Genius Recipes

The Creamiest Scrambled Eggs, Thanks to a Genius Trick

Finally! Soft, custardy scrambled eggs for people who don't have the time—or patience—for low-and-slow.

June  4, 2019

With Genius Recipes correspondent Kristen off for a few months trying to raise a genius newborn, we’re revisiting the column’s Greatest Hits—and hearing from a few special surprise guests—with brand-new videos. Wish her luck! (And keep sending those tips.)

There are so many decisions confronting scrambled egg lovers: Do you loosen the beaten eggs with milk or cream (or water or stock) or is all of that anathema? Which pan, what spatula? And what about cheese?

But the most vexing—and the most likely to draw a wide chasm between what I might gently call scrambled egg snobs and the rest of us—is whether you insist on cooking them low and slow for custardy, creamy eggs, or do something a little more efficient with your morning. You can tell which direction I lean.

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What Mandy @ Lady and pups has done for all of us, especially the impatient types, is speed up the beautifully soft scrambled egg from something like 15 minutes of constant stirring (or upwards of an hour in a double boiler, if you follow Laurie Colwin) to 15 seconds. Not only that, but Mandy has made the whole process more forgiving, too.

How? It involved those pups: After doctoring eggs with cornstarch for her "temporarily anorexic dog-son," she decided to cook and eat some herself. "A thickening agent is the answer to the previously-thought-impossible scrambled eggs fantasy," she writes. "Speed, and creaminess, all together."



This might sound confusing or strange, until you realize that cornstarch is itself an egg substitute. We've seen it standing in for egg in Jeni's genius ice cream base and other Philadephia-style recipes. And the allergic, vegan, or unprepared swap it freely into baking recipes.

But a small amount of cornstarch (or potato starch) is much better than a straight replacement—eggs are delicate, and cooking them too fast and hot results in the proteins seizing up, squeezing out moisture, and the eggs going dry and tough. Cornstarch stands in the way of these protein connections, as I learned from J. Kenji López-Alt at Serious Eats, who likes to add cornstarch to the eggs in egg drop soup to protect them from overcooking and turning rubbery.



This changes everything.

I've had jags of making scrambled eggs and toast every night for dinner for weeks, always aiming for a certain 3-second window of perfection and comfort. I finally got the seasoning down (1/4 teaspoon of Diamond Crystal kosher salt for 2 eggs), but in my impatience I still tend to overshoot and wind up with spongy eggs more often than I want to admit. Cornstarch saves me. "It's just concealing the fact that you overcooked your eggs," said one disgruntled Lifehacker commenter named Tristan. Yes! The eggs pictured here sat in the pan way too long while they were photographed. We ate them all.



You'll notice that this calls for a lot of butter, so just to be safe I tried the recipe both with and without the cornstarch, to see how much was really just the goodness of butter. Without cornstarch, the eggs were good but stiffer, the butter more free-floating. And I've found that even if you skimp on the butter, the cornstarch has dramatic effects.

Put them in tacos and breakfast burritos, on English muffins or toast (no need to butter!). Add herbs or salty bacon or just eat a big bowlful all by itself. Or, do like Mandy: "This may be weird, but I like soft on soft, so a savory oatmeal topped with this scrambled egg, with anchovy toasted breadcrumbs, would make me real happy."

Lady & Pups' Magic 15-Second Creamy Scrambled Eggs

Adapted slightly from Lady and Pups

Serves 1

3 large eggs
1 1/2 tablespoons whole milk (1/2 tablespoon for each egg)
1 3/4 teaspoons cornstarch or potato starch (1/2 + 1/8 teaspoon for each egg)
Salt to season
3 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 tablespoon for each egg)

See the full recipe (and save and print it) here.

Got a genius recipe to share—from a classic cookbook, an online source, or anywhere, really? Perhaps something perfect for beginners? Please send it Kristen's way (and tell her what's so smart about it) at [email protected].

Photos by Mark Weinberg

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137 Comments

Ann D. February 3, 2023
I use Mandy Lee's suggestion of Potato Starch (rather than cornstarch)--every time I make scrambled eggs--they ALWAYS come out custardy smoothe and soft. I love this suggestion! Thanks for making a video of it.
 
Waty K. March 24, 2022
Tq for the options. Will give it a try. Ignore the haters. I always love to learn new tricks and ideas.
 
Michele W. February 13, 2022
Amazing how the experts come out of the wood work to state how this is not good. And how they are over all the “how to” on scrambled eggs 🤣. I read others recipes to learn. If I decide to try it out it might change how I do things. I appreciate the share & tips. Thank you.
 
pattiebrown52 October 3, 2021
Don't know which I'm more thankful for the hack for the eggs (great!) or finding Lady and the Pups blog!). I am never let down by Genius recipes and/or tips!
 
