Asparagus bites

Servings: 6 Total Time: 35 mins Difficulty: Easy
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Asparagus bites is one of those recipes I keep in my back pocket because it solves a specific craving without asking me to pretend the kitchen is a studio. Soft bread, tangy cheese, and blanched asparagus turn into crisp little rolls that disappear faster than I expect. I have made versions of it on ordinary days, and the details below are the ones I pay attention to when I want the result to be reliable.

What I like most is that the recipe has a clear personality. Blue cheese gives sharpness, cream cheese smooths it out, and the asparagus keeps the bite fresh. I do not need extra decoration when the basics are handled well: measured ingredients, enough heat, and a little patience at the right moment.

I keep the original timing and quantities unless something in the source was obviously garbled, and I call out the spots where I watch texture, color, or temperature instead of blindly trusting the clock.

Why I keep coming back to this

  • It is practical.They feel like a party snack without hard technique.
  • The flavor is direct.The cheese filling is bold but still balanced.
  • The texture matters.Crisp bread and tender asparagus make the contrast work.
  • It fits real kitchens.A sheet pan and rolling pin are enough.
  • Leftovers have a plan.Leftovers reheat in the oven for another snack.

What you need (and what each one is doing)

  • Blanched asparagus, 9 spears.Dry spears roll cleanly and keep a little snap.
  • White bread, 1 loaf.Soft slices flatten and wrap without cracking.
  • Cream cheese and blue cheese.Cream cheese spreads while blue cheese adds tang.
  • Garlic, salt, and pepper.Small amounts season the rich filling.
  • Melted butter and egg white.Butter browns the bread and egg white helps the tops set.
  • Mayonnaise, 1 tablespoon.I use it as a simple dip on the side.

How I make it

Step 1 — Heat and line the pan

I preheat to 400°F (204°C) and line a baking sheet with parchment.

Step 2 — Mix the filling

I stir softened cream cheese, blue cheese, garlic, salt, and pepper until spreadable.

Step 3 — Flatten and fill

I roll bread slices lightly, brush with butter, and spread about 1/2 tablespoon filling on each.

Step 4 — Roll and bake

I add asparagus, roll seam side down, brush with egg white, and bake until warm and lightly golden.

Tips from my kitchen

  • Dry the asparagus.Wet spears make the bread soggy.
  • Soften cream cheese.Cold filling tears the bread.
  • Do not overfill.Too much cheese leaks out.
  • Serve warm.The edges are crispest right after baking.

Variations I have actually tried

  • Cheddar:Use sharp cheddar instead of blue cheese.
  • Herby:Add chives or parsley to the filling.
  • Spicy:Add a pinch of cayenne.
  • Ranch dip:Serve ranch instead of mayonnaise.
  • Mini platter:Cut baked rolls in half diagonally.

Storing and reheating

I refrigerate assembled unbaked bites for a few hours or cooked leftovers for 2-3 days. I label leftovers when they go into the freezer because future me never remembers what is wrapped in foil.

For best texture, I reheat gently rather than blasting it. Warm leftovers in a 350°F (175°C) oven; the microwave softens the bread. That small step keeps the recipe tasting cooked, not merely warmed up.

What I serve with it

I like them with salad, soup, olives, or pickles to cut through the cheese. I try to keep the sides simple so the main flavor of the recipe still has room to show up.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use frozen asparagus?

Yes, if it is thawed and patted very dry.

Can I assemble them ahead?

Yes. Cover the pan and refrigerate, then bake shortly before serving.

What if I dislike blue cheese?

Use cheddar, feta, or goat cheese, but keep the cream cheese.

Why did the rolls open?

They were likely overfilled or not placed seam side down.

Can I freeze them?

I prefer them fresh, though unbaked rolls can be frozen and baked with extra time.

If you make this, leave a comment with the change you tried or the detail that mattered most in your kitchen. I always like hearing which small adjustments are worth repeating.

One final note from testing: I get the best results when I set everything out before starting and clean as I go. With asparagus bites, that means the last few minutes are about tasting and texture instead of scrambling for a tool. It sounds small, but it makes the recipe feel calm, and calm cooking usually tastes better.

Small details I do not skip

When I make asparagus bites, I take a minute to set up the ingredients before heat, batter, or dough is involved. That sounds ordinary, but it keeps me from overcooking one piece while looking for another. With ingredients like crumbled blue cheese, garlic clove, loaf sliced white bread, the recipe tastes cleaner when each part is measured, trimmed, and ready before I begin.

  • I read the full method first.
  • I use the pan or glass size the recipe expects.
  • I watch texture as much as time.
  • I taste where it is safe to taste.
  • I write down the useful change.

I also give the finished asparagus bites a short pause before serving when the recipe allows it. Bread slices cleaner, sauces settle, muffins firm up, and fried foods stop sputtering. That little rest is not wasted time; it is usually the difference between food that looks rushed and food I am happy to put on the table.

Small details I do not skip

When I make asparagus bites, I take a minute to set up the ingredients before heat, batter, or dough is involved. That sounds ordinary, but it keeps me from overcooking one piece while looking for another. With ingredients like crumbled blue cheese, garlic clove, loaf sliced white bread, the recipe tastes cleaner when each part is measured, trimmed, and ready before I begin.

  • I read the full method first.
  • I use the pan or glass size the recipe expects.
  • I watch texture as much as time.
  • I taste where it is safe to taste.
  • I write down the useful change.

I also give the finished asparagus bites a short pause before serving when the recipe allows it. Bread slices cleaner, sauces settle, muffins firm up, and fried foods stop sputtering. That little rest is not wasted time; it is usually the difference between food that looks rushed and food I am happy to put on the table.

Asparagus bites

Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 20 mins Total Time 35 mins Difficulty: Easy Servings: 6 Calories: 96 kcal Dietary:
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Description

These asparagus bites wrap blanched spears in flattened white bread with a garlicky cream cheese and blue cheese filling. I bake them until the edges crisp and serve them warm.

Ingredients You’ll Need

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 400°F (204°C) and line a baking sheet with parchment.
  2. Mix softened cream cheese, blue cheese, minced garlic, salt, and pepper.
  3. Flatten bread slices, brush with melted butter, and spread about 1/2 tablespoon filling on each.
  4. Place a blanched asparagus spear on each slice, roll, and set seam side down.
  5. Brush with beaten egg white and bake until lightly golden and warmed through, about 5 minutes or a few minutes more if needed.
  6. Cool slightly and serve with mayonnaise if desired.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 6


Amount Per Serving
Calories 96kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 10g16%
Saturated Fat 5g25%
Trans Fat 0.2g
Cholesterol 27mg9%
Sodium 90mg4%
Potassium 33mg1%
Total Carbohydrate 1g1%
Sugars 1g
Protein 1g2%

Calcium 23 mg
Iron 0.2 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

Dry spears. Moisture softens the bread.

Thin filling. A light layer seals better.

Taste salt. Blue cheese is already salty.

Serve warm. The texture is best early.

Keywords: asparagus bites, asparagus appetizer, cream cheese asparagus, blue cheese appetizer, baked party bites, white bread rolls

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Can I use frozen asparagus?

Yes, if it is thawed and patted very dry.

Can I assemble them ahead?

Yes. Cover the pan and refrigerate, then bake shortly before serving.

What if I dislike blue cheese?

Use cheddar, feta, or goat cheese, but keep the cream cheese.

Why did the rolls open?

They were likely overfilled or not placed seam side down.

Can I freeze them?

I prefer them fresh, though unbaked rolls can be frozen and baked with extra time.

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