Meringue is back in style, not that it ever left.
A current food fad is a modern spin on a centuries old recipe, 400 years to be exact. That's when a food dish called Oeufs à la Neige (eggs in snow) was described in Le Cuisinier François, a pioneering 1651 cookbook when France was beginning a revolution in cookery that would make it the culinary leader of the world for centuries.
Today, this dish has been renamed eggs in a cloud, eggs in a nest, or cloud eggs, depending on your source.
Modern "eggs in a cloud" look sophisticated, but are not hard to make. Separate the egg white and egg yolks. Whip the egg whites, and arrange into "cloud" shapes on a silicone or parchment-lined baking sheet leaving a hollow in the middle for the yolk to be added. Bake a few minutes, slip the yolks onto each nest, bake for a few more minutes. That's it.
The 17th century version was cooked a bit differently. There were no hand-mixers or whisks, chefs used bundles of finely split sticks. The egg foam and yolk were placed on a buttered dish and baked atop coals instead of in an oven. Everything was heated from above with a cooking tool called a salamander, basically, a hot fire shovel held over the dish. It was served with a sprinkle of sugar.
A current food fad is a modern spin on a centuries old recipe, 400 years to be exact. That's when a food dish called Oeufs à la Neige (eggs in snow) was described in Le Cuisinier François, a pioneering 1651 cookbook when France was beginning a revolution in cookery that would make it the culinary leader of the world for centuries.
Today, this dish has been renamed eggs in a cloud, eggs in a nest, or cloud eggs, depending on your source.
Modern "eggs in a cloud" look sophisticated, but are not hard to make. Separate the egg white and egg yolks. Whip the egg whites, and arrange into "cloud" shapes on a silicone or parchment-lined baking sheet leaving a hollow in the middle for the yolk to be added. Bake a few minutes, slip the yolks onto each nest, bake for a few more minutes. That's it.
The 17th century version was cooked a bit differently. There were no hand-mixers or whisks, chefs used bundles of finely split sticks. The egg foam and yolk were placed on a buttered dish and baked atop coals instead of in an oven. Everything was heated from above with a cooking tool called a salamander, basically, a hot fire shovel held over the dish. It was served with a sprinkle of sugar.
This dish is fully customizable. You can add a variety of spices, such as oregano, basil, cilantro. You can also top the finished eggs with salsa or other toppings.
Eggs in a Cloud
- 4 eggs
- 1/4 C grated pecorino-romano cheese
- 1/4 C chopped chives
- 1/4 C crumbled ham or bacon
- Pepper & salt to taste
- Preheat oven to 450 degrees and line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.
- Separate eggs. Put whites in a single bowl and season with salt and pepper. Put each yolks in a separate small prep bowl.
- Whip the whites with a mixer until stiff peaks form. Fold in cheese, ham or bacon, and chives (if using any) after peaks have formed.
- Spoon 4 mounds of egg whites on parchment-lined baking sheet. Make a well in the center of each. Bake until slightly golden, about 3-4 minutes.
- Carefully add an egg yolk to the center of each white nest and bake again until the yolks are just set, about 3 minutes.
Watching your calories (as we are)? Here's great news — a single egg is only 70 to 80 calories, and you're not adding any oil, butter, or bread. You can eat two eggs at 160 calories for a filling breakfast. Adding 1/4 cup of Parmesan cheese to our four-egg recipe added 27 calories per "nest." But. the chives and herbs were minimal calories.
These are breakfast dishes that Grenville prepared adding cheese and chives and serving on a bed of field greens. he really enjoys making this recipe and enjoys being creative each time. Personally, I enjoy eating his "creations" as they are delicious!
11 comments:
Send him my way, they look delicious.
Oh my goodness. I have not even thought of eggs in a cloud for years. I like the variations you show. I could even envision a creamed spinach topping. This would be a good brunch offering.
It's great to be creative in the kitchen. I love it too.
They make a great presentation. I am trying to decide what the taste would be with non sweetened meringue. I bet they taste good or you wouldn't be making them.
Those look good!
Very interesting info about this good looking breakfast. Good job, Pat!
Something I haven't tried....yet! Looks good!
These do look very good but better if someone does them for me!
What a name .since now whenever I will look at clouds they will look like this pretty and cute shape :)
I have seen these and thoroughly enjoyed reading the historical aspect. We will have to give these a try. Thanks for the recipe :)
Looks delicious! Have a good week.
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