I think that breakfast can be the most enjoyable meal of the day.
There is nothing better than waking up on an “early-ish” Sunday morning, going to the farmers market and shopping for fresh ingredients like fresh mushrooms, freshly baked bread, eggs fresh from the farm and herbs straight from the farm garden. It’s a peaceful start to a day, no rushing about and you can really enjoy these wonderful stress free moments and for me, to enjoy that part of the day is rare because it is usually the busiest time of my normal day. You can really let your mind wonder and relax.
I have been asked to show people so many different recipes but none has fascinated people more than the old poached egg. That one request continually amazes me. Even when I cook breakfast at work, people are always amazed at how we can cook a perfectly poached egg. I guess it is because we have done it a million times and we forget that we did find it all a bit of a mystery once upon a time.
One secret to the perfectly poached egg is the egg itself. It must be fresh so that it can cook in the perfect round and egg like shape as opposed to the whispy broken and flattened egg that non-fresh eggs give out.
The second thing is the pot. Use a pot with long sides and deep. This allows the egg to drop at a distance so by the time it hits the bottom, the outside would set slightly, helping form that perfect round shape.
The third and most important is the temperature of the water. It mustn’t be too hot or it will break up the egg too much and it mustn’t be too cool or it will sink to the bottom too quickly and stick to the bottom of the pot. The bubbles from a prefectly heated pot of water help it form the round shape by forcing the heated water and bubbles up and around the egg and it also helps it by not allowing it to sink and stick to the bottom of the pot. Too hot and it will break up the egg but the right temperature keeps it buoyant, preventing it from ever touching the bottom, sticking and over cooking.
The vinegar is there to also help set the egg. The acid makes the protein harden.
Photo by Jun Pang
Sautéed Mushroom on Grilled Sour Dough with Hollandaise Sauce
Serve 4
For the Hollandaise
4 Cloves of garlic
1Tspn Black Peppercorns
1 Bay Leaf
2 Cups White Wine
3 Eggs Yolks
500gr Butter – melted over a double boiler
Sea Salt – to taste
Ground White Pepper – to taste
For the Mushrooms
2tspn Vegetable Oil
100gr Butter
100gr Shitake Mushrooms – finely sliced
150gr Shimeji Mushrooms – stalk removed and individually picked
100gr Oyster Mushrooms – ripped into this strips
200gr Button Mushrooms – finely sliced
1 Bunch Parsley – finely chopped
Sea Salt
Ground White Pepper
Poached Eggs
2 Liters Water
¼ Cup Vinegar
8 Fresh eggs
1 Loaf Sour Dough Bread – cut on angle, 4 pieces 2cm thick
Olive Oil
Method
For the Hollandaise
[slideshow]
For the Mushrooms
For the Poached Eggs
To Finish
Photo by Jun Pang
Comments (5)
GeeEm July 19, 2012
There really is nothing better than a well cooked (and by that I actually mean runny) poached free range organic egg. We are really lucky here as we have some people we can buy from who have consistent double yolk eggs, it makes for double the fun!
dnleslie July 19, 2012
Does that mean you have to change recipes when using eggs? haha
GeeEm July 19, 2012
It means you have to remember which box was the doubles and which was the singles 😉 We have made that mistake a few times. Just means a more dense cake 😉
cookinginsens July 19, 2012
Mouth watering pictures!
dnleslie July 19, 2012
Thank you, Jun Pang is an excellent photographer