Kim C. February 22, 2021
Please look at the audience once in a while not just your cohost or Because it becomes boring to watch you to talk to each other and not include us, after all you are doing this for us. Thank you
 
Patti P. January 7, 2020
I love scrambled eggs. It is the one dish I can explode my taste buds. I whip 2 eggs w/ 1 tbsp real salted butter. I out it in the microwave for 1 minute(I'm hungry already) then I add 1/2 cup of shredded cheddar-extra sharp. I return it the microwave for 33( 3 is the Lord's pleasure, HolySpirit gave me this recipe, double pleasure to Him alone) put it in a yellow cup to cook(HolySpirit is blonde) remove it and add cinnamon and salt!!! Wait for Jesus to come back,(hardest part) till cool. Amen
 
Richard R. November 30, 2019
put 3 eggs in a bowl. Add 1/2 teaspoon of salt. Whisk. Bring a pot of water to a boil. Make sure there's at least 5 inches of water in the pot. Wait until it boils. Pour in the eggs and try to keep them from striking the bottom where they might stick. Cover the pot and let stand about 30 to 45 seconds. Pour the eggs into a strainer. Roll out on a plate. If moist is what you want you'll not get a better plate of eggs and.................no butter.
 
Rowannn G. December 1, 2019
Very interesting! I'll try it.
 
Jnl July 1, 2019
Scrambled eggs is one of my easiest and fastest breakfast without cornstarch. Just seems like sacrilege add it.
 
Nancy July 1, 2019
Couldn't agree more; why add extra calories and alter the flavor ? The supposed time saved by not having to be as careful is probably wasted in finding and measuring out the additives. Not really a win, imvho.
 
Marguerite T. August 16, 2019
I have made these many times and it is quicker than the most of us (used to) scramble eggs. And, they are so velvety! I will never make eggs the old way! I add them on top of toast that I make an avocado spread instead of butter.
 
Andy C. June 26, 2019
Haters gonna hate...
I appreciate the options and iseas offered by people who write these articles.
You find it "disgusting" as someone so eloquently put it?
Don't do it. Easy peasy.
Open mind, open mouth haha
Recipies are evolved by ideas.
I tried it with a bit less butter and thought they were awesome!
So you have my thanks for the idea!
 
BL June 19, 2019
I was genuinely excited to read this... and then I saw the picture. Obscenely overcooked. I would hope that others aren't wasting their time on it.
America... Please stop cooking your eggs through. It's disgusting. Take a few moments and teach yourself how to soft scramble your eggs. You'll never want scrambled eggs any other way.
No reason to reinvent the wheel. The scrambled egg has already been perfected.
 
Nancy June 19, 2019
Thank you BL. I couldn't agree more.
 
Terri S. September 19, 2019
Wow! Those are some pretty strong words in critique (obscenely overcooked and disgusting?). For whatever reason, I've never been able to stomach a raw egg (undercooked, runny, raw...). So this recipe is, to me, delightful. I don't think we are all meant to think alike. America... please enjoy your eggs the way you like them best! I personally love to read and try out new things--it keeps things interesting.
 
Mark C. June 10, 2019
Definitely comes out as stated. Very easy to make. However, I like my eggs a little less custardy. So, I left the eggs in the pan to setup a bit more (which gave me about half the firmness I wanted). Next time, I think I'll halve the butter. The recipie uses a lot of butter for one serving.
 
Marija D. June 9, 2019
Worst advice ever. Ruining perfect eggs by adding, of all things, cornstarch. Just take five minutes and scramble some eggs. Also, I hope never to see another article on how to scramble eggs.
 
Nancy June 9, 2019
I couldn't agree more Marija!
 
lorraine June 12, 2019
Yes I agree with you
 
Marguerite T. August 16, 2019
Then don’t read them since you think you make perfect eggs! Life is all about trying new things. How can anyone make a bad comment without trying a recipe first? The
 
teresa B. June 9, 2019
This is amazing! I have an American style Bed and Breakfast in Sweden and make a personal
breakfast for each guest.This recipe saves me so much time and its a hit with every single
guest, not to mention fun to make. I’ve tried both corn and potato starch. Both work, but I stick with potato starch, it gives a better lighter taste and consistency.
 
Leck June 7, 2019
I read in a James Beard cook book 2 hints once that works for me. After you whisk the eggs whisk in about 1 teaspoon water for each egg. The water makes the books lighter and mostly boils out. If that seems too much. try 1/2 teaspoon per egg.
I also read to use cold butter - at least 1 teaspoon per egg - cut it into very small chunks and stir it I to the eggs. Then pour mixture into a preheated frying pan. I have never has precise timing so I am going to try the timing listed here. I do adhere to the practice of removing the pan from the heat.
Bon appetit.
p s. I also read somewhere that making good eggs is like making love; tenderly & slow.
 
