Background: Everyone makes scrambled eggs a little differently. Here’s the method I like:
- Get the best eggs you can; farmers markets are a great resource.
- Scramble them a little with a fork in a large bowl.
- Add a spoonful of sour cream for every 2 eggs.
- Scramble them a lot.
- Put a skillet on the stove on high.
- Add butter to a skillet and let it foam, but not brown.
- Turn down the temp to medium.
- Add the scrambled eggs.
- Use a rubber spatula to pull the uncooked egg into the center of the skillet.
- Continue to whisk with a fork as they cook.
- Turn off the heat before they brown and remove from pan immediately.
Why It Works:
- Farm fresh eggs make a difference in flavor, color, and texture.
- I find a fork does a better job than a whisk of incorporating the yolk and the white.
- The sour cream changes the flavor slightly, but it’s more about the texture. It keeps the eggs from getting rubbery.
- This is to break up all the sour cream you added.
- The classic French way is slow and low, but I like this method.
- I think browned butter in my eggs tastes fine, but the color can be off putting to some.
- Turning down the heat will make sure the butter doesn’t brown.
- I add them all at once, scrape the bowl with a rubber spatula, and then immediately scrape the skillet with a rubber spatula.
- Pulling the egg away from the edge of the pan will keep those edge sections from cooking faster than the center. You kind of fold them into the middle as more scoooshes to the edge.
- This makes for smaller curds, which is great for tacos and sandwiches, my go to vessels for eggs.
- If you let them sit in the pan, they will continue to cook, even off the heat.
Mods:
- Reduce the amount of sour cream at the beginning by half and replace it with cream cheese at the end. Fold it in gently.
- Fold in some warmed up Beer Braised Mushrooms at the end.
- Add cheese, duh.