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Oh Yum!

March 28, 2016 Leave a Comment

Gratin of hard-boiled eggsAll of those beautifully colored Easter eggs – Don’t let them go to waste.

imageHard boiled eggs, halved and baked in a creamy, cheesy Bechamel sauce. . . topped with buttered bread crumbs and baked until the sauce is bubbly and perfect.

Served with steamed asparagus or spinach, toast and jelly – oh my!  Perfect for breakfast, brunch, lunch, dinner, snacks, . . . . .you get the idea.

 

This dish can be made a day in advance and then baked. . . .and it reheats well.  It is as good on day  two as it is on day one.

Breakfast is calling!

Kathy

Creamy Gratin of Hard Cooked Eggs

Hard-boiled eggs baked in a creamy Bechamel, topped with buttered bread crumbs. Baked in individual gratin dishes or in a large casserole, these eggs are wonderful served any time of day. Served with steamed or roasted asparagus and buttered toast points - heavenly.
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Servings 4 people

Ingredients
  

  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 8 Hard-boiled eggs peeled and sliced in half lengthwise
  • 2 cups half and half (or heavy cream
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch
  • 1/4 cup cold water
  • 1 cup grated Swiss cheese
  • 1/2 tablespoon Dijon mustard (1 1/2 teaspoons is equal to 1/2 tablespoon)
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg (optional)
  • pinch salt
  • 1/2 cup bread crumbs
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • paprika

Instructions
 

  • Peel the hard-boiled eggs and slice in half lengthwise.
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Set the oven rack in the middle position of your oven.
  • Butter a 9x13-pan, a flat casserole dish that will hold at least 2 quarts, or enough individual Gratin dishes to hold the eggs
  • Arrange the peeled and halved eggs cut-side-down in the buttered casserole dish.
  • Melt the 2 tablespoons butter. Combine with the 1/2 cup bread crumbs. Set aside.
  • Combine the cornstarch with the 1/4 cup water. Mix to form a smooth paste. Set aside.
  • Heat the half and half or cream in a saucepan set over a medium flame. When the liquid begins to bubble, add the cornstarch mixture. Whisk continuously for one minute while the sauce boils.
  • Remove from heat. Stir in the Swiss cheese, mustard, nutmeg - if using, and the salt. Pour the bechamel evenly over the eggs; top with the buttered bread crumbs. Sprinkle with paprika.
  • Bake at 350 degrees for 25-30 minutes - until the gratin bubbles and the top turns golden brown.
  • Serve hot.

Notes

Special Equipment – a buttered, 13×9-inch casserole; a saucepan that will hold at least 2 quarts
Be sure that you set the oven rack at the middle position;
This dish can be prepared ahead of time.  If you are not going to bake the gratin right away, cover the dish with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for up to 24 hours.
This dish reheats well.  Low and slow.

Filed Under: Breakfast, Brunch, Eggs, Recipes, The Kitchen at Bridle Creek, Welcome Screen Tagged With: Easter Brunch, Hard boiled eggs baked in a creamy bechamel sauce, recipes using hard-boiled eggs, what to do with hard-boiled eggs

Deviled eggs

March 23, 2016 Leave a Comment

deviled peeps 2Have you decided what you are going to do with all of those boiled eggs you have colored?  There is nothing like a great deviled egg!  A beautiful and delicious finger food/appetizer/snack – and great way to make a dent in your Easter basket.

The basic deviled egg is great on it’s own – but why stop there?  By cutting the egg around the top instead of lengthwise – well, with a few peppercorns and finely trimmed carrots for beaks, you have baby chicks!  Add a little finely shredded lettuce and even the pickiest eaters may be willing to give them a try!

As with all egg products, make sure that you keep the eggs cold at all times to prevent food poisoning.

I have included  my recipe for deviled eggs. . . .  As with all recipes, add spices and seasonings to suit your personal taste. . . a little dried dill weed, a little celery salt, some black pepper, crumbled bacon –  you decide.