Teresa S. June 7, 2019
Soft scrambled eggs rarely see the light of day on my house due to time constraints but I tried these this morning. Game Changer! I used less cornstarch than called for but only bc I didn’t use a measuring spoon. And a smaller pan than I should’ve so they weren't 11 second eggs but they were creamy and custardy and just lovely! Thanks for the steer!
 
PRuby June 6, 2019
Not a fan of this. I wish I'd thought it through before trying it. The cornstarch makes the eggs more bland, changing their flavor from nice egg-i-ness to tasteless (even the butter didn't help). Cornstarch is not an egg substitute, except as a thickener, and it doesn't add anything but bland to flavor. It also adds empty calories.
 
Shelley D. June 6, 2019
Now that all corn and corn products are GMOs, I'll pass on the cornstarch. I try to use as little as possible. Our corn, wheat, rice and soy are refused by most of the European Union as imports.
Until they fix this problem they've brought on American citizens, I will be avoiding those products. Interesting idea though.
 
Pamela_in_Tokyo June 6, 2019
I understand what you are saying. And I agree! You could try Japanese potato starch called Katakuriko, available in Asian supermarkets. It would definitely not be GMO as Japan does not allow it.

Katakuriko is used as a thickening ingredient in many Asian dishes for quick stir-fry type thickening. But it can’t really be used to replace cornstarch or flour in puddings where longer hotter cooking. It can’t take boiling. But, otherwise, it is great.
 
Bud Z. June 6, 2019
These are scrambled eggs not a science project. Too much butter in a non-stick pan. I use unsalted butter exclusively. Salt, in my opinion goes on the eggs not in them.
Moist, not wet, not hard. Very personal and not complicated.
 
Willow June 5, 2019
I really don’t like the idea of adding corn starch to my eggs. I would rather use ingredients that add flavor in my cooking instead of empty calories plus a follow a low carb diet, always have. I used to hate scrambled eggs until I tried mixing in creme fraise (I make my own with cow or goats milk and a a tablespoon or 2 of buttermilk per pint jar..let sit covered on counter for 8 hrs). I use my small cast iron skillet (non stick pan is toxic to birds-i won’t use it for myself plus a seasoned cast iron pan is non stick) on medium heat with 1 tablespoon butter. Add 2 whisked eggs, let set. Remove from heat and stir return to heat for 30 seconds. Repeat. Add a tablespoon of creme fraise, stir and return to heat. The eggs are creamy, fluffy and light. Just double recipe for each additional person. For more than 4 eggs you will want to increase skillet size accordingly.
 
Emily W. June 6, 2019
You add strawberry cream to your eggs?
 
Matt June 8, 2019
I too am interested in this creme fraise you're making. Is this a seasonal dish you enjoy only when strawberries are in season?
 
Willow June 8, 2019
No. I just mix in the creme fraise.
 
Willow June 8, 2019
No, it can be used on so much. In scrambled eggs as I described, in place of sour cream in any dish, I top my quesadilla with it and pico. It is also good with fruit.
 
Evelyn M. June 9, 2019
Please tell me you're being sarcastic. She's misspelled CREME FRAICHE... at least that's how I spell the heavy sour cream like substance that thicker than sour cream and richer than yogurt but has excellent tang!
 
Bettelou August 22, 2021
And yet, do you bother to make CREME FRAICHE? A misspelling does not invalidate the info, which is a positive suggestion.
 
Pamela_in_Tokyo June 5, 2019
I have been doing this for a while because I read the LADY & PUPS blog! And I love it!

I think potato starch (katakuriko in Japanese) is better and tastes better than cornstarch. Another thing to remember is you do not want to add the starch too early. If you add it too early the starch will settle and it will be hard to re-mix it into the egg mixture.
 
Nancy June 5, 2019
You know, I appreciate a good hack just as much as the next person. But I have to say, if we don't even have a couple of minutes to do the low and slow on an egg, what the heck? Don't we deserve to take even a few minutes for ourselves ? This hack isn't going to come remotely close to fixing what is wrong with that picture.
 
Yirgach June 5, 2019
Just add a few tablespoons of fresh grated Locatelli Romano (saltiness already included!)
A little garlic, eevo and butter too... Same technique, incredibly more flavorful and always creamy (sorry no cornstarch. just flavor).
3D flavor and moist creamy scrambled eggs.
 
Dee June 5, 2019
Try whipping that butter, no salt, pepper, or a bit of cheese, in the eggs then cooking on a med heat.
Light fluffy, and tasty....
 
Barbara H. June 5, 2019
Thank you so much for making it easy to reduce number of eggs for those, like, me who would find 3 or even 2 eggs overkill. The ingredients listing makes it sublimely east to adjust.
 
