Breakfast
An Underrated (& Simple!) Technique for Fancy-Feeling Eggs
For when you're not feeling fried or scrambled.
Photo by Bobbi Lin
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3 Comments
Terry
January 29, 2023
The first version of this I was introduced to was at a B&B in Asheville, NC just a few minutes from Biltmore Estate. We were served baked(?) eggs in ramekins for breakfast one morning, and when we returned home I looked up a recipe and added it to the breakfast rotation for a while. Similarly to Janifood's method I would butter two ramekins, crack two eggs into each and add salt, pepper and a little cream. I would start the water bath heating in the oven (350F) while I prepped the eggs, then lower the ramekins into the pan and let them bake for about 20 minutes. I'm not sure I ever perfected the technique as sometimes the yolks would be cooked, sometimes not, and sometimes the whites would refuse to solidify completely. But once my husband commented that they were essentially fancy, hard-boiled eggs I had to agree and stopped making them. I never considered cooking them on the stovetop, and with the additions suggested here I may have to give them another try, at least when I need a more hands-off way of cooking breakfast.
Janifood
January 29, 2023
Hi. I’m a fan of the oven-baked egg, which I cook in ramekin in a water bath. I think of this as a shirred egg and usually add bit of seasoned light cream before dropping the egg in the buttered ramekin. Herbs on top. Need to look for these coddling vessels!
Lynnscott
January 14, 2023
I love coddled eggs, and this is the first time I McEnroe seen anything written about them. Great piece!
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