How to Boil an Egg
...or make an omelette
Soft-boiled eggs are placed in cold water
and the pot placed on the flame. They take 3 or 4 minutes from
when the water first starts to boil, so time them carefully and
quickly pop them into cold water and crack one of the ends to
stop them cooking further. The English call this "topping" the
boiled egg.
Serve with buttered bread, or "soldiers". These are slices
of buttered toast that have been cut into strips - rather like
thick French fries. The toast "soldiers" are then dipped into
the still-soft egg yolk and eaten. Hot and very yummy. You
still need a teaspoon to scoop out the rest of the cooked egg
as well. If you've never done this before, try it!
Hard-boiled eggs need about 20 minutes
boiling. They too should be quenched in cold water, but should
be allowed to cool fully before you try and peel the shells.
Once the shell has been removed, you can use the hard-boiled
eggs in salads. You can chop the egg or slice it, and have it
in sandwiches... even in cold salads. The egg tastes even
better with a little mustard or mayonnaise.
You can just throw a couple of hard boiled eggs into a
packed lunch to take with you hiking or exploring. Add a
sandwich and an apple or orange, and it's a simple but healthy
meal.
You can even take the peeled hardboiled eggs and coat them
with sausage mix. I used to buy rissoles at my local butcher'
shop, cut and squash the rissoles and then mold the mix over
each cooked egg. You then roll each meaty ball in breadcrumbs
to stop it sticking, and cook them in hot oil until they turn
golden brown on the outside. What have you just made? Why,
they're Scotch Eggs... Great food items to
include in a picnic lunch, and even more tasty when eaten with
a little brown barbecue sauce!
It you've brought a fry pan, you can make
omelettes quite easily. Just break and beat 2 to 3
eggs per person in a bowl. Pour into a hot pan and cook on a
medium to slow heat until the bottom is brown and the egg on
top is nearly set.
You can add most any kind of filling to the middle of an
omelette... chopped ham, bacon, cooked onion, diced or shredded
cheese, sliced capsicum, shredded lettuce, chopped tomato...
whatever you have on hand. Even baked beans are fine, if a
little wet and sloppy.
Sprinkle the filling liberally all over the setting egg and
season with salt an pepper. Lift and turn one side over on top
of the other half while the omelette sets, lift it out and
serve with salad and potato or whatever.
If you have a larger frying pan, you can make a bigger
omelette for several people and divide it up once it has been
cooked. However the largest omelette most people can safely
make seems to be at the 10 egg mark. And for that you need a
well-controlled fry pan, or else the egg will burn on the
bottom and still be soggy on the top. It is also the hardest
thing to try and remove a large omelette from the pan without
it breaking.
That's why I like to make my omelettes one serving at a
time.
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