Lynn June 5, 2019
I don’t get it. What’s the big deal? Soft scrambled eggs, referred to as Miemi eggs in this family, just ain’t a big thing. They’re a staple when g'kids are here so recipe is usually for from 2 to 4 people depending on whose up for eggs. 8” nonstick skillet for 2-3, 10” nonstick for 4 or more. 2 jumbo eggs per person, 1 extra every 3 eggs. 1 Tbs butter per two eggs; less if it’s 8 or more eggs. Whip those puppies up, no salt, and throw in bubbly butter and turn down the heat to medium. Stir quickly and gently til just barely beginning to set then turn to low and stir vigorously til done (never too soft for my g'daughter). Takes the time of 2 rounds of toast for 4. Creamiest of curds! Pepin would be proud.
 
Nancy June 9, 2019
Exatly !
 
Terri S. September 19, 2019
I think we get it that you don't care for this recipe... there are five negative comments from "Nancy" on this post. Maybe not all your comments, I dunno. I definitely don't understand why you keep coming back to underline your dislike of the recipe (if these are all your comments). I'm sure it begins to feel hurtful to the author, and that is likely not your intent.
 
Helena June 5, 2019
My trick for deliciously creamy and soft scrambled eggs is to add a teaspoon of whipped cream cheese! Divine
 
Suzanne G. June 5, 2019
The recipe says, "1 3/4 teaspoons cornstarch or potato starch (1/2 + 1/8 teaspoon for each egg)." Does this mean 5/8 teaspoon -- 1/2 teaspoon plus 1/8 teaspoon -- for each egg? Or does it mean 1/2 teaspoon, no matter how many eggs, plus 1/8 teaspoon per egg? Thanks.
 
Kelly June 5, 2019
Sorry. A 6 minute video about this? P A I N F U L !
 
Blake June 5, 2019
I add a little carbonated water from the Soda Stream for fluffy eggs. I wonder what that would do for this recipe.
 
Rosalind R. June 5, 2019
Cornstarch? Are you kidding me? I add a half shot of water to the egg as I'm beating it before tossing it into the pan (on medium low heat), and my eggs are always creamy and delicious. Without that extra water, the eggs become a solid mass.
 
Rachel June 5, 2019
A shot of water is EXACTLY what I do! I think it ‘steams’ things a little in the pan.

I’ve never seen this posted by anyone else. I thought I was the only one in the world who did this simple trick!
 
Jean A. June 6, 2019
Rachel— ina garden did s show on the best scrambled eggs a few years ago. She suggested the water and I’ve been doing it ever since.
 
Jean A. June 6, 2019
Ina Garten. Sorry for the autocorrect
 
Ron C. June 5, 2019
I just use blue cheese salad dressing mixed in. No fuss, no muss and it keeps them moist and adds extra flavor!
 
Joan June 5, 2019
I use water not milk.
 
m January 4, 2018
will arrowroot powder work? no corn or nightshade for this family. thanks!
 
James H. June 5, 2019
That really sucks. Nightshade allergies are very rare. Homegrown tomatoes are one of the true joys of summer.
 
Pamela_in_Tokyo June 5, 2019
Arrowroot should work, but I think potato starch is better. “Katakuriko” in Japanese. Available in Asian supermarket.
 
Paula September 27, 2017
If you want superb scrambled eggs, along with the techniques in these threads, start with bacon grease. It gives eggs flavor like nothing else! Mmm
Paula
 
Satya S. June 23, 2017
Omg, my mother, a French woman and trained in the correct use of eggs would NEVER salt an egg before cooking it! If you whisk in a tsp of water and don't overcook it, you have no need to do anything else.
 
Kathy D. July 4, 2018
You are the only other person I have seen that mentioned using water for scrambled eggs instead of milk. I saw that tip on another cooking site and have been doing it ever since. It makes the eggs turn out soft and fluffy!
 
scoot87501 June 5, 2019
I've been using water for eons and get very fluffy creamy eggs.
 
Blake June 5, 2019
Try carbonated water next time.
 
Rosalind R. June 5, 2019
Your French mother may have been trained but her (and your) prejudice against salting eggs before cooking is misplaced.

"Adding salt to the eggs well before cooking can prevent the proteins from bonding too tightly by reducing their attraction to one another, resulting in a tenderer curd and lower likelihood of unattractive weeping. Adding salt immediately before cooking helps, but if you want the full effect, the salt must have time to dissolve and become evenly distributed through the mixture. This takes about 15 minutes—just enough time for you to get your bacon cooked or your omelette fillings ready!"

https://www.seriouseats.com/2016/04/food-lab-american-omelettes-ham-and-cheese.html
 
Helena June 5, 2019
Julia Child would never either!
 
scoot87501 June 5, 2019
I whole idea here was fast scrambled eggs that are still creamy and fluffy.
 
