One of the great disappointments in my life is that
uilos Does Not Eat Eggs.
I am a big fan of Breakfast Any Time, and over the last holy cow ten years I've more or less perfected my pancake recipe. (Although these days instead of "1 cup flour" it's "5 oz flour," because flour should be measured by weight not volume.) I make pretty good crepes, too, and my waffles are only okay but I blame that on having a not so good waffle iron. Real Breakfast is a thing that happens, at least one day a weekend.
I don't get to make eggs for two, though. Which is a shame, because I like eggs, and there's an awful lot of things you can do with them. So I only get eggs when I'm willing to cook for just me, and also to do the dishes from actually cooking something.
Scrambled eggs are easy: skillet on low-medium heat, a little butter in the skillet, beat the eggs but not too much and mix in some milk and chili powder, and go. (I am not a believer in "cheesy scrambled eggs," mostly on the grounds that it's a pain in the neck to clean up melted cheese and egg.) Omelettes are harder, but the failure mode of "omelette" is scrambled eggs with stuff, so that's alright.
I've tried poaching eggs, and I mostly end up with a mess. A few years ago I got a couple of silicone "poach pods," which hold the egg and float in a covered pot of boiling water. This makes something close enough to poached eggs for my taste. I can never get the yolks right, though. Either they're too runny, or they're solid and I might as well have hard-boiled them. What I'm looking for is something Lewis Grizzard described as "over medium": "The yolk shouldn't run out when you cut it. It should ooze."
A couple of weeks ago Shauna (
idoru, not that she posts anymore) put up a link on Facebook to the basted egg. That's "basted," not "blasted" or "bastard," though I suppose
uilos would disagree. It's sort of halfway between frying and poaching. I've tried it a couple of times, and their description of what happens to the yolk isn't really accurate. It doesn't so much "change colour" as it develops a sort of translucent skin of cooked egg-white over it. When the skin covers the whole thing, it's nearly overdone and you should have served it up about ten seconds ago. It's tasty, though. Served over toast the yolk sort of seeps in, and the whites aren't as crispy-crunchy as I get with fried eggs. It has replaced "scrambled" as my go-to egg.
I haven't tried the egg-over-tortilla-basted-with-salsa that the article describes. Maybe next week for lunch.
(happy birthday, sor!)
I am a big fan of Breakfast Any Time, and over the last holy cow ten years I've more or less perfected my pancake recipe. (Although these days instead of "1 cup flour" it's "5 oz flour," because flour should be measured by weight not volume.) I make pretty good crepes, too, and my waffles are only okay but I blame that on having a not so good waffle iron. Real Breakfast is a thing that happens, at least one day a weekend.
I don't get to make eggs for two, though. Which is a shame, because I like eggs, and there's an awful lot of things you can do with them. So I only get eggs when I'm willing to cook for just me, and also to do the dishes from actually cooking something.
Scrambled eggs are easy: skillet on low-medium heat, a little butter in the skillet, beat the eggs but not too much and mix in some milk and chili powder, and go. (I am not a believer in "cheesy scrambled eggs," mostly on the grounds that it's a pain in the neck to clean up melted cheese and egg.) Omelettes are harder, but the failure mode of "omelette" is scrambled eggs with stuff, so that's alright.
I've tried poaching eggs, and I mostly end up with a mess. A few years ago I got a couple of silicone "poach pods," which hold the egg and float in a covered pot of boiling water. This makes something close enough to poached eggs for my taste. I can never get the yolks right, though. Either they're too runny, or they're solid and I might as well have hard-boiled them. What I'm looking for is something Lewis Grizzard described as "over medium": "The yolk shouldn't run out when you cut it. It should ooze."
A couple of weeks ago Shauna (
I haven't tried the egg-over-tortilla-basted-with-salsa that the article describes. Maybe next week for lunch.
(happy birthday, sor!)
no subject
Date: 2015-08-30 02:23 am (UTC)Eggs are Ingredients.
Do you eat baking powder straight? Butter? Soy Sauce? No. These are Ingredients, not Food. Same with eggs.
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Date: 2015-09-02 02:09 am (UTC)The trick is not to break the yolk while turning, which I'm pretty sure used to be easier, so possibly those with less mass-produced eggs in their fridges would do better. Anyway, when done right you get buttery toast plus egg, only have to clean one pan (which was greased w/ the butter before egging) and you can creditably argue that the eggs *are* an ingredient.
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Date: 2015-09-03 02:38 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2015-08-29 06:55 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2015-08-29 04:18 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2015-09-04 06:38 pm (UTC)Poached eggs are awesome. I have a pan that makes great poached eggs. Considering that I love eggs Benedict, we have them fairly frequently.
You make crepes? Yummy! Do you have a recipe you could share?
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