it would bake in the morning while we opened gifts. I haven't had it in a very long time. Mom always made one with sausage and one with ham. Leftovers for days.
@SakuraSamael6 ай бұрын
Heh, when I was feeling particularly depressed or unmotivated, I used to do pretty much exactly this, but in the microwave. Tore the bread up into chunks, soaked it in egg/milk, added anything else I had on hand and blasted it until it was cooked through. Top it off with ketchup while it was warm and it was a serviceable enough meal.
@virginiaf.57649 ай бұрын
It's basically a savory bread pudding. Makes a great breakfast dish and was my go-to when it was my turn for Friday breakfast at the office. Put it together at night and bake in the morning. Lots of cheese and sausage or bacon.
@winfr34k9 ай бұрын
Maybe you could show us the Tomato-Bread-Cheese-Thing your mom used to make one day, I'm intrigued! Bread dishes in the oven tend to be really soggy with a weird heat distribution of thermonuclear to stone cold in seconds all over the pan...
@songindarkness9 ай бұрын
This is really interesting. I have 1970s era British cookbooks that have recipes for savoury bread puddings that seem very similar and are also delicious. I made one with stale bread and I think that was the purpose, to use up the stale bread, just as for sweet bread puddings (we don’t say bread and butter pudding but it’s the same thing). I think you can add what you like to them. Bacon and veg and anything you might put in a frittata and omelette. I suspect these sort of recipes started disappearing when you have modern processed bread that doesn’t go stale it just moulds.
@RamonaAnne9 ай бұрын
We always called that strata. Usually added a couple of layers of bread and the same of cheese plus some other ingredients like roasted chilies. Also, I'd spread the butter on the bottom of the pan, rather than put in some dabs of butter.
@cathyfield47659 ай бұрын
Jules re. Meat stuffed into meat: my maternal side of the family were Polish farmers... They stuffed duck which wasn't meaty with a ground beef, prune, and onion mix. The flavor was wonderful and there was more meat to go around for dinner.
@donnamariebrown24789 ай бұрын
Love your show and always learn something new. Thanks Glen and Jules!
@ShinKyuubi9 ай бұрын
Like the looks of the dish and I may have to try this as bread and cheese are top favorites of mine for a go to snack...but as an American I'm weirded out by the milk in a bag lol. That is something I've never seen in the supermarket or even a whole foods store.
@SethCohn239 ай бұрын
It's a purely Canadian thing. They do bags, while we in the US do mostly cartons or plastic. When I was a little kid in the 70s, we had a milkman delivering in glass bottles, and I've seen glass bottles locally from small farms.
@daveb-d4t8 ай бұрын
ne Iowa has it too ... go to the store for a bag-o-milk
@itmightbeciaran9 ай бұрын
This seems extremely similar to the numerous breakfast casseroles you see in the cookbooks from my grandmother's church (Upstate NY, not too far from where this recipe originated). In more recent (post-80s) versions these are almost invariably called "strata", and tend to be eggier with more vegetables, and often feta or goat cheese. The one we always make is from an older version of the church cookbook (I think 50s) and uses only stale bread, milk, eggs, cheddar, mustard powder, and optional pork sausage, ham, or bacon. We always use pork sausage. That particular recipe called for halved slices rather than the cubes common in the later versions. The overall result looks about halfway between this and a modern breakfast strata.
@ShooterMcNut9 ай бұрын
I used to make something similar when I was a cook at a wrinkle ranch, it was called "cheese fondue" even though it was nothing like fondue.
@patriciakinney-fisher24789 ай бұрын
Good morning❤️ I can’t wait to try this
@DeliaLee89 ай бұрын
We had a variation of this all the time growing up. Loved it. Stale bread ends, sliced block cheese. Colemans mustard powder, salt and pepper. I don't remember any other seasonings but, as you've said, there are so many other options.
@tonyboloni649 ай бұрын
Interesting. What you call the nub, we always called the heel. A great way to use up stale bread, extra eggs and milk...plus the diced end of a ham, part of an leftover onion. Maybe a couple of flicks of curry?
@lesliemoiseauthor9 ай бұрын
I love the name of the recipes in this cookbook
@dextardextar9 ай бұрын
canada really has the best cuisine, cheese and more cheese.
@tankersgirl9 ай бұрын
This is very similar to a breakfast casserole I make. Like Julie suggested, I add cooked, drained, and crumbled bacon or sausage. I also substitute crescent rolls in lieu of the sliced bread. I use way less milk though.
@juliemeanor65319 ай бұрын
My mom made this. She called it Strata, with sometimes asparagus or browned onions and Swiss cheese or parmigiana. Easy to make ahead then bake when closer to meal time.
@joethesampleguy34149 ай бұрын
It was fun seeing you on the Whiskey Tribe channel!
