“How do you want your eggs?”
How many times have been asked that at a restaurant and not known
exactly how to answer it? “What’s the way where it’s fried but the yolk
is still runny?” “Aren’t sunny side up and over easy the same thing?”
“What’s the difference between over easy and over medium?” “What the
heck are basted eggs?”
Eggs really tie breakfast together. They’re great in so many ways:
inexpensive, easy to prepare, cook quickly, and offer a solid source of
protein.
So how do you answer the next time a server asks how you’d like your eggs? Here are 11 ways to cook an egg.
1. Hard Boiled
A hard boiled egg is cooked in its shell in boiling water. The “hard”
refers to the consistency of the egg white (or albumen) and the yolk.
Making them is simple. Fill a pot with enough water to cover your eggs
by about two inches. Bring it to a boil and carefully drop in the eggs
and leave them for 10-12 minutes. For easier peeling, place the eggs
immediately in an ice water bath after boiling, then gently tap and roll
them on a counter. (There’s also the gimmick of adding a teaspoon of
baking soda to the boiling water to help loosen the shells, cracking the
shells off both ends, and blowing the egg out of its shell. Look it up
on YouTube.) Bonus: you can hard boil a bunch of eggs at a time and
refrigerate them. Eat them with a sprinkle of kosher salt, or chop onto
salads.
2. Soft Boiled
Soft boiled eggs follow the same process as hard boiled eggs, but you
cut the cooking time roughly in half. This gets the egg white cooked
while leaving the yolk runny. Our preferred method is the “six minute
egg,” which sounds way fancy. (“This is a pile of breadcrumbs and a six
minute egg.” “Ooooooo!”) The six minute is just like it sounds: bring
your water to a boil, gently lower in the eggs, set a timer for six
minutes, then remove the eggs and drop them in an ice bath.
Sometimes soft boiled eggs are eaten in the shell, stood upright in
little egg cups. You can then daintily tap the top of the egg with a
spoon and scoop out the insides. They’re great on toast, sprinkled with
salt, pepper, and hot sauce. We also love dropping a couple on a thick
black bean soup.
3. Hard Scrambled
The almighty scrambled eggs. When they’re done right, they’re my
favorite preparation. I like that scrambled eggs can be made by
accident: “Oops, I dropped these eggs. I guess I’ll just mix them up
over some heat.” Scrambled technically means that the whites and yolks
are broken and mixed together. Hard scrambled eggs are cooked all the
through. This is the default preparation for scrambled eggs at most
restaurants, and while they’re good, they border dangerously on dry.
4. Soft Scrambled
That’s why I prefer soft scrambled eggs, sometimes referred to
as “wet.” The texture is 10x better, and they play more nicely with
other ingredients. The difference between soft and hard scrambled eggs
is cooking time. If you want soft scrambled eggs, you need to keep in
mind that eggs. cook. quickly. You can’t walk away from them. Whip your
eggs (I add a little milk) in a separate bowl. Heat your pan no higher
than medium, grease it, pour the eggs in, then stay close with a
spatula. Turn and fold them repeatedly while they cook. Use the spatula
to prevent them from spreading out, especially up the sides of the pan;
when they spread too thin, they’ll over-cook quickly. I usually fold
them until they no longer look runny, but still look wet (i.e. light is
reflecting in them). Have your plate ready so you can remove them from
heat immediately. They’re perfect on buttered toast with salt and
pepper; try adding slices of cheese or sauteed kale.
4a. “Perfect” Scrambled Eggs
If you want super creamy soft scrambled eggs, you can use the method we learned from Gordon Ramsay.
Drop eggs into a pan over medium-high heat, along with one, thin pat of
butter for each egg. Then start stirring with a spatula. Break the
yolks, let them mix with the butter and whites. And keep stirring. If
the pan gets too hot, lift it off the heat briefly. And keep stirring.
Do this for about 4-5 minutes, until the eggs start coming together.
Right before you take them off the heat, add a dash of milk, sour cream,
or creme fraiche. Stir that in, then ladle the eggs onto toast and
sprinkle with herbs (chive, dill, green onion) or salt and pepper. The
result is some of the creamiest, softest eggs you’ve ever tasted.