Blair J. July 7, 2016
I'm sure someone has already mentioned this, but I love greek yogurt in my scrambled eggs. I always have it on hand and it makes me feel better than starting out my day with butter... though it's a relative right? Thanks for the post. I'm obsessed with these Genius Recipes.
 
lunule July 7, 2016
Blair, do you skip the butter and the milk in your recipe? And, use full fat Greek yogurt?
 
Blair J. July 7, 2016
I do skip both! And yes, full fat greek yogurt. I scramble the eggs with the yogurt before I put it on heat (usually just in the pan). Use more yogurt than feels right (I tend to like a wet scramble). Oh and a nonstick pan is key! LMK how it goes. :)
 
lunule July 8, 2016
Thanks Blair! I am excited to try!
 
kathy May 21, 2016
i was just wondering. How about when using just egg whites? because after they set awhile they get watery.
 
Nancy June 5, 2019
Kathy, why are you just eating the whites? Most of the nutritional benefits of eggs are in the whole egg. A lot of the research, has now debunked the maligning of the yolks.
 
Jim L. May 20, 2016
I'm a pretty good egg makes but never heard of this.
Naturally I was a bit suspect so I made these for dinner last night.
I'll be damned this hack works! THE best and the softest scrambled eggs I ever had!
 
Nicole H. May 20, 2016
would arrowroot work? I only have that in house right now.
 
tim F. May 20, 2016
after thirty yrs as an exec chef, i will let you in on a little secret. increase butter to 4 Tbl, and reserve one tbl . stir it in at the end to coat the finished eggs for a nice gloss, a superb mouth feel, and the wont dry out.
 
Bee May 20, 2016
I agree with you, 100%, tim f. Putting butter on finished eggs is the norm in our house; that's how we've served them in my Swedish family for over 100+ years! I recall seeing my Great Grandparent's eating their eggs that way when I was a wee child, and they were born in the 1880's; both lived to be over 100 years old eating butter, cream, lard and eggs...daily. :D
 
Chuck H. May 19, 2016
Oh that was unsalted butter.
 
Chuck H. May 19, 2016
A tablespoon of salt for each egg? That's insane.
 
lydia.sugarman September 27, 2017
A tablespoon of *unsalted butter* per egg, not salt!
 
Judith R. May 2, 2016
I know of a few diners that add a little pancake batter to their scrambled eggs. Same reason. So those with gluten issues need to ask if they do. But the eggs are creamy.
 
Andie P. May 1, 2016
I commented eleven months ago about my method with which I have had great success for 60 + years, including years when I was catering.
They are creamy, tender and remain so even when held in a chafer for an hour.
The method is on my blog: http://www.asenjigalblogs.com/resurrected-recipes-from-long-ago/scrambled-eggs-excellent-from-mapledale-farm/ As i noted almost a year ago. My grandfather's cook perfected these and breakfast was served buffet style because of many in the large extended family.
 
lydia.sugarman September 27, 2017
The photos no longer load on your blog page.
 
Lynn January 4, 2016
A small amount of cottage cheese added to your egg substitutes perfectly for the cornstarch and adds a bit of salty creaminess to your eggs while adding a touch more protein. Simply add a small dollop of cottage cheese to your egg and whip together with a fork. No salt needed, but add a sprinkle of pepper, if you'd like. Saute in butter over medium heat mixing frequently. Done in no time at all. I stop cooking while the eggs are still slightly wet. Yum.
 
Jim M. January 3, 2016
I find a puzzle in this recipe for Creamy Scrambled Eggs. The ingredients list calls for 1 3/4 teaspoons of Cornstarch. After that it says (1/2 + 1/8 teaspoon for each egg.) If that is a total for all 3 eggs, then it would be 4/8 + 3/8 or a total of 7/8 teaspoon, not 1 3/4 teaspoons. Or we could say 1/2 (4/8) + 1/8 for each egg (Total 5/8 x 3 eggs = 15/8 or 1 7/8.) I can't seem to find a way to get that total to 1 3/4 teaspoons. Comment please!
 
Lindsay-Jean H. January 4, 2016
Mandy @ Lady and Pups rounded up the cornstarch for 3 eggs. As she explains in the comments of her blog, "because for 3 eggs, 1 1/2 + 3/8 tsp will be too difficult to measure, so I round it up to be 1 3/4 tsp."
 
Rowannn G. December 28, 2015
Nowhere do I see a comment saying that anything contained in this thread is disgusting. If you're referring to the very innocent opinion that a cauliflower sandwich wasn't to someone's liking, all I can say is that there's a hell of a lot going on in the world today that is way more important than someone offending your sensitive sensory sensibilities. Try not following this thread if such a piddling thing offends you. Food is is a general subject born to controversy. Read the first amendment.
 
