• Due to a recent spam attack on the site we have switched user registration to require administrator approval. Please bear with us as this could take a few hours to approve new registrations (depending on availability) but all genuine registrations will be approved

One In ~ None Out

  • Thread starter Thread starter Darran
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies: Replies 267
  • Views Views: Views 3,976
Does omelette get included?
I can’t remember the last time I had an omelette. Will make one for lunch during the week and predict it getting positioned between boiled and scrambled. It’s a step up from scrambled, Shirley?
 
I can’t remember the last time I had an omelette. Will make one for lunch during the week and predict it getting positioned between boiled and scrambled. It’s a step up from scrambled, Shirley?
Not cooked breakfast ranked, just generally.

Scrambled.
Fried.
Omelette.
Boiled.
Poached - last because I can’t be arsed with the faff.
 
Not cooked breakfast ranked, just generally.

Scrambled.
Fried.
Omelette.
Boiled.
Poached - last because I can’t be arsed with the faff.
Wrong again.

Poached
Soft boiled
Hard boiled (warm in a sandwich with salt and pepper)
Fried
Omelette only with cheese.
Scrambled - never. Pointless and mostly tasteless.
 
Wrong again.

Poached
Soft boiled
Hard boiled (warm in a sandwich with salt and pepper)
Fried
Omelette only with cheese.
Scrambled - never. Pointless and mostly tasteless.
Eggs have got to be the most versatile food out there. I couldn’t live without them anyway.
 
I’d also argue that runny scrambled eggs should come with a health warning.
There is a perfect cooking point for both scrambled eggs and omelettes. If you undercook them and they're runny, you're right in saying you're risking your health. But overcook them and they are tasteless.

I'm a fan of the French method - baveuse. An omelette should still have a very small amount of underdone egg in the centre when you slide it out of the pan as it will continue to cook in the middle when folded on your plate. Scrambled eggs should be off the heat and on your plate as soon as the last visible runny bit is gone.

Done like that and they're a thing of beauty. As long as you're getting good quality golden yolk eggs of course. My wife cooks scrambled egg in the microwave which is sacrilege. She thinks (probably rightly) that I'm pretentious about the whole thing.

Also, to throw a very unpopular opinion in to the fried breakfast chat, I loathe baked beans.
 

Swansea City 🦢 v Millwall 🦁

Back
Top