4b. Omelets & Frittatas
Scrambled eggs can be manipulated in many ways. Ordering plain scrambled
eggs means they’ll be mixed and moved in the pan, whereas an omelet or
frittata indicates that the scrambled eggs are cooked until they’ve
stabilized into a usable form and topped with other ingredients:
cheeses, meats, vegetables, anything. A frittata is typically
open-faced, whereas an omelet is folded over in half onto the additions.
But the egg base remains the same (except in egg white omelets, where
yolks are separated out).
4c. Scrambles & Hashes
These preparations are pretty simple, as far as eggs go. A
scramble usually means other ingredients are scrambled in the pan with
the eggs. This could include meats, cheese, sauteed veggies, or diced
potatoes (or, yes, hot dogs). Good if you’re a fan of scrambled eggs
and, well, everything else breakfast has to offer.
5. Sunny Side Up
Sunny side up means your egg yolk looks like a bright morning sun. To
make: crack an egg directly into your greased frying device. Then fry it
until the edges brown, WITHOUT flipping. Flipping your sunny side up
egg turns it into an over easy egg. The yolk is runny, and depending on
how long you fry it, the albumen is completely or partially set. We
refer to these as runny or “dipping” eggs. The runny yolk is great for
dipping toast into.
6. Over Easy
Eggs over easy and sunny side up are often using interchangeably, but
they are different. You go from sunny side up to over easy by simply
flipping your egg when the edges are brown. The “easy” doesn’t refer to
the simplicity of turning over an egg, but the state of your yolk. “Over
easy” means the egg is flipped and cooked just long enough to make a
film on the top of the yolk. When served, the yolk – and some of the
whites – are still runny.
7. Over Medium
Over medium is the next step after easy: they’re fried,
flipped, and fried a little longer, enough to cook the whites through
and brown the edges slightly. You’ll develop a thicker film on your
yolk, but the inside is still runny. Good for those like the dipping
quality without a watery egg white.
8. Over Hard
And over hard is the final step. Over hard is fried, flipped,
and fried again – usually with the yolk broken – until both the white
and the yolk are completely cooked. Just tap the edge of your spatula
into the yolk or poke it with a fork before turning it over. Be careful
not to dribble the yolk when flipping.
9. Poached
Poaching ties with soft scrambled as my favorite preparation. It’s like
boiling but without the shell, or like over medium that skips contact
with the pan. These means you’re avoiding any hard edges. The white is
cooked through and the yolk is warm and runny. Just imagine it mixing
with a bright hollandaise on an eggs benedict.
Methods for poaching vary. Restaurants looking to poach in bulk will
often immerse ramekins with raw eggs into boiling water, sometimes a
whole tray full at a time. If you’re just poaching at home, it’s
actually much easier than you may think. I haven’t perfected my personal
method, but the two that have worked for me are:
1.) The Whirlpool. Heat your water just shy of a rolling
point. Add a dash of vinegar (some recipes call for a 1/2 cup, but
that’s always too much for me. I don’t like my eggs tasting like acetic
acid). Crack the egg into a tiny bowl. Swirl the water in your pan to
create a whirlpool, then carefully drop the egg into the center. The
swirling pulls whites altogether in the center. Leave it in the water
for about five minutes, then lift out with a slotted spoon.
2.) The Strainer. Heat water. Add vinegar. Crack the egg
into a mesh strainer to let the most watery portion of the whites (it’s
not much) drip out – this prevents danglers. Carefully decant the egg
from the strainer into the water. Cook for about five minutes. Retrieve
with slotted spoon.
And if you make a mistake… well, just look up some recipes for egg drop soup.
10. Baked or Shirred
Baked eggs are cracked and baked in a dish. “Shirred” refers to the
flat-bottomed dish in which they’re frequently cooked. They’re almost
always mixed with other ingredients. The white mixes in and gets cooked
through, while the yolk is left runny. For example: a tomato provencal
dish (pictured from Pistacia Vera),
with eggs cooked into a bed of cream, tomatoes, cheese, and herbs. Or
the North African/Mediterranean dish shakshouka (like at Mazah). The benefit of this preparation is that the egg really blends into the ingredients.
