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If you think your frying-pan
is perfectly clean, warm it in front of the fire for half a
minute, put a clean white cloth over the top of the finger, and
then rub the inside of the frying-pan.
To fry eggs properly, very little butter
will be required; a little olive-oil will answer the same
purpose. If you have too much “fat,” the white of the eggs are
apt to develop into big bubbles or blisters. Another point is,
you do not want too fierce a fire. Fry them very slowly. Some
cooks will almost burn the bottom of the egg before the upper
part is set. As soon as the white is set round the edge, you
will often find the yolk not set at all, surrounded by a rim of
semi-transparent “albumen.” When this is the case, it is very
often a good plan to take the frying-pan off the fire (we are
presuming the stove is a shut-up one), and place it in the oven
for a minute or so, leaving the oven door open. By this means
the heat of the oven will set the upper part of the eggs, and
there is no danger of the bottom part being burnt.
There is a great art in taking fried eggs
out of a frying-pan and serving them on a dish. Fried eggs, to
look nice, should have the yolk in the centre, surrounded by a
ring of white, perfectly round, rather more than an inch in
breadth.
Take an egg-slice in the left hand, slide it
under each egg separately, so that the yolk gets well into the
middle of the slice. Now take a knife in the right hand and
trim off the superfluous white. By this means you will be able
to do it neatly. The part trimmed away is virtually refuse. Of
course, you do not throw away more than is necessary, but take
care that the white rim round the yolk is of uniform breadth.
Most cooks take the egg out with their right hand, and attempt
to trim it with the left; the result is about as neat as what
would happen were you to attempt to write a letter with your
left hand in a hurry.
Very often the appearance of fried eggs is
improved by sprinkling over them a few specks of chopped
parsley.
In placing fried eggs on toast, place the
slice over the toast and draw the slice away. Do not push the
egg on; you may break it.
Eggs, Poached.—The best
kitchen implement to use for poaching eggs is a good large
frying-pan. The mistake is to let the water boil; it should
only just simmer. You should avoid having the white of the
egg set too hard. We should endeavour to have the eggs look
as white as possible. In order to insure this, put a few
drops of vinegar or lemon-juice into the water, break the
eggs separately into a clip, and then turn them very gently
into the hot water. When they are set fairly firm take them
out with an egg-slice, using the left hand as before, and
trim them with the right. It is not necessary, in poached
eggs, to have a clear yolk surrounded with a white uniform
ring. Poached eggs often look best when the yolk reposes in
a sort of pillow-case of white. Before putting them on toast
or spinach, &c., be very careful to drain off the water;
this is particularly important when the water is acid,
especially with vinegar.
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