Negative N. February 13, 2016
You didn't read down far enough. I didn't make it up.
 
Negative N. December 28, 2015
To those that think anything on here is disgusting, I'll make a deal with you. You don't say things I put in my mouth are disgusting, and I'll extend you the same courtesy. It's rude is what it is...
 
cd H. November 17, 2015
This is also called "soft scrambled" but I have found very few restaurants know how to do it properly, even breakfast oriented ones like Dennys or IHOP. Oddly enough the place that comes the closest is McDonalds on their breakfast meal.
 
Rowannn G. August 4, 2015
I made scrambled eggs for breakfast yesterday exactly the way I did when I commented on this thread weeks ago. I beat the eggs for a good 1 to 2 minutes to get lots of air into them. Put butter in the skillet, when starting to bubble, added the eggs and KEPT THEM MOVING, MOVING, MOVING, MOVING. That said, I am really having a positive response to Sir McKellen's technique--making them in a pot instead of a skillet. There is less surface area in a pot, which slows moisture evaporation. Not sure about the half & half, but will try it both ways. And thank you, Sir Ian, for explaining what a toast rack is for. I just always thought it was a Brit fancypants sort of thing.
 
lunule August 4, 2015
Sir Ian McKellen made a funny scrambled egg cooking video. Interesting toast factoids too.
https://www.facebook.com/ianmckellen/videos/10153014229903601/

I like to cook eggs in a pot. I think butter and cream are also helpful. I guess cream cheese or sour cream would do the same?
 
nano Z. August 4, 2015
when I cooked in Washington State...we added cream cheese and chives to the scrambled eggs...and salmon...yummie
 
kristina August 4, 2015
To keep eggs soft add a teaspoon of sour cream instead of milk. They stay soft and fluffy!!! Also, try EVOO instead of butter...great flavor.
 
Rowannn G. July 7, 2015
I think some baby arugula would add a tiny bit of tanginess that would nicely combine with the sweetness of the berries.
 
Charlotte B. July 7, 2015
It's the strawberry salad. Someone suggested Swiss chard or arugula.
I will try it that way.
 
Rowannn G. July 7, 2015
Now I've forgotten--what was the kale used for? I have to say that kale is the one and only vegetable I won't eat--I abhor the taste and texture. Which dish was it?
 
Bee July 7, 2015
I'm 100% in agreement with you, Rowannn, and your abhorrence of kale! I honestly don't know HOW or WHEN Kale became the Magic Bullet with Millennials but if Kale became EXTINCT, I'd throw a party to celebrate it's demise! LOL

And just so Kale Lover's know: I've had it massaged, sauteed, boiled, raw and dried. And I still can't stand it!
 
Rowannn G. July 7, 2015
Hah! That's funny. There are two of us now! My sister sent me a photo yesterday of a sign in front of a restaurant featuring some dish or other with "massaged" kale. I burst out laughing. What the hell is it?
 
Bee July 7, 2015
Hi, Rowannn. I'm glad that you got a giggle from my comment. I have a 3 bedroom apt. in Chicago and I rent out the other two bedrooms to students. ALL of the Millennial students are "into" Kale and I abhor it. Also, ever hear of a "cauliflower sandwich"? Me either. Raw cauliflower on pita bread....I tried it and wanted to barf! And "no", nothing else was in the 'sandwich' to add any taste beside a heapin' helpin' of B.L.A.N.D.

Regarding the Massaged Kale: NO ONE at work would believe me when I mentioned it. So, they googled it and laughed their arses off that people would massage ANYTHING other than their partner's shoulders! When I have enough time in my life to 'massage kale', I'll know that I have waaaay too much time on my hands. LOL
 
Rowannn G. July 7, 2015
Hah! You're funny. I LOVE cauliflower--even raw--but NOT in a sandwich with nothing else. Why bother with the bread? I'd rather wait for big fat tomatoes for that. In any case, I'm told that collards are the "new" kale, which is okay by me as long as you cook 'em with smoked pork hocks. My god, what ever happened to real food?
 
Charlotte B. July 6, 2015
I meant the comment on not using kale. Is a good substitute spinach?
 
Charlotte B. July 6, 2015
Write to me, please
 
Rowannn G. July 6, 2015
Hi Charlotte,
Okay, i'm wroting to you as you asked me to do. Should we be discussing something? The way I learned to make my eggs is a pretty interesting story.
 
Rowannn G. July 6, 2015
I mean WRITING.
 
Charlotte B. July 6, 2015
To the person who responded to my postings, please write to me.
 
