Omelette
make this omelette
at least once a week.
It’s insanely delicious,
whether laden with
veggies or kept simple.
I love it with dill, but
it’s good with almost
any herb or scallions.
Once you are a pro at
making this, add any
other cooked veggies
you have around.
$1.60 total
$0.80 / s e rving
4 eggs
2 tbsp fresh dill, finely chopped
salt and pepper
butter for the pan
1 shallot or ½ small red onion,
finely diced
¼ cup grated cheese
Method
Crack the eggs in a bowl. Add the dill, salt, pepper, and beat with a fork.
Put a big saucepan on medium-high heat. Melt a small blob of butter in
the pan. Once the butter is sizzling, add the onion and sauté for about
two minutes, until it’s translucent and smells great.
Add the egg to the hot pan and swirl it around to coat the surface
evenly. If the center of the omelette cooks more quickly than the edge,
use a spatula to pull any raw egg into the middle. Then stop touching it.
After about 30 seconds, toss the cheese on top along with any other raw
or cooked vegetable you feel like adding. Once none of the egg remains
translucent, fold the omelette in half with your spatula, then lift it out
of the pan. You don’t want any brown on your eggs.
If I’m serving two people, I usually cut one large omelette in half rather
than making two omelettes. However, when you feel like being fancy,
you can make a pair of two-egg omelettes simply by using half the
ingredients for each. For extra fanciness, roll up the omelette instead of
folding it—that’s how the French do it, traditionally. The result will be
quite thin and tender.
at least once a week.
It’s insanely delicious,
whether laden with
veggies or kept simple.
I love it with dill, but
it’s good with almost
any herb or scallions.
Once you are a pro at
making this, add any
other cooked veggies
you have around.
$1.60 total
$0.80 / s e rving
4 eggs
2 tbsp fresh dill, finely chopped
salt and pepper
butter for the pan
1 shallot or ½ small red onion,
finely diced
¼ cup grated cheese
Method
Crack the eggs in a bowl. Add the dill, salt, pepper, and beat with a fork.
Put a big saucepan on medium-high heat. Melt a small blob of butter in
the pan. Once the butter is sizzling, add the onion and sauté for about
two minutes, until it’s translucent and smells great.
Add the egg to the hot pan and swirl it around to coat the surface
evenly. If the center of the omelette cooks more quickly than the edge,
use a spatula to pull any raw egg into the middle. Then stop touching it.
After about 30 seconds, toss the cheese on top along with any other raw
or cooked vegetable you feel like adding. Once none of the egg remains
translucent, fold the omelette in half with your spatula, then lift it out
of the pan. You don’t want any brown on your eggs.
If I’m serving two people, I usually cut one large omelette in half rather
than making two omelettes. However, when you feel like being fancy,
you can make a pair of two-egg omelettes simply by using half the
ingredients for each. For extra fanciness, roll up the omelette instead of
folding it—that’s how the French do it, traditionally. The result will be
quite thin and tender.
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