Make-Ahead Recipe: Sausage, Artichoke & Goat Cheese Egg Bake (2024)

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Faith Durand

Faith DurandSVP of Content

Faith is the SVP of Content at Apartment Therapy Media and former Editor-in-Chief of The Kitchn. She is the author of three cookbooks, including the James Beard Award-winning The Kitchn Cookbook. She lives in Columbus, Ohio, with her husband and two daughters.

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updated Jan 29, 2020

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Make-Ahead Recipe: Sausage, Artichoke & Goat Cheese Egg Bake (1)

Serves6 to 8

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Make-Ahead Recipe: Sausage, Artichoke & Goat Cheese Egg Bake (2)

Artichokes, sausage, goat cheese, and sun-dried tomatoes — here’s an egg bake for you that will work for breakfast, lunch, or dinner! It’s also a great example of my basic formula for egg casserole. These provide my most frequent go-to lunch, a make-ahead staple that uses up little bits of leftovers — in this case, one lone sausage and half a log of goat cheese, plus a few sun-dried tomatoes and the last of a wedge of Parmesan. Read on for the recipe and some thoughts on making a hearty, easy egg bake out of nearly anything you have on hand.

I know we talk about eggs a lot here at The Kitchn — and it was just last week that I gave you a recipe for a potato-egg breakfast casserole. So, another egg casserole for lunch? Really? Yes, and let me tell you why. If you bake a pan of this on Sunday night and all week long you’ll never have to ask, “What’s for lunch?”

Basic Formula for an Egg Casserole
When making a lunch or breakfast egg casserole, here are the basic proportions I start out with. (This will fill a 9×13-inch baking dish or any other 3-quart dish.)

I start with an egg base of 8 to 9 large eggs and 1 cup milk. I season with 1 1/2 teaspoons salt and some ground pepper.

After this, the mix-ins are endless! I like to use bits and pieces of ingredients lying around the kitchen — things like the one sausage leftover from a meal this weekend — I cooked it and used it to flavor the rest of the onion and garlic in this casserole. I also had just a tiny bit of sun-dried tomatoes left over from the other casserole last week. Those went in, along with the scraps of cheese I’ve been meaning to clean out of the cheese drawer! I remembered that I had a bag of frozen artichokes in the freezer (which needs a spring thaw!) and those made up the bulk of the casserole, along with the eggs.

When it’s all thrown together, bake for 35 to 40 minutes at 350°.

Why I Love Egg Casseroles for Lunch
Everything worked together beautifully — this is a really hearty, yummy casserole that could be breakfast, lunch, or dinner. I think an egg casserole is a nearly perfect lunch because it is so easy to wrap up — just put a square in a take-out container or wrap it in foil. You can pack in lots of veggies and potatoes, if you want, so it’s a one-dish meal. (I still like to eat mine with salad, though.)

Whether you follow my impromptu, cupboard-inspired recipe below, or whether you take this loose template and make up your own version of a lunch egg bake, I encourage you try this some weekend evening — it’s a great way to stash a week of meals in the fridge in nearly no time at all.

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Serves 6 to 8

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

  • 4 ounces

    spicy Italian sausage (about 1 large sausage)

  • 1

    large onion, diced

  • 4 cloves

    garlic, minced

  • 1/4 cup

    sun-dried tomatoes, finely chopped

  • 12 ounces

    frozen artichoke hearts, thawed and roughly chopped

  • 8

    large eggs

  • 1 cup

    whole milk

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons

    salt

  • Freshly ground black pepper

  • 3 ounces

    goat cheese, crumbled

  • 1 cup

    shredded Parmesan cheese

Instructions

  1. Heat the oven to 350°F and lightly grease a 3-quart or 9x13-inch baking dish with baking spray or olive oil.

  2. Heat a deep sauté pan over medium-high heat. Chop the sausage into 1/2-inch pieces and cook until well-browned. Add the onion and garlic and turn the heat down to medium. Cook for 5 minutes or until the onion is soft and translucent. Add the sun-dried tomatoes and cook for an additional 3 minutes or until the onion begins to brown just a bit. Add the artichoke hearts and cook just until they are warmed through. Turn off the heat.

  3. Whisk the eggs thoroughly then whisk in the milk, salt, and a few grinds of black pepper. Stir in the crumbled goat cheese and Parmesan cheese, then fold in the cooked sausage and vegetables from the skillet.

