Right from the start I will state I don’t like runny eggs. Runny eggs, however are taking over the world, so I think I may need to learn to like them. Half the food pictures I see when I scroll through Instagram are dishes of all manner topped with runny eggs, some poached, some fried, all of them gooey and unappetizing. I like my eggs scrambled, or if I am in the mood (and this is very important) hard boiled and made into either egg salad, or deviled eggs. When did runny eggs take over the world?
Several weeks ago out of the clear blue, I got about ten texts from a friend rhapsodizing about her love of runny eggs. When I finally admitted that I don’t really like them it was like throwing water on a fire. I regretted saying anything, but I couldn’t go on with the conversation pretending I shared her obvious passion; I had to be honest. I have no idea why anyone thinks it will improve a perfectly good cheeseburger, stack of pancakes, or bowl of ramen by topping it with a poached or fried egg. When I am out for brunch (not nearly often enough BTW) I generally order my X-Benedict (get it?) with the eggs scrambled.
When I was very little (maybe three or four) I regularly had a soft-boiled egg for breakfast. My mom would put it in a blue and white egg-cup on a plate with ‘duckies’ which were strips of toast that I’d dip into my runny egg. One morning I got a piece of shell in my mouth, and though I admit it was a snap decision, I was done with soft-boiled eggs forever! I have never looked back, and to this day am a bit skittish about finding shell in my egg dishes. (Maybe this is a subject for my therapist’s couch.)
If you are keeping track, you can add this to the list of my food dislikes/aversions that cause me culinary shame. I have eaten runny eggs when they are served (I am not completely without manners), but if I can find a way to avoid them I will. Though most of the world probably thinks I’m nuts, or just wrong, at least I am not alone. Anyone who reads this blog regularly knows of my love/hate relationship with Food Network (though if they offered me a job I would take it in a second!) and last week I was watching one of the 87,758* episodes of Diners, Drivers and Dives, a pizza edition, and the chef was making an amazing, mouthwatering pizza, and then, broke an egg over it, simultaneously Guy Fieri and I emitted the same plaintive “Nooooooooooooo”.
“Grow up” you say, “Get over it!” you demand, “Are you serious?” you ask. OK, you may have a point, but think of all the eggs I’m saving for you. I haven’t done any research on the subject, but it seems that this mania for topping every dish leaving a restaurant kitchen with an egg is having a significant impact on overall egg consumption. True, I am avidly against calorie counting, but do you really need to add 100 calories to your deep fried meatloaf and smoked gouda sandwich? Wouldn’t it be just as good with a little mayo instead of an egg? Really, I’m asking, would it? What is your favorite egg topped food?
*this is merely an estimate
Kelly - I don’t like runny eggs. They look great in pictures, but for me, that’s where it ends. I like super hard boiled…like, egg salad hard boiled. I’m okay with that too. 🙂 Happy Monday!
nrlowell@comcast.net - Kelly, I am even particular about my egg salad- I grate rather than chop my eggs. I guess we all have out culinary quirks!
Adrian Seltzer - The whites MUST be firm, but the warm yolk mixing with hollandise over a crab cake is pretty near heaven.
nrlowell@comcast.net - Adrian, I’m afraid we don’t share the same idea of heaven!
Sarah Honey - OMG. I can’t! They have to be well done or even passed well done! They will go right back to the kitchen.
nrlowell@comcast.net - Sarah, after mt years running a diner, I found that people are more particular about how they like their eggs than any other food! We like what we like.
Quirky Chrissy - I ADORE runny eggs. I have since I was a kid. The only way I’d eat scrambled eggs was if there were equal parts scrambled and cheese.
But…I speak from childhood food aversion experience when I say, give them a try again.
I wouldn’t eat ranch (anything with ranch on or in it) for about 20 years because of a bad food experience. Then one day I dipped wings in ranch and it was all over. I mean, I still don’t love ranch…but occasionally a good ranch is a nice change from blue cheese on the wings or from French onion dip with chips.
nrlowell@comcast.net - Chrissy, just for you I will be brave and give them another try, one day soon… 🙂
Suheiry Feliciano - This made me laugh. I think runny eggs are disgusting. I like hard-boiled eggs, but they have to be cooked just right. If you cook them too long, they get rubbery, and that grosses me out too.
nrlowell@comcast.net - I’m so happy to see there are people who will also admit to this! Thanks Suheiry. Nothing is worse than that telltale green ring on a hard-boiled egg!
Peggy Gilbey - I’m having a chuckle Nancy for I’ve just prepared and photographed a curried bauble and squeak topped with a poached egg for my cottage cooking club this morning! Enjoyed it too. I enjoy poached eggs, properly done, and, accompanied with foods as they make sense. No soft boiled for me. And as to the correct preparation of hard boiled eggs, turning off the burner as soon as boiling begins, no. Not rubbery hard boiled, but, fully cooked.
nrlowell@comcast.net - Peggy, I am laughing too! I have eaten a poached egg to be polite, and I can cook them. I’m not sure if I’m more put off by the runny yolk, or the slimy white… And I’m with you on hard-boiled eggs, no green!!
Alisa - My love of eggs has changed over the years. Until my husband introduced me to sunny-side up eggs, I was grossed out by eggs that weren’t cooked until they were dry. Now I love sunny-side up eggs. The thing that has not changed is my dislike of hardboiled eggs. I will not eat them whole, in egg salad, or deviled.
nrlowell@comcast.net - Alisa, people are pretty particular about eggs, that’s all I have to say. Any theories on my eggshell aversion?