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The simplest way of boiling eggs is to place
them at starting in boiling water, and boil them from three to
three and a half to four minutes, according to whether they are
liked very lightly boiled, medium, or well-set.
The egg saucepan should be small, so that
when the eggs are first plunged in it takes the water off the
boil for a few seconds, otherwise the eggs are likely to crack.
This applies more particularly to French eggs, which have thin,
brittle shells containing an excess of lime, probably due to
the large quantity of chalk which is the distinguishing feature
of the soil in the Pas de Calais, which is the chief
neighbourhood from which French eggs are imported.
Over a million eggs are
imported from France to England every day, notwithstanding the
fact that thousands are kept awake by the crying of their
neighbours’ fowls.
There is a strange delusion among Londoners
that an egg is not good if it is milky. This, of course, is
never met with in London, for the simple reason that a milky
egg means, as a rule, than it has not been laid more than a few
hours. For this reason eggs literally hot from the nest are not
suitable for making puddings or even omelets. Eggs that have
been kept one or two days will be found to answer better, as
they possess more binding properties.
There is an old-fashioned idea that the best
way to boil an egg is to place it in the saucepan in cold
water, to put the saucepan on the fire, and as soon as the
water boils the egg is done. A very little reflection will show
that this entirely depends upon the size of the saucepan and
the fierceness of the fire. If the saucepan were the size of
the egg, the water would boil before the egg was hot through;
on the other hand, no one could place an egg in the copper on
this principle and then light the copper fire.
Eggs are best boiled in the dining-room on
the fire, or in an ornamental egg-boiler. By this means we get
the eggs hot, an occurrence almost unknown in large
hotels and big establishments.
Eggs, To
Break.—Whenever you break eggs, never mind what
quantity, always break each egg separately into a cup first;
see that it is good, and then throw it into a basin with the
rest. One bad egg would spoil fifty. Supposing you have a
dozen or two dozen new-laid eggs just taken from the nest,
it is not an uncommon thing to have one that has been
overlooked for weeks, and which may be a half-hatched mass
of putrefaction.
Eggs, Fried.—The first
point is to have a clean frying-pan, which is an article of
kitchen furniture very rarely indeed met with in this
country. For frying eggs, and for making omelets, it is
essential that the frying-pan should never be used for other
purposes.
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