Every week, Food52’s Senior Editor, Kristen Miglore, unearths recipes that are nothing short of genius.
Today: 40-second scrambled eggs, and the perfect Mother’s Day bonding experience.
You may think there are a finite number — say, 6 — ways to take your eggs. Breakfast is a multiple choice test, and diner waitresses and short order cooks aren’t about to allow a write-in (not to mention busy moms and dads).
Sure, over time we’ve learned to improve upon the fundamentals, by frying eggs in olive oil or hard-cooking them judiciously rather than boiling their yolks out. But rarely has a new technique been rolled out, especially one that doesn’t take 40 minutes. This one takes 40 seconds, give or take.
It’s all thanks to an off-duty chef who got bored, started tinkering, and reinvented breakfast — with the quickest and fluffiest scrambled eggs imaginable.
Adding to their mystique, they’re also made without any fat at all, and there’s no crusty pan to clean. How could it be?
photo: Liz Hafalia/The San Francisco Chronicle
This technique — a hybrid of poaching and scrambling — first came to San Francisco chef and writer Daniel Patterson out of necessity. As he explained in the New York Times Magazine in 2006, his then-fiancé made him throw away the Teflon pan he relied upon for scrambling, and he had to get resourceful.
It’s not such a stretch to call these 40-second eggs, because other than waiting for your water to boil, that’s all the time they take. You barely have time to make toast!
Now pay attention: You beat your eggs while counting to 20, swirl the boiling water, then slip in the eggs, pop on the lid, and wonder what’s going on in there.
20 seconds later, de-lidded, you have a poufed cloud of eggs, ready to be drained and seasoned to your liking.
In addition to being faster than many an ad experience on this very site, it’s an exceedingly forgiving method:
• As written, Patterson’s recipe uses four eggs and serves two, but you can always go with five eggs and invite a hungry friend; or two and dine alone; or one to fold into a killer breakfast sandwich.
• Patterson instructs you to drain away your thin egg whites (see above), lest they go skittering off in the water, but I’ve skipped this step with relatively fresh eggs and not regretted my laze.
• Depending on how you plan to dress them up, you can salt the water to taste without threatening the integrity of your eggs. Assuming you’re serving them minimally, with just a ribbon of olive oil and sprinkle of flaky salt, go ahead and salt the water till it tastes like the sea, as you would for boiling pasta or blanching vegetables.
When Patterson occasionally serves them at his restaurant, Coi, it’s with vinegary grated radish, seaweed powder, radish flowers, and chicken jus infused with katsuobushi. Too much salt in the water would just get in the way.
But six years after stumbling upon the technique, Patterson most often poach-scrambles eggs at home, both for his buddies and for his two young children (Louise, 16 months, and Julian, 3 1/2 — see above!). And no wonder: it’s the 40-second breakfast, after all.
It’s as wondrous to kids as it is to adults, which makes it the perfect Mother’s Day bonding experience (hint, hint). A grownup might need to handle the boiling water, but the kids can crack and whisk the eggs, butter the toast, and watch the magic unfurl from a safe distance. And, of course, trot it off to mom, with toast and coffee on the side.
Daniel Patterson’s Poached Scrambled Eggs
Adapted slightly from the New York Times Magazine, “The Way We Eat: Which Came First?” (January 8, 2006)
Serves 2
4 large eggs
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil (optional)
Fine sea salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Photos by James Ransom