Guest guest Posted March 16, 2005 Report Share Posted March 16, 2005 Incredible, Edible Eggs http://snipurl.com/dh2r Or " aigs, " as we call them in Alabama. The egg is one of the best little foods nature ever created. I have a special place in my heart for the little orbs, as frying eggs was the first act of cooking my mother taught me. There is no other food item that is as flexible as the egg; none that shows up in such a variety of dishes; none other capable of such an immense range of texture. Eggs make soufflés delicate and sensual; they hold together crème brulée and cheesecake (the epitomes of dessert baking, as consommé is the capstone of broth making); they are creamy, light, and soft when scrambled by a master hashslinger in your local greasy-spoon diner. When I fried eggs as a child, I’d use an old stainless-steel Revere pan and whole butter. I’d always end up with some almost-burnt crunchy brown lace at the edges of the egg white. That remains my favorite part of a fried egg, but nobody at a breakfast diner will cook them that way. An omelet with sausage and cheese is just about the reason Louisiana hot sauces were invented. Omelets work with XX habañero sauces, too, in case anybody’s wondering. And then there’s the nutrition: Egg whites are basically zero-fat, 100% protein muscle-building bombs, with just a few little bits of minerals and vitamins thrown in. The protein in egg whites is so easily used to best effect by the human body that the best protein powders in bodybuilders’ nutrition stores use egg protein exclusively. The yolks have plenty of saturated fat and cholesterol, and are loaded with vitamins, minerals, and more protein. Additionally, the yolks provide the smooth, mouth-filling texture that makes egg dishes so satisfying. Warmed -- not cooked -- eggs and egg yolks are used in sauces of all kinds, particularly the classical hollandaise and béarnaise (which, remember, include cayenne pepper in the French-textbook versions), not to mention mayonnaise. Hard-boiled eggs are good in salads, on their own (with plenty of salt and hot sauce), and in whatever else you want to add them to. Raw eggs hold together a nice beef tartar, adding their own mouth-filling smoothness and luxury. In custards of all kinds, including cheesecakes, crème brulée, and quiche, egg proteins uncoil and solidify, holding the whole mass together so it can be eaten with a fork. What else is there to say about eggs? Oh, right: The food nannies hate them. All that fat and cholesterol are bad for you; and raw eggs may carry salmonella! When I want to use a raw egg for something, I remind myself that on average, fewer than 1 in 20,000 eggs carries salmonella; and if you buy your own eggs as fresh as possible and inspect them, you improve your odds even further. There’s good news about the fat and cholesterol, too. If you don’t have a problem, eat up! If your doctor says you have a problem, well, err on the side of taking his advice, but ask him a lot of questions. If I’m not mistaken (and I always can be), the medical community has long since decided that your genes are a bigger contributor to a bad cholesterol profile than your diet. What can you do with eggs you haven’t done already? Try frying up a few with some potatoes and broken-up salmon to make salmon hash. Include some diced yellow, red, or orange bell peppers. Make a sauce for that by reducing orange juice, adding cayenne pepper, and finishing with butter. Per Madison and most of Australia, you can put fried eggs on a pizza with pepperoni and hot peppers. One of my favorites, a real valve-snapping fat bomb: Broil up a nice little beef tenderloin steak, and cover it with melted extra-sharp cheddar cheese and a fried egg. For a dipping sauce, consider a strong reduction of beef broth with balsamic vinegar and black pepper, finished with heavy cream. The balsamic vinegar provides some bright notes, but fresh herbs wouldn’t hurt, and Italian parsley goes with everything. There’s still more you can do with eggs, of course. The list is never-ending. Order them over easy with runny yolks in a greasy diner, and sop them up with sausage and white toast. Talk about comfort food! Next to salt (http://snipurl.com/dh2u), eggs are the most versatile ingredient in your kitchen. Unlike salt, eggs are a complete food in themselves. Fry yourself up a dozen,and thumb your nose at the food nannies. But don’t eat eggs just because the nannies hate them; eat them because they’re so darned good! February 10, 2005 Brad Edmonds [freedomwins2001@...], author of the new book, There’s a Government in Your Soup (http://snipurl.com/dh2w), writes from Alabama. ###### " I feel sorry for all those health food people. Someday, they will be lying in a hospital bed, dying of nothing. " Redd Foxx ================================================= " This is what the king who will reign over you will do: He will take... He will take... He will take... He will take... ... he will take... He will take... " (I 8:11-17) ================================================= Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.