11. Basted
I’ve come across some some eggs on restaurant menus that are
labeled as basted but are clearly poached. Generally basted means liquid
or steam is used to thoroughly cook the egg white without flipping. For
instance, while frying an egg in butter, you repeatedly scoop and pour
the extra butter on top of the egg. This cooks the yolk and top whites
without forcing you to flip it. Alternatively, you can also squirt some
water into the pan and then cover the egg with a lid, to steam the
whites. If you do this quickly, you can cook the whole egg before the
edges start to brown, which seems to be the appeal of basted eggs (much
like poached eggs).
11a. Spanish fried eggs **NEW ADDITION**
One specific form of basting is known as Spanish fried eggs. They’re
popular in France – just kidding, Spain – and are fried at high temps in
olive oil, while you spoon the hot oil over the egg. You’re in danger
of getting splashed, but we all need to live a little, right? I fry my
eggs over medium heat, just below the oil’s smoke point. Crack an egg
into a small bowl first, then ladle it into the hot oil, and start
scooping oil over the white and the yolk for about 1 minute. The result
is the best of all worlds: crispy edges, creamy whites, and a runny
yolk. Bonus: try different olive oils to affect the final flavor.
Okay, so that was actually fifteen ways to prepare eggs. But you get
the point: eggs are versatile, even in the different textures and
flavors they offer through different cooking methods. And there’s so
much you can do with eggs once they’re cooked: fold scrambled eggs in a
burrito, layer a fried egg on a burger, chop a hard boiled egg in a
salad, or put poached eggs on everything. Regardless of how you use
them, they enhance any breakfast dish and they stand perfectly fine on
their own.
yolk - żółtko (w jajku)
runny - cieknący, lejący się, płynny, półpłynny, rzadki
sunny-side up - jajko sadzone
eggs over easy - jajka smażone z dwóch stron
heck - do licha! psiakrew!
what the hell; what the heck - co u diabła, co u licha
baste - podlewać, dodawać wody ( w trakcie gotowania, duszenia potraw)
solid - stały, zbity (twardy); stały (w formie ciała stałego); solidny
hard boiled - na twardo (jajko)
shell - skorupk, łupina (np. jajka, orzecha)
refer - nazywać, zwracać się (do kogoś lub czegoś w określony sposób)
refer to sth - odnosić się do czegoś, nawiązywać do czegoś
albumen - albumina, białko (np. w jajku)
pot - garnek
cover - przykryć, nakryć, okryć; pokrywa, powłoka; okładka (książki lub czasopisma)
inche - cal (2,54 centymetra); posuwać się (wolno)
peeling - obieranie; łuszczenie się; oczyszczanie cery
peel - obierać (ze skórki); łuszczyć się, schodzić; odklejać
immediately - natychmiast; bezpośrednio
gently - delikatnie (np. poruszać się, sugerować); łagodnie (np. głaskać, czesać); lekko (np. dmuchnąć)
tap - stuknąć, klepnąć
counter - kontuar, lada, bufet
gimmick - sztuczka, chwyt (np. reklamowy, marketingowy)
cracking - pęknięcie; rysa; doskonały, wspaniały
crack - pękać; rozłupać, strzaskać
bunch - pęk, bukiet, wiązka; kiść
refrigerate - chłodzić, ochładzać (jedzenie lub napój), zamrażać; przechowywać w chłodni, trzymać w lodówce
sprinkle - odrobina (czegoś), szczypta (np. soli)
kosher - koszerny; w porządku, do zaakceptowania, nadający się
chop - kotlet
roughly - z grubsza, mniej więcej; prymitywnie, ordynarnie
pile - stos, sterta