Andie P. June 7, 2015
For the past 60+ years I have been making scrambled eggs the way I learned from my grandpa's cook. I've posted about it on various forums, even back in the pre-internet Prodigy days.
It requires no butter, just enough heavy cream to just cover the bottom of the skillet - NOT MIXED INTO THE EGGS - and bubbling evenly across the bottom. Use an egg for each person plus half again as many for "normal" appetites when there are other foods. Or use two per person if this is a "stand-alone" dish with just toast or ??.
These scrambled eggs will stay tender in a chafer for buffet serving (the way breakfast was done in my grandpa's house) much longer than any other method.
They even taste "eggier" than most scrambled eggs.
Posted on my blog with photos a few years ago.
http://www.asenjigalblogs.com/resurrected-recipes-from-long-ago/scrambled-eggs-excellent-from-mapledale-farm/
 
Bee June 8, 2015
Hi, Andie. I followed the link to your blog and plan on making your eggs this upcoming weekend. Bless you for sharing your grandparent's recipe: I'm very excited to try it!
 
Andie P. June 8, 2015
I was born on my grandpa's very large farm in western Kentucky in 1939. During the war, my dad and all my uncles were in the military and so my aunts and their children, as well as my great grandmother, two of my grandpa's sisters and three of his brothers all lived with grandpa and grandma in their huge house so there were a lot of people to feed every day. My grandpa's cook, Miss Lily Murfree, cooked these eggs in two 15 inch cast iron skillets and trasnferred them to the pans that went into the buffet servers to keep warm. Most scrambled eggs turn tough and stringy after a while but not these. When I was still doing some catering, back in the '80s, I served these often and always got compliments and questions about my method, which I was happy to share. (Along with my advice on how to cook the perfect sausage patty, also on my blog...)
 
DViolet June 27, 2020
Prodigy!!! Thanks for the slap of nostalgia :-)
 
Rowannn G. June 3, 2015
Baking soda? Mayonnaise? i don"t think so. I'm with you all the way (see my comment), but the aluminum bowl + ss pan ae intriguing. Why? And I use more butter. Otherwise you're absolutely right: eggs are perfect little things all by themselves.
 
Ted November 8, 2015
What's wrong with baking soda? You put it in breads, pancakes, pastries, whatever. All it does when heated is produce CO2, just like the fizz in pop drinks and the bubbles in beers and ales (an excellent additive to many foods, by the way), and, to me at least, gives a nice fluffy texture to the whole mix.
 
enyaj June 3, 2015
With all due respect, this reminds me of a recipe I saw on Huff Post that suggested putting baking soda in omelets. To me, eggs are such perfect little things all by themselves. I beat in a lot of air in a 10" aluminum mixing bowl, use a little butter in a SS pan, low heat, stir frequently, and they're done to perfection -- creamy, retaining all their flavor -- in way less than 5 minutes. (S&P after, never during the cooking process.) It takes the same amount of time as it does to toast 2 pieces of baguette in the toaster oven. As someone else wrote, if you can't take that much time for breakfast for yourself, something needs to give. (You can also toss a few halved cherry tomatoes with some olive oil and herb of your choice in a small ramekin and let those heat up in the toaster oven beforehand, and pop those on top. Be good to yourself!)
 
booglix June 2, 2015
Is it just me or is 45g of fat a bit much in a serving of scrambled eggs? I'm all for indulging, and eat plenty of butter and cheese, but wow.

As many others have echoed, it really does not take very long to make creamy eggs if you know how to do it (no additions other than butter, add salt at the very end). It takes me approximately 5 minutes start to finish. If you can't spend 5 minutes on breakfast, slow down!
 
Rowannn G. June 2, 2015
My thought exactly!
 
Marina F. June 1, 2015
Adding mayonnaise in works wonder too!
 
Rowannn G. June 1, 2015
It's really funny that so many people have so many different ways of making these. Chacun a son gout. Whichever your preferred technique, enjoy them!
 
Bee June 1, 2015
I have a gag-reflex to the infamous "custardy" scrambled eggs so whenever I'm out and about and ordering brekkie, I always request "hard scrambled eggs" and therefore receive NO surprises. Bravo to all of you that enjoy eggs this way but I'll continue to enjoy them nice and thoroughly cooked aka 'hard', thank you. :D
 
mizerychik June 6, 2015
Thank you. I thought I was the only one who found runny scrambled eggs unbearably disgusting. I always have to ask for them "dry."
 
Bee June 8, 2015
Egg-xactly, mizerychik! Many people have a "thing" about certain textures of food: some can't tolerate tapioca or pudding or rice. My thang is runny eggs or "creamy eggs"...I'd rather starve than force them down my throat!
 
janet V. May 31, 2015
I'm skeptical, but can't dis it unless I try it. I'm a scrambled egg purist. No cream or milk, pinch of salt, just enough butter to coat the pan well. I use the pull-from-the-sides method and stop the cooking just before they look done. My friends and family call them "perfect."
 