Deviled Peeps

It may seem obvious – but make sure you remove the peppercorns before eating 🙂

Enjoy,

Kathy

                                                       

Deviled Eggs

An all-time classic. The recipe is based on using 6 hard-boiled eggs
- but you can easily increase the number of eggs. For each 3 eggs added, add 2 tablespoons mayonnaise, 1/2 teaspoon yellow mustard and a pinch of salt.
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Servings 6 people

Ingredients
  

  • 6 eggs, hard boiled click here for my fail-proof method

  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 1 teaspoon yellow mustard
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • ground paprika

Instructions
 

  • Boil the eggs using your favorite method - or click here for my instructions for cooking the perfect hard-boiled eggs
    . Cool the eggs completely. (The eggs can be boiled up to several days in advance.)
  • Carefully peel the eggs. Pat them dry.
  • Halve the eggs and place the yolks in a bowl. Set the whites aside.
  • Mash the yolks with a fork.
  • Add the mayonnaise and mustard to the yolks. Continue to mash and mix until well combined. If the mixture seems dry, you can add up to 1 teaspoon white vinegar.
  • Add salt and pepper to taste.
  • Spoon or pipe yolk mixture into halved whites.
  • Sprinkle paprika over the yolk mixture if desired.

Notes

Try sprinkling the eggs with any of the following:  chopped chives, dill weed, crumbled crispy bacon. . . . maybe some smoked salmon.
How about adding a little creamed horseradish in with the mayonnaise?

Filed Under: Eggs, Holidays, Recipes, The Kitchen at Bridle Creek, Welcome Screen Tagged With: Deviled Eggs, spring chick deviled eggs

Scotch Eggs

March 22, 2016 Leave a Comment

Scotch Eggs 006Since the early 1980’s, Gastropubs throughout the British Isles have been serving up amazing food.  Scotch Eggs are just one of the items that you may find on the menu.  Boiled eggs encased in sausage, typically coated with bread crumbs and fried.  Served with mustard, they are a delight!

But these little gems are my dressed up version.  I first tasted these in the early 80’s, at the home of a dear friend.  I was instantly hooked!  A little tweaking and refining has earned these little beauties a place of honor here.  Boiled eggs surrounded by sausage, coated in crushed cornflakes and baked in the oven. . . topped with a celery sauce (that really  – I could eat by the spoonful!). . . . what are you waiting for?!

These can be made ahead – as early as the night before you plan to serve them, and then baked – making meal prep for your Holiday breakfast or brunch all the easier.  Although eggs and spring go together like bread and butter, these are wonderful any time of the year.

 [Continue Reading …]

Filed Under: Breakfast, Eggs, Holiday Meals, Holidays, Recipes, The Kitchen at Bridle Creek, Welcome Screen Tagged With: Baked Scotch Eggs, Best Scotch Eggs ever, Easter Brunch, Gastropub food, gluten free brunch, How to make The Perfect Hard-Boiled Eggs, Scotch Eggs, Scotch Eggs with Celery Sauce, Spring Brunch

Cheesecake in Eggshells ! Bless you Molly Yeh!

March 17, 2016 Leave a Comment

cheesecake+eggs-9So, of course you remember that I suggested you save the egg shells from the soft-boiled eggs you made a few days ago?  You have all made them – right?!

Well, you will want to now when you see what Molly Yeh has done with them. .. .  She has done a no-bake cheesecake egg with a marmalade yolk – and so cleverly put them into egg shells!

Genius!

Can you say Easter dessert?    We are so doing these this year!                                                                               The link to her website is below – Just click on her name.  Now hop to it, make those soft-boiled eggs so we can get to the good stuff – CHEESECAKE!

Enjoy,

Kathy

Here’s the link. . .

Source:  Molly-yeh

 

Filed Under: Eggs, Holidays, Recipes, Welcome Screen Tagged With: Cheesecake in Egg Shells, Easter dessert, Molly Yeh, No bake cheesecake eggs

Soft Boiled Eggs – Done Perfectly!

March 15, 2016 Leave a Comment

Soft Boiled Eggs 021 editedSeveral years ago our family was fortunate enough to spend the summer in Europe – with most of our time being in Germany.

Soft-boiled eggs were an every day part of our breakfasts.  They were perfectly cooked – and kept at a perfect temperature – and I became hopelessly addicted to them!

As our time in Germany came to a close, we (I) purchased egg plates, egg dishes, egg spoons, . . . . and many more treasures –  to bring home with us – in an attempt to replicate our wonderful experience.  But, try as I might, I had trouble reproducing those perfectly cooked soft eggs!  It seemed as though they were either over-cooked – and practically hard boiled, or under-done and nearly raw.

