"When I
was a lad I ate four dozen eggs / Ev'ry morning to help me get large /
And now that I'm grown I eat five dozen eggs / So I'm roughly the size
of a barge!"
What you'll need
- Several broccoli florets
- 2 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon water
- Pinch of salt
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
- 1/2 cup grated sharp Cheddar cheese
- 1/4 cup chopped ham
How to make it
- Wash the
broccoli florets and cut them into bite-size pieces. Place them in a
small saucepan and add just enough water to cover the bottom of the pan.
Cover the pan tightly and heat the broccoli over high heat, steaming it
for 2 to 3 minutes, until crisp-tender. Drain the florets in a
colander, being careful to avoid the steam, then set them aside to cool.
- Crack the
eggs into a small bowl. The trick is to achieve as clean a break as
possible by striking the egg against the bowl's rim with just the right
amount of force. Too little, and you'll end up with small shell
fragments; too much, and you'll smash the entire shell. If you happen to
get any shell fragments in the bowl, use a clean teaspoon to remove
them.
- Add the
water and salt to the eggs and use a fork to beat the mixture just until
blended. Now, before you do anything else, get the rest of your
breakfast ready (pour your orange juice, put your bread in the toaster,
and so forth), because an omelet cooks in 2 minutes or less from start
to finish.
- Put your
pan on a front burner with the heat set at slightly higher than medium.
If you're right-handed, point the handle toward your left side; if
you're left-handed, point it toward your right. Let the pan heat for 2
to 3 minutes so that it gets fairly hot. Put a tablespoon-size pat of
butter in the middle of the pan and let it melt. If the butter
immediately starts to sizzle and smoke, your pan is too hot. Remove it
from the heat to cool for a minute or so before proceeding. Tilt the pan
to spread the melting butter over the entire bottom.
- Pour the
beaten eggs into the prepared pan and wait a few seconds for the bottom
of the eggs to cook just a little. Then use a wooden spoon or spatula to
start gently pushing the eggs away from the edge of the pan toward the
center. As you do so, tilt the pan so that uncooked egg runs into the
empty spot you've created. Work your way around the edge in this fashion
until the egg is no longer runny.
- Using the
back of a wooden spoon or spatula, spread any remaining uncooked egg
across the surface so that it will continue to cook evenly.
- When the
surface of your omelet looks just a little undercooked, it's time to add
your fillings (the egg will finish cooking as you complete the next 2
steps). Arrange the broccoli over the half of the omelet farthest from
you. Sprinkle the cheese and the ham over the broccoli.
- Holding
the pan handle with one hand, slide a spatula under the plain half of
the omelet and fold it over the filling in one steady motion.
- Using an underhand grip, tilt up the pan handle and slide the omelet out of the pan and onto your plate. Bon appétit!
Source:
http://spoonful.com/recipes/broccoli-ham-and-cheese-omelet
No comments:
Post a Comment