Scrambled eggs

This article is about the culinary egg dish. For other uses, see Scrambled eggs (disambiguation).
"Scrambled" redirects here. For the TV programme, see Scrambled!. For other uses, see Scramble.
A close-up of scrambled eggs with grated cheese, tomato salad, toasted baguette, and aribiki (grilled, smoked Japanese pork sausages)

Scrambled eggs is a dish made from whites and yolks of eggs (usually chicken eggs) stirred or beaten together, typically with salt and butter and variable other ingredients, and then gently heated in a pan while being stirred.

Preparation

Preparation in pans

Only eggs are necessary to make scrambled eggs,[1] but nearly always salt is used, and very often other ingredients such as water, milk, butter, cream or in some cases creme fraiche or grated cheese may be added. The eggs are cracked into a bowl; with some salt, and the mixture is stirred or whisked. More consistent and far quicker results are obtained if a small amount of thickener such as cornstarch, potato starch or flour is added; this enables much quicker cooking with reduced risk of overcooking, even when less butter is used.[2][3]

The mixture can be poured into a hot pan containing melted butter or oil, where it starts coagulating.[4] The heat is turned down and the eggs are stirred as they cook. This creates small, soft curds of egg. Unlike pancake or omelette scrambled egg is virtually never browned.

Once the liquid has mostly set, additional ingredients such as ham, herbs, cheese or cream[4] may be folded in over low heat, just until incorporated. The eggs are usually slightly undercooked when removed from heat, since the eggs will continue to set. If any liquid is seeping from the eggs (syneresis), this is a sign of undercooking, overcooking or adding undercooked high-moisture vegetables.

Variations

Philippines variant of onions and scrambled eggs
Video showing the steps in which basic scrambled eggs are prepared with mushrooms and cheese

Serving options

Scrambled eggs with bacon and pancakes

Classical haute cuisine preparation calls for serving scrambled eggs in a deep silver dish. They can also be presented in small croustades made from hollowed-out brioche or tartlets.[5] When eaten for breakfast, scrambled eggs often accompany toast, bacon, smoked salmon, hash browns, cob, pancakes, ham or sausages. Popular condiments served with scrambled eggs include ketchup, hot sauce, and Worcestershire sauce.

See also

Notes

References

External links

Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe/module on
Scrambled eggs (Spanish)
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