Searches of all of the best cookbooks, the internet, and every resource I could think of yielded as many different techniques as there were sources and produced nothing but a long series of trials and failures.  And so, I gave up.  I put away the little egg plates and egg spoons and for a very long time, there were no soft-boiled eggs at the Homestead (insert frowning face here).  And then, one day, as I was doing research on a totally unrelated cooking process, it came to me.  I knew what I was doing wrong. (The white and the yolk are made up of different blends of proteins, and so the white sets at a higher temperature than the yolk. . . . The methods that had been suggested – and touted for years, did not take that into consideration – I know, exciting stuff huh!  It’s how I roll. . . )

Soft Boiled Eggs - tools of the tradeOut came the little egg plates and spoons, the salt bowl and egg topper.  We were back in business! The soft-boiled eggs have returned (insert happy face here!).  Now, they are cooked to perfection. And served with a freshly baked English muffin, or a piece of buttered toast, the joy in the morning is back!

Having a very large flock of chickens means that we have a never-ending supply of these luscious little nuggets.  They are packed with protein and in spite of all the bad press targeting them for so many years, eggs – all of them – the whites and the yolks – have been proven to be very good for you!

You don’t need to have egg plates or egg cups or egg spoons or an egg topper to enjoy these gems.  A small bowl or ramekin filled with salt, rice, grain, seeds – works well as a holder for your eggs.  The back side of a table knife – tapped around the top of the egg will crack the egg open just fine.  Demitasse spoons, teaspoons – or even toast soldiers (thin pieces of a firm bread – toasted and buttered) will retrieve the yummy goodness waiting to delight your palate.  Be creative – be thrifty – get organized – and get going!  Get out your tools and lets get to it – soft-boiled eggs are calling.

Enjoy,

Kathy

P.S.  You are going to want to make these – and save the shells!  Wash them out carefully and let them dry – You will want them to use when you see what’s coming later in the week!

How to Cook the Perfect Soft-Boiled Egg

A great soft-boiled egg should have a firm yet soft - almost custard-like white and a warm, mildly runny yolk. A yolk that is nearly set is also acceptable. It is, after all, a matter of personal preference. My favorite, method for making soft-boiled eggs is a technique that works best in small batches of one to four eggs at a time. I call it my Fail-Safe French method. Using this method, you can use eggs right out of the refrigerator. No need to bring them to room temperature before cooking. I also have a great method for making them in larger batches. Simply follow my directions for the perfect hard-boiled egg - only let the eggs set for 6 minutes instead of 12. This method is not as consistent. . . You may have to test it a few time to find the timing for your eggs to be set the way you like them. The benefit of this method is that you can do large numbers at a time – as long as the eggs are in a single layer. We will start with my favorite, the small batch method.
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Cook Time 5 minutes mins
Total Time 5 minutes mins

Ingredients
  

  • 1 to 4 eggs no more than 4 at a time

Instructions
 

  • Fill a sauce pan with several inches of water (enough to cover the eggs).
  • Set the pan over high heat and allow the water to come to a rolling boil.
  • Lower the heat and let the water reduce to a rapid simmer.
  • Gently lower the eggs into the water, one at a time.
  • Cook the eggs for 5 to 7 minutes; 5 minutes for a moderately runny yolk, up to 7 minutes for one that is more set.
  • Remove the eggs from the water (using a slotted spoon if you plan to cook more than one batch).
  • Run under cold tap water for 30 to 60 seconds.
  • Set the egg, upright, in an egg cup or a small bowl or ramekin filled with rice, salt, or dried beans, grains, small gravel (cleaned – of course), whole dried corn . . . use your imagination. If you avoid egg spills, you can use your base over and over again.
  • Remove the top by tapping gently with a knife around the top of the egg, or if you are lucky enough to have one, use an egg-cutter.
  • Eat the eggs while they are warm, scooping out with a small egg spoon, or buttered crusty toast spears.
  • If you are doing more than one batch of eggs, return the water to a rolling boil and repeat from step 3, adding water if needed.

Notes

Several years ago, we spent the summer in Europe. Soft boiled eggs were on the menu every morning. I became addicted to them – and was intrigued as to how they were able to make so many in advance – and keep them warm without over-cooking . Before leaving Germany, we stocked up on egg plates, egg cups, egg spoons – everything we could – so that we could recreate our wonderful breakfast experience when we returned home. . . but no one would tell me the secret of how they kept their eggs just right…..
Well – here’s the secret.
You can make soft boiled eggs in advance, cooking for no longer than 5 minutes. Cool them completely in cold water, and refrigerate, covered until you need them (up to 3 days). Bring them to serving temperature by reheating them in 140 degree water for 30 minutes. – (So, that’s how they did it!) And now you know 

Filed Under: Eggs, Recipes, The Kitchen at Bridle Creek, Welcome Screen Tagged With: How to cook soft-boiled eggs, how to make perfect soft-boiled eggs, soft-boiled eggs, Sur la Table egg topper, Sur la Table olivewood egg cup, toast soldiers

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