Slow-cooked omelettes such as frittatas or tortillas can sometimes be tough. The proteins in eggs, like those in meat, become leathery if overcooked. One way of creating a lighter-textured omelette is to souffle it.
6 eggs, separated
100g hard cheese, such as Gruyere or Cheddar, grated
A little salt, if you like (the cheese is salty)
Large knob of butter
Beat the egg yolks lightly, and fold in the grated cheese. Whip the whites. I do this with a hand whisk, until I get soft peaks when I lift the whisk from the egg. A little vinegar helps the process, apparently.
Fold the whites into the yolk/cheese mixture, turning it over repeatedly with a spoon until roughly amalgamated. (You do this gently, in order to retain the air bubbles in the egg.)
Melt the butter over a gentle heat in a heavy, non-stick, 28cm frying pan. Pour in the omelette mix, and cook until it sets on the bottom. Cook the top under the grill, at its lowest flame.
Hi Nicholas,
ReplyDeleteThis isn't related to the souffle but there isn't a general questions section. I'm planning a Christmas party for 30+ people at my house. I want to give them a hot meal which they'll eat stading up (so can't serve anything that needs much cutting). I don't mind preparing beforehand but ideally want something simple to serve. I was thinking about groundnut stew or cassoulet (I was looking at your Aubergine book which is why it occured to me to contact you). I read your blog regularly... could you suggest something? I can give you the parameters e.g. ovens, cooking pot sizes ect) if you are interested in advising me... please email e dot strobes at gmail dot com. Many thanks!
Regards,
Philip