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Crescent rolls stuffed with sausage and cream cheese, topped with an egg mixture and baked to a delicious, golden brown. Get the recipe: Sausage and Cream Cheese Crescent Breakfast Casserole The ...
LaCorte unrolls one can of crescent roll dough and presses it into a 9-by-13-inch pan, then spreads the sausage mixture on top. Some shredded cheese goes on top of that (because of course), then ...
There are also vegetarian kishke recipes. [10] [11] [12] The stuffed sausage is usually placed on top of the assembled cholent and cooked overnight in the same pot. Alternatively it can be cooked in salted water with vegetable oil added or baked in a dish, and served separately with flour-thickened gravy made from the cooking liquids. [7] [13]
Rugelach can be made with sour cream or cream cheese doughs, [6] [7] [8] but there are also pareve variants (with no dairy ingredients), [13] so that it can be eaten with or after a meat meal and still be kosher. Cream cheese doughs are the most recent, while yeast leavened [13] [14] and sour cream doughs [15] [16] are much older.
This breakfast casserole recipe is a make-ahead meal that's perfect for the holidays. It's filled with ham, two types of cheese, eggs, and crescent rolls.
A Swiss roll, jelly roll (United States), roll cake, cream roll, roulade or Swiss log or swiss cake —is a type of rolled sponge cake filled with whipped cream, jam, icing, or any type of filling. The origins of the term are unclear; in spite of the name "Swiss roll", the cake is believed to have originated elsewhere in Central Europe ...
Best classic: Pillsbury Original Crescent Rolls. Pillsbury is a household name for pre-made dough products like cinnamon rolls, pie crusts, and toaster strudels.
Kishka may refer to: . Kishka (food) or kishke, various types of sausage or stuffed intestine Samiylo Kishka (1530–1602), nobleman from Bratslav; Intestine or Gut (zoology), in East Slavic languages, also used in English-language Yiddishisms