Quiche is the brunch dish that does it all — it's elegant enough for Easter, sturdy enough for a weekday dinner, and tastes as good cold from the fridge as it does warm from the oven. Asparagus and Gruyère are the spring pairing that makes this version worth making in April and May specifically: sweet green spears, nutty melty cheese, silky custard, flaky crust. Make it Saturday, eat from it all week.
Asparagus and gruyere quiche
A spring quiche with tender asparagus, nutty Gruyère, and a flaky butter crust — brunch centerpiece, make-ahead dinner, leftover breakfast.

- Prep
- 25 min
- Cook
- 50 min
- Total
- 1h 45m
- Serves
- 8
Asparagus and gruyere quiche
Makes 1 nine-inch quiche
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (15)
Butter crust
Filling
Custard
You'll need
- 9-inch pie dish or tart pan with removable bottom
- Food processor or pastry cutter (for crust)
- Rolling pin
- Pie weights or dried beans
- Parchment paper
- Large mixing bowl and whisk
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 sliceWhat to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Green — the standard; tender and grassy, works throughout
- Purple — sweeter than green; turns green when cooked but holds the flavor
- Jersey Knight — a reliable US field variety with tender spears
- Pencil-thin asparagus — no need to peel; blanch only 45 seconds
Ripeness
Tips should be tight and dry; a spear should snap crisply at its natural break point. Avoid any with slimy tips, a limp bend, or a dried-out base.
Imperfections are fine
Mixed thickness in a bunch is fine — group by size when blanching. A little dirt at the base rinses off.
Good substitutions
- Broccolini — swap 1-for-1; blanch 60 seconds
- Spinach (10 oz fresh or 1 cup squeezed-dry frozen) — skip blanching, add raw with shallots
- Leeks (2 cups sliced, sautéed) in place of asparagus for a classic leek quiche
- Mushrooms (8 oz sautéed and dried of moisture) for mushroom-gruyere version
In season
US asparagus season runs April through June — a short, sweet window where local is dramatically better than imported.
How much to buy
About 1 lb — one standard bunch.
Find your asparagus grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season April – June
- For this recipe 1 lb / 1 bunch
- Freshness Picked within 3 days
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian
- While you're there Farm eggs · Gruyère or Comté from a cheesemonger · Fresh chives · Cream from a local dairy · Shallots
At the market
About 1 lb — one standard bunch.
Best varieties
- Green the standard; tender and grassy, works throughout
- Purple sweeter than green; turns green when cooked but holds the flavor
- Jersey Knight a reliable US field variety with tender spears
Good to know
Tips
- Keep everything cold when making the crust. Warm butter = tough crust; cold butter = flaky crust.
- Don't over-fill the custard. The filling should come to 1/4 inch below the crust edge to prevent overflow.
- Blanching asparagus before baking keeps it bright green and tender. Unblanched asparagus can be tough at the base and army-drab in the finished quiche.
- Grate your own cheese — pre-shredded bagged cheese is dusted with cellulose and doesn't melt as smoothly.
- Let the quiche rest 20 minutes before slicing; cold cuts are ugly and hot cuts weep custard.
Storage
- Refrigerator: 4 days, covered. Actually tastes great cold for breakfast.
- Freezer (baked): 2 months, tightly wrapped. Thaw in the fridge overnight.
- Freezer (unbaked, assembled): 1 month. Bake from frozen at 350°F for 75 minutes.
Reheating
- Oven: 325°F (160°C) for 15 to 20 minutes, tented with foil to prevent over-browning.
- Toaster oven: 325°F for 10 minutes (individual slices).
- Microwave: 60 to 90 seconds per slice — works but crust softens.
Make ahead
- Crust dough: up to 2 days refrigerated or 3 months frozen.
- Blind-baked shell: 1 day ahead, store at room temperature covered.
- Full quiche: bake up to 2 days ahead; flavor improves overnight.
- Freeze an extra while you're at it — quiche freezes better than most baked goods.
Variations
- Asparagus and ham: add 1 cup diced ham with the cheese for a classic Easter version.
- Asparagus and leek: sauté 1 cup sliced leek with the shallots.
- Asparagus, goat cheese, and thyme: swap half the Gruyère for 4 oz crumbled goat cheese.
- Asparagus and smoked salmon: fold in 4 oz torn smoked salmon with the cheese.
- Crustless version: skip the crust; grease the pan, reduce bake time to 30 minutes for a lighter frittata-style dish.
- Mini quiches: divide among 12 muffin cups (blind-bake small rounds of dough first); reduce bake time to 20 minutes.
Swaps
- Gluten-free: use a GF pie crust (store-bought works), or make crustless.
- Lower-fat: use half-and-half instead of heavy cream; replace 1 egg with 2 whites.
- Dairy-free: swap butter in crust for vegan butter; use full-fat coconut milk + 2 tbsp nutritional yeast in place of cream and cheese.
- No Gruyère: Comté, Emmental, Fontina, or aged white cheddar all work well.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use a frozen pie crust?
Do I have to blind-bake the crust?
Why did my quiche crack or get watery?
Can I make quiche ahead?
Can I freeze quiche?
What cheese works best in asparagus quiche?
Can I use frozen asparagus?
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