@StarTraveler6499 ай бұрын
The goose, chicken tongue recipe is similar to a Cajun Turducken down in south Louisiana. Chicken stuffed in a duck, stuffed in a turkey. It's time consuming, but amazingly good !
@murlthomas22439 ай бұрын
The cheese in the oven looks interesting. Never saw a recipe for savory French toast, although I’m sure there are some out there. I have some bacon in the fridge and might try some “improvements” suggested by you and Julie.
@geophat759 ай бұрын
This looks good, im going to make a lower carb version with green bell pepper quarters instead of bread. Love how simple it is to make. Thanks!
@guyfromcanada889 ай бұрын
A bag of milk and a snippit is 100% Ontario.. lmao i LOVE it man.
@MrRobinGoodhand7 ай бұрын
We have. bagged milk in New Brunswick too, but only in the 4 litre format (oddly, you get 3 bags of milk).
@debrajohnson19829 ай бұрын
I make something very similar that was my aunt’s recipe. The custard is flavored with about 1/2 teaspoon stone ground mustard. The bacon is on the side. Everybody loves it. I truly enjoy your show.
@HealthyDisrespectforAuthority9 ай бұрын
Yep.. I'm already mentally switching cheeses. Muenster and provolone together is my favorite cheese combo.. and I'm thinking rye bread with those.
@erikaatkinson93459 ай бұрын
Oooh, yeah, that would be amazing!
@alanblott45599 ай бұрын
I'd put a few extra layers of bread in the pan. It's a savoury Bread and Butter Pudding. Another comfort food discovered. And what about creamy mash potatoes as a layer..........
@jacquespoulemer35779 ай бұрын
Sing Loudly :Puddin on the Ritz...." Peter Boyle (almost Boyd) This Oven Cheese for me would be a 'musgo' dish to empty out the fridge. Anything that must go. The 19th century recipes remind me of my copy of Sandra Oddo's Homemade from the 1970s. a collection of 1800s farm cooking. Thanks Glen, Jules for the history both Canadian and personal. Jim Oaxaca
@virginiaf.57649 ай бұрын
One of the funniest movie scenes ever. You made me go find a KZbin video if it.
@lusnorthernhome34109 ай бұрын
The look on Jules face is priceless. 😂
@trevorsocia23009 ай бұрын
I vote Glen makes the Boned goose, chicken and cured beef tongue to be on a (hopefully) not too distant future episode of the Old Cookbook Show!
@nickbriggs96209 ай бұрын
My mom makes something we’ve always called “onion pie” that’s essentially the same dish as this only with sautéed onion and ground pork sausage… it’s very good…
@Count_Smackula9 ай бұрын
This will soon be served in my house. I'll definitely be adding bacon or sausage. And cayenne pepper. 😉
@zerg5399 ай бұрын
I think cubing the bread and letting it stale overnight, buttering the dish and using some on the bottom like you did, and finally adding some flavors basically anything that would go into a quiche could work here.
@davidsawyer15999 ай бұрын
I have brother-in-law that has a similar recipe. It's made with store bought white bread. It's a mess. The looks alone turned me off. That looks firm. Thanks Glen
@robertmckee57379 ай бұрын
Cracking vid loved the recipe i think it was cooked in an wood burning oven so the oven would have to be at the right temp not like a modern oven thanks Glen keep up yer guid work.
@boerieza9 ай бұрын
Jules didn't look convinced. lolol. She's the one we look at every time. She's the yard-stick. Her reactions are gold and 100% honest :D Take a shot every time Glen says "Boned" lol
@1EdmundDantes9 ай бұрын
Worcestershire sauce would be great on this.
@smwillia9 ай бұрын
Salt, pepper, paprika, and some cayenne with some chives and Italian parsley added to this would be great. And maybe some more cheese, maybe Swiss and mozzarella added, would bring this to a nice place.
@heideleskun11639 ай бұрын
"Cheese Bread Pudding" that's what comes to mind. I need to make some now, it would be great with the soup I made.
@windlessoriginals11509 ай бұрын
Thank you
@stevemccravy71699 ай бұрын
If you had put thin slices of tomato and onion between the bread and cheese, it would be a dish we had when I was a child. My grandmother on the Scots side of the family made it
@iannevay85709 ай бұрын
Hi there, we called it cheese pudding, we layered slice bread with cheese and season. my mother made it as a treat.
@MrRobinGoodhand7 ай бұрын
Boy, Glen, somebody got pretty trigger-happy with the annatto! I have never seen such orange cheese before! That sounds like a proto-type cheese rarebit to me.
@doccyclopz9 ай бұрын
I'm in total agreement with Glen in regard to the woeful tasteless bars that the big Canadian Supermarkets try to pass off as cheese these days. I can vividly remember my Mother melting Cracker barrel cheddar on toast in the 1970's with it's sharp aged taste akin to a Balderson 5 yr old cheddar today. Whereas Cracker barrel cheddar today is akin to eating tofu.