Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Recipe #1: Soft-Boiled Eggs on Toast with Maple Fried Bacon




Whether the egg came before the chicken may indeed be up for debate. That the first egg should have been soft-boiled seems inarguable.

The following recipe was cobbled together last fall while at my friend Brennan's apartment in Brooklyn. At the time, he had fresh cherry tomatoes and basil growing on his fire escape and while they added some wonderful seasonal freshness to our brunch, they were inevitably supporting roles. The recipe below contains my now full-proof method for quick, near-perfect soft boiled eggs. Everyone's hardware is different, of course, so it may take a little trial and error; but the goal of a consistently yellow, soft and viscous but not overly runny yolk, and a just-firm-enough white will be had through this recipe or some subtle variation thereof (such that when you put in on toast, table or plate it widens and squats a bit like a reclining fat man on a deck chair) .

Soft-Boiled Eggs on Toast with Maple Fried Bacon

4 eggs
4 strips of bacon
2 large slices of country bread (or any other good bread)
1 tablespoons butter (and 1 for buttering toasted bread)
1 tablespoon maple syrup
1 handful fresh basil, coarsely chopped
1 tablespoon olive oil
about a dozen cherry tomatoes, sliced in half
iced water in a medium sized mixing bowl
sea salt and pepper to taste

In a medium sized saucepan, bring about 6 cups of water to an "almost boil" (there should be an abundance of small bubbles collecting on the surfaces of the pot, and maybe a few ascending to freedom above). Hold each egg under warm running water for about 20 seconds to bring their temperature up slightly. With a soup spoon, lower each egg into the saucepan carefully so as not to crack them, and let cook (I nudge them occasionally) for 6 minutes. When the six minutes are up, lazily walk over to the pot and lift each egg out with the spoon and place in the ice water bath for about 30 seconds.

Meanwhile, over medium heat, melt a tablespoon of butter in a skillet or heavy duty non-stick pan. Line the bacon strips in the pan making sure that they are completely flat and in contact with the pan. After about three minutes of cooking (or when the bacon looks just cooked) brush the maple syrup on both sides of each piece. Finish cooking for about 1-2 minutes longer.

In a small mixing bowl, combine the basil, tomatoes, olive oil and a pinch of salt.

Place two soft-boiled eggs on each piece of buttered country toast, and slice open the ends with a sharp knife for the drama of it all. Place a small heaping of the tomato mix on each and serve with two slices of the gooey bacon.

Eat, enjoy and ponder that darned question of creation.

Happy Birthday, Mom



First let this be said: you are every bit as beautiful, inside and out, as if today marked the 30th year of your life. And our gift to you on this day of days is, in fact, a birth of its own. This will be the first entry in a blog that we hope will serve as a depository for our family’s collective food correspondences. The Internet, and more specifically the blog, has the now familiar ability to cut across the disparate time and space that separates our schedules, our homes, and indeed our kitchens. In the past couple of years, our family has gotten into a wonderful habit of documenting our various creative culinary endeavors and emailing the resulting images and recipes to one another. The small cooking community this has engendered has only gained momentum as Nicole has blossomed into a burgeoning pastry chef, and Gavin, often occupying the whole-iest food periphery, has inevitably caught the amateur chef bug. Our intention is that The Expanded McKenzie Kitchen will chronicle our growth together as impassioned food lovers and as aspirant chefs, and that it might create an easily accessible archive for all of our culinary undertakings. An athenaeum, of sorts, of our ever expanding family kitchen.

Under the influence of your love of food and of your own tireless kitchen, there have been countless lessons that we all have learned. None of them, however, have had as much import as these two:


First, that a recipe is only a suggestion.


And second, that except under extenuating circumstance, there is seldom good excuse for a bad meal.

Happy Birthday, and happy blogging!

Love,
Nicole and Ol