  4. Pour into the prepared baking dish and bake for 35 to 40 minutes or until a knife comes out clean and the top is lightly golden brown. Serve warm or cold, with a fresh salad.

  5. Leftovers keep well in the fridge for up to 5 days.

Related:

(Images: Faith Durand)

Filed in:

Breakfast

Casserole

dinner

easy

Eggs

Ingredient

Make-Ahead Recipe: Sausage, Artichoke & Goat Cheese Egg Bake (2024)

FAQs

Can I bake an egg casserole and reheat it? ›

Bake the casserole for only 30 minutes. Cool to room temperature. Wrap tightly with foil or plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight, then reheat in a 375 F oven for 30 minutes the next morning until the casserole is browned and heated through.

Can breakfast casserole be frozen before baking? ›

To freeze breakfast casserole prepare the recipe and add to your pan. Cover well with plastic wrap and then tinfoil and freeze for 2-3 months. Allow it to thaw overnight in the refrigerator, and then let it come to room temperature before baking according to recipe instructions.

How do you store egg casserole? ›

Most recipes suggest 350 °F. Bake until the center of the casserole reaches an internal temperature of 160 °F as tested with a food thermometer. After baking, any leftovers must be refrigerated within two hours and can be kept three to four days in the refrigerator or frozen for about three months.

How long can I refrigerate an egg casserole before baking? ›

Cover casserole with plastic wrap or aluminum foil and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. (When ready to bake, allow to sit at room temperature for 10–15 minutes as oven preheats.)

How long can you refrigerate a casserole before baking? ›

Unless food will be frozen, it's safest and will provide the best quality product to start preparing most perishable foods no more than a day before a meal. For example, assemble a vegetable casserole a day in advance, refrigerate and then bake the day of your dinner.

How long can uncooked breakfast casserole stay in the fridge? ›

Remove from heat and add the cooked vegetable mixture to the sausage in the prepared casserole dish and roughly stir together to distribute mixture evenly. Set aside. You can either bake breakfast casserole immediately or cover the dish with plastic wrap or foil and refrigerate for up to 24 hours to bake later.

Is it better to freeze breakfast casseroles cooked or uncooked? ›

The answer depends on what's in it. Casseroles with raw protein (meat, poultry, seafood) should be completely cooked before freezing. However dishes with pre-cooked meats or no meat are fine to go in the freezer uncooked.

Is it better to freeze egg casserole cooked or uncooked? ›

The ingredients that you add to your casserole will dictate how it's frozen, and some require one method versus the other. In general, freezing your casserole before baking may yield better results with the dish's texture.

Can you make a casserole with raw eggs ahead of time? ›

Yes, you can. Raw eggs are fairly stable in the freezer, especially when beaten or mixed with other ingredients. Check to see what else is in the casserole, though.

How do you reheat egg casserole without overcooking? ›

Reheat a casserole in the microwave for best results
  1. Be sure to use a microwave-safe dish.
  2. Reheat a single portion at a time. ...
  3. Loosely cover the casserole. ...
  4. Microwave at 30-second intervals stirring in between each time. ...
  5. To help keep/add moisture in your reheated casserole add a small bowl of water alongside your plate.
Sep 7, 2022

Can egg bake sit out overnight? ›

If the egg casserole has sat out for 2 hours throw it away. Do not refrigerate it, do not eat it.

Can you reheat a casserole in the oven? ›

If you baked your casserole ahead of time, simply cover the dish with foil and reheat at 350˚F until heated through. Depending on the type of dish, you may need to add moisture to keep it from drying out, for example, a splash of milk to baked macaroni and cheese.

Can you reheat an egg dish? ›

The bottom line

Cooked eggs and egg dishes can be safely consumed as leftovers if they're initially cooked thoroughly, stored properly, and reheated to an adequate temperature to kill germs and prevent foodborne illness. Different reheating methods work best for certain types of cooked eggs and egg dishes.

How long to warm up egg casserole in oven? ›

How long to reheat casserole in oven? Generally, most casseroles reheat within 20-30 minutes, or when the temperature reaches 165°F, making it safe for consumption and enjoyably hot!

Can you reheat a dish with egg in it? ›

Yes, you can warm up an omelette. If you pre-cook an omelette to reheat later, then refrigerate it within 2 hours of cooking and heat it again in 1-2 days. Omelettes are best reheated by microwave, but you can use the oven, hob or even the grill. Reheated omelettes should be served piping hot and only heated once.

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