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Saltie's Soft-Scrambled Eggs

3.5

(29)

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Photo by Jason Fulford

This is a technique that achieves the best of both over easy and scrambled eggs. You scramble the whites in the pan, leaving the yolks whole. Then you break the yolks at the last minute, folding them into the whites. For so long, I had this idea of what a scrambled egg was, and it wasn’t exciting. The technique changed me. It was so easy, and it had such a better texture than the small-curd scramble method. It was a joy.

To emphasize:

Be careful not to overcook the eggs. Err on the side of runny rather than dry.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    1 serving

Ingredients

1 tsp unsalted butter
2 eggs
Sea salt
Finely chopped herbs, for garnish

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Melt the butter in a nonstick skillet over medium heat. Break the eggs into the pan when it is warm but not yet hot. Sprinkle the eggs lightly with salt.

    Step 2

    Let the pan heat up, and don’t move the eggs until the egg whites begin to set. Using a heat-resistant spatula, move the whites around the pan to help them cook through, while keeping the yolk unbroken, for about 30 seconds. When the whites fluff up and are almost completely set, remove from the heat and fold the yolks into the whites. The residual heat should cook the whites through and leave the yolks soft. This is kind of like scrambling an over easy egg.

    Step 3

    Sprinkle with herbs, if desired.

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Reprinted from All About Eggs: Everything We Know About the World’s Most Important Food by Rachel Khong and the Editors of Lucky Peach. Copyright © 2017 by Lucky Peach, LLC. Photographs and illustrations copyright © 2017 by Tamara Shopsin and Jason Fulford. Published by Clarkson Potter, an imprint of Penguin Random House, LLC. Buy the full book from Amazon.

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