Lady Bracknell
Handbag at Dawn
I love poached eggs - quite the finest way to eat them - but have only got a rather ancient and unreliable egg poacher. So Lush's method (with added buttered cling film tip from hitony) sounds quite BRILLIANT.
I love poached eggs - quite the finest way to eat them - but have only got a rather ancient and unreliable egg poacher. So Lush's method (with added buttered cling film tip from hitony) sounds quite BRILLIANT.
Always scrambled eggs - made by mixing powdered egg with powdered milk and water, stirring until most of the evidence of the powder (but not all) had disappeared, leaving the resultant goo to go cold and semi-congealed in a pan. Help yourself. The toast was cold, too. And the margarine ... don't get me going about the margarine.
Nothings beats Egg in Soup. With a Pork Pie by the side when feeling peckish.
Lovely
Boiled egg curry, mmmmm!
My preferred method these days is to break an egg into a mug lined with cling film, twizzle to seal and drop the whole parcel into boiling water for 5 mins. Remove cling film. Eat on toast.
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And the margarine ... don't get me going about the margarine.
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I don't really like poached eggs, but have scrambled every Sunday.
Taken me ages to get it right. If anyone is interested, fot two people I break 4 eggs into a COLD saucepan.
Whisk (with a proper hand whisk - not a fork) and then add about a tablespoon of butter, salt and pepper.
This is placed over the LOWEST heat possible on the hob and whisked continuously and vigorously. The eggs will foam if you are doing it right.
The mixture will firstly start to thicken like custard.
This is a completely different approach than simply roughing up an omelette. Proper scrambled eggs take time.
When it starts to solidify at the bottom, I move to a wooden spoon but still continue to stir very quickly. This is a crucial stage and leaving the pan on the heat without stiring will ruin it.
When you need to leave the pan for a few minutes to make the toast, it's important you take it off even the low heat that is there
Timing is crucial. When the eggs still have a certain amount of liquid, you can start to think about the toast, remembering that the eggs continue to cook in the pan alone when off the heat.
Anyway - this method of whisking over a low heat continuously and vigorously initially into a thick custard makes very very creamy eggs. Everyone thinks they know how to make scrambled eggs (I did) but when it's done properly, you realise how rubbish the ones you made before were.