Omelet

This Omelet Is Practically a Pizza

April 16, 2018

There were a few months of my life when I ate shakshuka twice a weekend, every weekend. Tahini on top, toast alongside. I was working at a bakery with shakshuka on the brunch menu, so this was vaguely inevitable and very exciting and then I overdid it and have barely eaten shakshuka since. Which is a shame. Eggs and tomato sauce are so good together.

In shakshuka, the eggs are runny-yolked, so at the mere mention of a spoon, they ooooooze, enriching the bright, acidic tomato sauce, like adding a knob of butter. (And we all know how good adding butter to tomato sauce is.) Similarly, in England, a full breakfast usually includes fried eggs with grilled tomatoes (and sausages and mushrooms and many other things).

Here in the States, eggs and tomatoes are also breakfast buddies—the best kind of buddies. Maybe it’s scrambled eggs with ketchup (my eggs of choice when I was a wee one). Or, instead of eggs splashing around in a tomato-sauce sea or eggs and tomato halves holding hands, they are more subtle, more secretive about their love. The tomatoes are usually raw and chopped into tiny pieces. And the eggs go to great lengths to hide them. Which is to say: an American-style, browned, cheesy omelet, a staple at any divey diner across the country.

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This is all well and good, but it puts a lot of pressure on the tomato, too much pressure to live up to year-round. If the tomato is as red as a fire truck and as sweet as corn, the omelet will be kisses fingertips. If it’s unripe or mealy or sad—lots of tomatoes are like this—the omelet will be sad. Which is why, if I’m ordering an omelet out, I rarely, if ever, ask for tomato. Too risky!

Pizza, is that you? Photo by James Ransom

Shakshuka doesn’t have this problem. If tomatoes aren’t in season, canned will work just fine. That’s when I started to think: an omelet with canned tomatoes. Cook those down, down, down into a thick, jammy sauce. Tuck them into an eggy blanket. Lots of cheese because it’s not an omelet without cheese (fact just my opinion). The result, it turned out, is less like shakshuka, and more like pizza. Pizza for breakfast! Without being, you know, pizza for breakfast.

Omelet

French-style omelets are pale and tender, with custardy, practically runny curds in the center. Classically, they forgo all mix-ins. American-style omelets are bolder and brasher, with browned exteriors and all the mix-ins. The latter will be our spirit guide here.

Tomato sauce

Not just any tomato sauce will do. We need it to stay put mid-omelet, not weep all over the place like a hot mess. I started with Marcella Hazan in mind, then off-railed: I added in some olive oil and garlic, oregano and red pepper flakes. This simmers for 45 or so minutes, until it’s practically chutney.

Cheese

Mozzarella! But what kind? Fresh, whole-milk mozzarella is so supple and tender, it’s easy to assume that it’s best for everything. Here, it wasn’t, yielding a watered-down omelet, like a soggy margherita. Not what we’re going for. Humble, part-skim, low-moisture—the firm kind you can grate like a potato—produces a gooey, stretchy cheese layer, like sports-bar or $1-slice or midnight-delivery pizza. Just right. And about the order: I thought that cheese first, tomato sauce second would provide another layer of soggy-bottom insurance. On the contrary! When the cheese melted into the eggs, it ruined that whole saucy, gooey, cheesy thing that pizza does so well. It became a cheesy omelet filled with tomato sauce, not an omelet filled with cheese and tomato sauce. Does that make sense? You could try it yourself, or just believe me: Tomato sauce first, cheese second, so it melts into the sauce, just like a pizza.

Toast

Because every pizza needs a crust. (Uh, what’s that?) Any bread works here. A fluffy grocery store loaf. A crusty bakery one. Warm focaccia. Fried pizza dough! How meta is that? In any case, serve the toast alongside, heap some omelet on top. Eat twice a weekend, every weekend, for months, then never again.

What’s inside your go-to omelet? Tell us in the comments below!

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • patricia gadsby
    patricia gadsby
  • Kate Runyon
    Kate Runyon
  • Suzanne D'Amato
    Suzanne D'Amato
  • Emma Laperruque
    Emma Laperruque
Emma was the food editor at Food52. She created the award-winning column, Big Little Recipes, and turned it into a cookbook in 2021. These days, she's a senior editor at Bon Appétit, leading digital cooking coverage. Say hello on Instagram at @emmalaperruque.

5 Comments

patricia G. September 30, 2019
My pizza omelet is a flat omelet embedded with vegetables, with the prettiest vegetables strewn on top. For a potluck last weekend I used potatoes, onions, garlic, shaved corn, red peppers, jalapeño chilis and epazote, which grows like a weed in my neck of the woods. I cooked it in my largest cast iron pan until the bottom was set, then added some patches of mozzarella on top and finished the omelet under the broiler. It was a zero-waste pot-luck so I served it on a large circle of cardboard, with triangular cardboard "spatulas." You can vary the vegetables with the seasons -- asparagus, peas, mint and parsley are lovely in late spring.
 
Kate R. September 30, 2019
Hi there Miss Emma! I am highly allergic to eggs but have recently found and have been having a blast with Just Egg! It’s a vegan alternative to the real thing and according to my hubby, is a fantastic doppelgänger. We have been enjoying our now ritualistic omelet night now every Thursday and I can’t wait to try this recipe out! Thanks for the inspiration kiddo. You ROCK! It’ll be like the Italian eggs in purgatory...my Nonni would have been proud.
 
Emma L. September 30, 2019
Thanks for the kind words, Kate! Hope you enjoy the recipe!
 
Suzanne D. April 16, 2018
Oh yum. Def know what I'm making this weekend!
 
Emma L. April 17, 2018
Yay!