breadcrumbs - bułka tarta
breadcrumb - okruszek chleba
upright - pionowo, prosto
stand upright - stać prosto
daintily - delikatnie, misternie
scoop (slang) - szybki zysk
scoop out - wykopać, wyskubać
scrambled egg - jajecznica
almighty - potężny (o osobie)
preparation - przygotowanie
heat - ciepło, upał, gorąco
default - nie uiścić należności, nie uregulować płatności
ingredient - składnik (potrawy)
whip - biczować, smagać, chłostać (za pomocą bata); zacinać, smagać, uderzać, wzburzać (np. wiatr, deszcz); ubijać (np. śmietanę, jajka)
grease - smar, tłuszcz, maż, łój, okrasa, smalec
pour - nalewać; zalewać, wylewać
repeatedly - ciągle, raz za razem, wielokrotnie
prevent - zapobiegać
spread out - rozkładać, rozłożyć, rozpościerać się; rozłożyć, rozkładać (w czasie)
saute - przysmażyć; podsmażyć krótko na średnim lub dużym ogniu w niewielką ilością tłuszczu
kale - jarmuż (odmiana kapusty); kapusta
briefly- przelotnie, na krótko
creme fraîche - śmietana zakwaszona (z francuskiego)
stir - zamieszać, mieszać
ladle - chochla, chochelka; łyżka wazowa
chive - szczypior, szczypiorek
dill - koperek, kper
indicate - wskazywać, pokazywać; oświadczać, określać
usable - użyteczny, przydatny (np. informacja); nadający się do użytku, używalny, użytkowy
remains - szczątki zwłoki, szczątki
remain - pozostać(np. w pozycji siedzącej); pozostać, nie zmienić się; uchować się, zachować się
Hashe - siekać (mięso); spaprać (coś), sknocić; zapiekanka z siekanego mięsa i ziemniaków
dice - kostka (do gry); kości (gra z użyciem kości)
bright - jasny; słoneczny, pogodny (np. dzień, pogoda)
flip - podrzucać (np. naleśniki); gwałtownie coś otworzyć (np. butelkę, słoik); zdenerować się, wściec się; przerzucać (np. strony)
partially - częściowo
dip - szybka kąpiel (w basenie, jeziorze); spadek (np. popularności, temperatury); sos, dip (do maczania zakąsek)
interchangeably - wymiennie, zamiennie
simplicity - prostota (np. życia, ubioru); naiwności, prostota (umysłu)
slightly - nieznacznie, nieco
thick - gruby (o przedmiocie); bujny, gęsty (np. krzaki)
dribble - dryblować (piłką); kapać (o wodzie); kapać (o ślinie)
poaching - gotowaniew małej ilości płynu
poach - gotować jajko bez skorupki; gotować w małej ilości wody lub mleka (dusić); kłusować, uprawiać kłusownictwo, polować nielegalnie
skip - podskakiwać, podrygiwać; unikać (obowiązków), pomijać (pewne czynności); skakać (przez skakankę)
pan - rondel, patelnia
edge - krawędź, brzeg, skraj; przesunąć, przesuwać (w kierunku czegoś); oblamować, otoczyć; zmieniać się
hollandaise - sos holenderski
eggs Benedict - jajka Benedykta (grzanki z jajkami, szynką i sosem holederskim)
vary - różnić się, zmieniać się; zależeć, być zależnym (od czegoś); urozmaicać (np. dietę)
bulk - wielki rozmiar, wielka bryła, cielsko, ogrom (o opakowaniu, o maszynerii); cielsko, zwalista figura (o dużym ciele); błonnik
immerse - zanurzać
ramekin - ramekin (naczynie do zapiekania)
raw - surowy (nieugotowany), nieprzetworzony
tray - taca; płaski pojemnik
acetic acid - kwas octowy
tiny - niewielki, maleńki
swirl - kłębowisko (np. dymu), kłąb (np. kurzu), wir (wydarzeń); zawijas; wirować (o wodzie); kotłować się (o myślach, emocjach)
altogether - zupełnie, całkiem, całkowicie; razem, w sumie
mesh - siatka, oczko, oko w sieci; zazębienie
źródło: http://www.breakfastwithnick.com/2014/04/08/how-do-you-want-your-eggs-eleven-ways-to-cook-an-egg/
Brak komentarzy:
Prześlij komentarz