Omelets |
Julia Child has been teaching this subject for the last few decades. Here are the basics:
Break four eggs into a bowl. Add 1/8 cup water and whisk until
blended. Add salt and pepper to taste. BTW that's water, not
milk. Milk is for making scrambled eggs.
Melt 1/2 Tbsp butter in the pan. Heat until the butter is foamy but before
it turns brown (Julia says that makes it taste "cheap.") Pour
eggs into pan.
Keep the pan moving as the eggs are cooking so they don't stick. Lift the edges and let the eggs run down
underneath. When the top is almost set add filling in center and get ready to
flip. Lift the pan and push it forward quickly, then jerk it back. It takes some practice
but looks quite impressive. In The Goldwulf Manuscript ch. 12
Spenser notes "I'm very good a flipping omelets." Sure, you
could fold it over with a spatula but what kind of gumshoe would that make you?
Below are the variations mentioned in the books.
Spanish Omelet
The Godwulf Manuscript ch. 12
1 green pepper
1 tomato
Slice pepper and tomato, add at the appropriate time.
For authenticity serve with "thick slices of fresh pumpernickel."
Mushroom Omelet with Sherry
Mortal Stakes ch. 2
1/4 pound mushrooms, sliced thin
1/2 Tbsp butter
1/8 cup sherry
Heat the oil, add mushrooms and cook, stirring, for five minutes. Add sherry and
continue to stir until the alcohol and liquid cooks off. Remove from pan.
Serve with fresh squeezed orange juice and "a warm loaf of unleavened Arab bread." Remember that this book was published in 1975 and the word "pita" was pretty much unknown outside of the ethnic community.
Potato and Onion Omelet
Early Autumn ch. 10
1 potato
1 onion
1/2 Tbsp butter
Peel and dice potato and onion. Melt butter and add both to pan. Cook and stir until potato has softened and onion is limp.
Potato and Scallion Omelet
Ceremony ch. 2
1 potato
2 or 3 scallions
1/2 Tbsp butter
Peel and dice the potato. Set aside.
Cut off the root end of the scallions and half of the green, then chop.
Spenser and Susan disagree on the next part:
She said: Melt the butter and add both ingredients to the pan. Cook and
stir until the potato has softened.
He said: Melt the butter and cook the potatoes, stirring often, until almost
cooked, adding the scallions during the last few minutes to soften and
just slightly brown.
Serve with biscuits from a mix, boysenberry jam, and Great Western champagne.
Onion Omelet
Potshot ch. 62
1 onion, sliced
1/2 Tbsp butter
Melt butter in pan, add onions and cook, stirring, until translucent.
Serve with biscuits.
If feeding seven hungry gunslingers adjust amounts accordingly. Note that you cannot just make one big omelet
for several people. "You have to make omelets in small batches or they don't work. And the pan needs to be cured, and the heat needs to be right. You don't just break a bunch of eggs."
This Page Created by Bob Ames