Trick is no milk just eggs. Fork slowly wisk add half melted butter. Slow cook and add more butter. Folding eggs over.
Butter prevents eggs getting too hot.
deverall11 said
06:32 PM Oct 8, 2023
Cream. Allergies aside or not wanting cream, this is the secret to creamy scrambled eggs.
Did some work at The Coffee Club whilst travelling. Not only do they use cream for their
scrambled eggs but also for their omelette.
Common practice in commercial kitchen where one mix is used across more then one dish.
Bolognese sauce: Lasagna, Spag Bol, base for Cottage Pie but to name a few examples.
Dougwe said
08:32 AM Feb 9, 2024
I used to use milk many moons back but always watery so,
Now I lightly spray a not stick fry pan with Olive Oil then chop up onion (sometimes chopped up bacon as well) and lightly fry in pan then just crack the amount of eggs wanted into pan and just with egg flip swish everything around quickly breaking eggs until cooked as I like them. Onto a slice of toasted sourdough bread then salt and black pepper to taste. A nice White Ginger and Pear Tea to wash it all down.
Mmmm, what time is lunch?
Whenarewethere said
09:57 AM Feb 14, 2024
I am not actually an egg person, a bit in a meal is ok, but other than that I'm not that keen on them.
Anyway, cream in eggs is the way to go for fluffy scrambled eggs... keeps Wife happy.
Possum3 said
10:27 AM Feb 14, 2024
I always use milk and shredded cheese, grind in some pepper prior to cooking, never add salt.
Sometimes I add in chopped tomato, diced ham and sliced pickled onion to make an evening meal.
Possum3 said
10:30 AM Feb 14, 2024
Whenarewethere wrote:
I am not actually an egg person, a bit in a meal is ok
If making home-made fried rice, crack a couple of eggs in and stir just prior to serving, turns OK to great.
Extraordinary Rendition said
03:06 PM Feb 18, 2024
Dougwe ... With the greatest respect , you are talking about an Omelette. A distinct comestible entirely. Not to put it/them in the shade and I can understand where the confusion may have arisen.
Peace ..
-- Edited by Extraordinary Rendition on Sunday 18th of February 2024 03:08:27 PM
Dougwe said
04:17 PM Feb 18, 2024
Nope, Hanna. Not an omelette. By the time it is cooked and served, it is just like scrambled eggs. An omelette is a round flat egg mix similar looking to a pancake folded over in half and served like that.
Scrambled is similar I spose to my brain when Uncle Al gets up before me in the morning.
Stay Safe out there.
Whenarewethere said
11:17 AM Feb 19, 2024
Possum3 wrote:
Whenarewethere wrote:
I am not actually an egg person, a bit in a meal is ok
If making home-made fried rice, crack a couple of eggs in and stir just prior to serving, turns OK to great.
I always do egg first & separately, then meat separately (not a lot), separately. Found a great Chinese duck shop in Chatswood - Sydney, which I get de-boned (couldn't be bothered myself, another $4 for a whole duck, $2 half duck). I do boil the carcass parts for stock, easy & well worth the effort). No difference to boiling takeaway chicken carcasses to create stock.
Remove each food group after initial cooking. Only combine at the end.
Craig1 said
09:07 PM Feb 19, 2024
Dont fold an omelette in half mate, it goes soggy in the middle
Did some work at The Coffee Club whilst travelling. Not only do they use cream for their
scrambled eggs but also for their omelette.
Common practice in commercial kitchen where one mix is used across more then one dish.
Bolognese sauce: Lasagna, Spag Bol, base for Cottage Pie but to name a few examples.
Now I lightly spray a not stick fry pan with Olive Oil then chop up onion (sometimes chopped up bacon as well) and lightly fry in pan then just crack the amount of eggs wanted into pan and just with egg flip swish everything around quickly breaking eggs until cooked as I like them. Onto a slice of toasted sourdough bread then salt and black pepper to taste. A nice White Ginger and Pear Tea to wash it all down.
Mmmm, what time is lunch?
I am not actually an egg person, a bit in a meal is ok, but other than that I'm not that keen on them.
Anyway, cream in eggs is the way to go for fluffy scrambled eggs... keeps Wife happy.
Sometimes I add in chopped tomato, diced ham and sliced pickled onion to make an evening meal.
If making home-made fried rice, crack a couple of eggs in and stir just prior to serving, turns OK to great.
Dougwe ... With the greatest respect , you are talking about an Omelette. A distinct comestible entirely. Not to put it/them in the shade and I can understand where the confusion may have arisen.
Peace ..
-- Edited by Extraordinary Rendition on Sunday 18th of February 2024 03:08:27 PM
Scrambled is similar I spose to my brain when Uncle Al gets up before me in the morning.
Stay Safe out there.
I always do egg first & separately, then meat separately (not a lot), separately. Found a great Chinese duck shop in Chatswood - Sydney, which I get de-boned (couldn't be bothered myself, another $4 for a whole duck, $2 half duck). I do boil the carcass parts for stock, easy & well worth the effort). No difference to boiling takeaway chicken carcasses to create stock.
Remove each food group after initial cooking. Only combine at the end.