A few years ago my Mom and I went to a cooking class in  Bloomfield  - Pittsburgh's "little Italy" - for our birthday gifts,  thanks Dad!  The class was put on by Maria, the owner of our favorite  Italian gift shop.  (Dominic the Donkey visits there every Christmas,  but that's a another story for a different day!)  We gathered around a  big dining room table in the apartment above the store while Maria got  cookin'.   She taught us how to make soups, homemade stock, biscotti,  etc, while we took notes and eventually ate all of the delicious food  she made.  We ate, and ate, and ate.
Everything was so good, but  the BEST thing she made that day was what she called a "broccoli,  chicken, cheddar braid."  As you might guess, the ingredients include  broccoli, chicken, and cheddar cheese, plus mayonnaise, dill, red  peppers which I replace with red onion (note: I HATE peppers and remove  them from every and all recipes.) and garlic.  You mix all of those  together, then put the mixture into the center of crescent roll dough  that's been laid flat.  You cut a billion little diagonal lines into the  sides of the dough and then "braid" the dough over the top of the  mixture, which is much easier said than done!  Finish it off with an egg  wash and either pine nuts or slivered almonds on top and bake it in the  oven.  It turns out to be flaky and buttery on the outside and cheesy and delicious on the inside.  My favorite part is the slight flavor from the dill. MMMMMMM!
In Maria's class I remember her saying more than once that  she likes to eat the filling alone.  Every time I make it there seems  to be just a litttttttttle bit too much filling, so I save some and eat  it while the rest is baking ;)
I've made this recipe at least 10  times now, and it is definitely a favorite!  I made it for my roommates  my senior year of college - it lasted only a day or 2 in a fridge  belonging to 5 women, for pumpkin carving parties, birthday parties, and  sometimes just for myself!  My friend Allison suggested I blog about it  since she liked it so much, although I don't know how much she got to  eat since the #1 fan of the recipe EVER was her boyfriend's Dad who ate  90% of it before noon one Saturday!  Thanks Ali :)
In other  related food news, I LOVE Hungry Girl - Lisa Lillen, google her.  She  brought it to my attention that Pillsbury now makes seamless dough,  which I just found in a Hawaii grocery store this week!  (Hawaii lags in  getting new products, music, everything...)  This can potentially save  tons of time and sticky fingers from pressing the crescent roll dough  together for the Broc, chix, cheddar braid!  Did I forget to mention  that ANNOYING step?! OOPS!  So I have the dough but didn't know what to  make with it but now it seems so obvious...
This is Maria's creation and the first time I ever tried the glorious, glorious recipe.
Here's one that I made, using almonds instead of pine nuts.
Bryce makes them, too!
Broccoli Chicken Cheddar Braid
adapted from Maria's (of Merante Gifts in Bloomfield, PA) recipe
2 cups of cooked, chopped chicken
2 crowns of broccoli, chopped
2 cups of shredded cheddar cheese
1 cup of mayonnaise (I use light mayo)
4 cloves of garlic, minced
1/2 of a red onion, finely chopped
Dill to taste
2 packages crescent roll dough (seamless if possible)
To make the filling, mix together the chicken, broccoli, red onion, cheese, garlic, dill, and mayo. (If preparing in advance, cover and chill overnight.)
Lay each package of dough flat on a greased cookie sheet. If you can't find the seamless dough, press the seams of the triangular crescent rolls together. Spoon half of the chicken mixture onto each.
With a sharp knife or scissors, cut the dough into one inch wide strips around the edges. Bring the strips up over the top of the filling, rotating sides to get a braided effect. Repeat for the second braid.
OPTIONAL: Brush each braid with egg white wash and sprinkle with sliced almonds or pine nuts.
Bake at 350 degrees F for 25 minutes, or until the dough is firm and golden brown. Allow to cool before cutting.
UPDATE!!
I got a brilliant idea to turn this braid into individual cups made in cupcake/muffin tins! What took me so long to think of that?
To make this recipe into cups:
 Cut the flattened dough sheets into 12 squares each (3 wide by 4 high  worked best for me). Spray 2 cupcake/muffin tins with non-stick cooking  spray. Place one square inside each compartment, then spoon equal  amounts of the chicken mixture into each. Bake at 350 degrees F for  about 18 - 20 minutes.
This is so much easier and tastes just as good!