Yvonne S. May 31, 2015
Hmm, IDK. I cook my eggs like Geoffrey Zakarian says; exactly like Rowannn Gilman says below, beat thoroughly, no salt, scramble constantly to break up the curds and make them really small, and stop cooking just before you think they're done and still wet. Believe me, they ARE done, and so creamy and tasty! Salt & pepper to taste just before you serve them. Yum!
 
Rowannn G. May 31, 2015
Why thank you, Yvonne! I wouldn't be caught dead putting cornstarch in my scrambled eggs.
 
Rowannn G. May 31, 2015
You DO NOT have to stir eggs for 15 minutes to achieve that beautifully soft, creamy, light scramble. Beat eggs VERY thoroughly (let lots of air in). No milk, no half & half, no cream--NOTHING. And NO SALT: salt toughens proteins, so don't salt until you're ready to eat. Use plenty of butter in a preheated pan over low heat, pour the eggs in, and IMMEDIATELY keep 'em moving. Don't stop for one second. Takes about 5 minutes or less--and don't leave them sitting in the pan to overcook from residual heat. Plate them right away...et voila. Perfect scrambled eggs. My father, who never thought I did anything right, requested that I prepare his scrambled eggs.
 
Christina T. June 1, 2015
I agree with you Rowannn on your point of "You do not have to stir eggs for 15 minutes...."; however I do use heavy cream in my scrambles - about a tablespoon to 3 eggs. I was out of regular milk once when I had a craving for scrambles, only had heavy cream on hand, so I tried it and have been making them that way ever since. I think scramble recipes are something like chili recipes - everyone has their own tried and true method, the way that makes them and their family happy; to each their own.
 
Dustin H. May 31, 2015
Has anyone tried this with less butter? 3 tbsp per 3-egg scramble is a LOT of butter for every day eating. I wonder about using 1/3 of the butter, and if that would need scaling back on the cornstarch, and how that would affect everything.
 
Craig May 31, 2015
Tried this recipe and it was the most disgusting thing I've ever eaten. The texture was shudder-inducing. I couldn't get past two bites. What a waste of time and effort.
 
tamater S. May 31, 2015
To state only that something is disgusting, doesn't really educate. For dietary reasons, I can't add starches to my eggs, but was thinking of trying these for husband and guests brunch. So I'm curious about the adjectives you'd use; the eggs didn't set-up, were sort of slimy? What? Need adjectives here.
 
Caroline May 31, 2015
Added note: for one egg I used a regular 8" All-Clad skillet. I had no problem with sticking.
 
rudder May 31, 2015
This recipe is indeed genius! I don't think I've ever had such insanely tender eggs! Definitely a keeper =)) thank you for sharing!
 
Caroline May 31, 2015
I just made this recipe. These truly are MAGICAL eggs. I followed the recipe for one egg using potato starch and half and half, I had no milk. Absolute perfection !!!!
 
Nancy May 31, 2015
I make scrambled eggs quite often. I like them with Spicey LC cheese. I use a non-stick egg pan, 1 teaspoon butter melts in the medium hot pan. When melted, I add 2 egg whites and 1 wedge of cheese. Then I mash the whole thing with a fork, stirring constantly as it cooks. It literally takes 20 seconds. I stop just before the eggs are totally cooked. They are done! I scoop mine in a bowl and hubby puts his in a tortilla with corn relish and hot sauce. I may try the cornstarch, but I don't really have a problem with runny eggs.
 
rparagus May 31, 2015
Can you use skim milk?
 
javafiend May 31, 2015
Not really, as it's the fat that helps keep the eggs from toughening up...I myself use the Cooks Illustrated recipe that uses half&half in the egg mixture
 
witloof May 28, 2015
Here's my trick. Start the eggs by breaking them into the hot skillet and let the whites just set, then break the yolks and gently stir.
 
Sue May 31, 2015
Witloof, that's my morning egg routine. Next : flip egg, slide a tortilla underneath, wait just a little bit, fold tortilla with egg in the middle, and my breakfast is done in not much more than a minute. I'm addicted!
 
Nicole H. May 20, 2016
I call those "Frambled" eggs- fried/scrambled!
 
mcs3000 May 28, 2015
Whoa! Must try...
 
AntoniaJames May 27, 2015
Seriously, yes. ;o)
 
Lindsay-Jean H. May 27, 2015
Good things come to those who don't want to wait!
 
Allyn May 27, 2015
If Lady and Pups tells you to do it, just do it. She's never wrong. I just made her spicy cumin lamb hand smashed noodles, and, like everything else of hers I've made, it was mind-blowingly delicious. (https://girlnamedallyn.wordpress.com/2015/05/27/xian-famous-spicy-cumin-lamb-hand-smashed-noodles/)