Cathy2 wrote:Has anyone run into situations where they wouldn't cook the eggs as ordered?
Regards,
Egg white coagulates between 144 and 149°F, egg yolk coagulates between 149 and 158°F and whole eggs between 144 and 158°F. Plain whole eggs without added ingredients are pasteurized but not cooked by bringing them to 140°F and maintaining that temperature for 3 and 1/2 minutes. According to the FDA Food Code, eggs for immediate consumption can be cooked to 145°F for 15 seconds.
Mhays wrote:I suppose if you're eating something like softly scrambled eggs with mix-ins, or a highly seasoned omelet, you could maybe miss a bad egg among the several good ones and get salmonella - but from a sunny-side up egg? It was NOT something anybody with taste buds or a sense of smell would miss.
If present in food, [salmonella] does not usually affect the taste, smell, or appearance of the food.
jimswside wrote:any place that will not serve a sunny side up, or overeasy egg will not be a place I eat. The same goes for places that will not cook a hamburger less than medium.
Mhays wrote:Thanks, Binko - beyond my own experience, I was going off Alton Brown, who (I think) describes the same experience...but I defer to the USDA.
Mhays wrote:This doesn't dull my point, however - a lot of these rules are in place because people aren't taking responsibility for their own health.
Darren72 wrote:Mhays wrote:This doesn't dull my point, however - a lot of these rules are in place because people aren't taking responsibility for their own health.
I'm not sure what you mean. Beyond smelling or tasting the food, what are you suggesting people do in a restaurant? Are you suggesting that people smell an off odor, but don't say anything about it?
Mhays wrote:During the years I worked at Starbucks, we got a bad batch of milk TWICE - and, both times, ran through many customers before we discovered the error. Only one of those two times was the error pointed out by the customer - and we found the milk was really nasty sour (the other time, one of the baristas smelled it, after handing out her fourth or fifth latte.)
Cathy2 wrote:jimswside wrote:any place that will not serve a sunny side up, or overeasy egg will not be a place I eat. The same goes for places that will not cook a hamburger less than medium.
My friend Helen had overeasy without any reservations from the waiter. Only my very reasonable request for sunny side up eggs was declined.
Cathy2 wrote:"The Health Department won't let us serve those. You can have basted eggs."
Cathy2 wrote:Has anyone run into situations where they wouldn't cook the eggs as ordered?
abe_froeman wrote:I feel a little embarrassed to admit this, but other than sunny side up, scrambled and an omelet, I don't really know what the other ways to cook eggs mean. I'm sure I've had them before but unknowingly.
Mhays wrote:Ask and ye shall receive.
American Egg Board wrote:Basic Preparation
Scrambled Eggs
Fried Eggs
Hard-Cooked Eggs
Poached Eggs
Baked (Shirred) Eggs
French Omelet
Savory Soufflé
Soft (Stirred) Custard Sauce
Baked Custard
Soft (Pie) Meringue and Hard (Swiss) Meringue
LAZ wrote:However, my favorite egg dish is the sunrise sandwich, which is the name by which I was introduced to a preparation that's also called Gas House eggs, one-eyed jack, egg-in-a-nest and egg-in-a-hole. That's fried bread with an egg cooked in the center.
Egg in the basket or Egg in a window (egg in the hole in Commonwealth countries and toad in a hole or bird's nest in many parts of the United States) refers to a chicken's egg fried in a hole of a slice of bread. It is a common comfort food, and is known by many names in various countries. For example, this dish is sometimes referred to as one eyed jack when the cut out section of bread is fried and then placed back on the yolk, like an eye patch. Another name common in the United States is "Rocky Mountain toast". In the Northeastern United States it may be referred to as a "Bulls-eye." Other names include "Egg-Hole Bread", "Hole-E-Bread", "Top Hats", "Hole-in-a-Bucket", "Eggies in a Nest", "Hole in the Wall", "One-Eyed Susie", "Bird's Nest", "Toad on a Lilly", "Magic Egg", "Wesleys on Horseback", "Egyptian Toast" and "Indian Eye". A variation called "Indian Winking Eye" is done by putting the circle of bread back on the egg while cooking it.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
My Opa could have used an egg cooking terminology lesson. I certainly would have preferred him asking for eggs coddled instead of his seat-of-pants-invention, "Eggs cooked like snot." His youngest children were a few years younger than I, they would tell of their embarassment when he did this in restaurants. He would easily return his eggs several times until, "They got it right."
If he were far younger, had less money and didn't look so damn charmingly eccentric, he never could have gotten away with his demands. Now with health and liability consideratons, he probably would not get so far.
Regards,
Binko wrote:LAZ wrote:However, my favorite egg dish is the sunrise sandwich, which is the name by which I was introduced to a preparation that's also called Gas House eggs, one-eyed jack, egg-in-a-nest and egg-in-a-hole. That's fried bread with an egg cooked in the center.
I know it as "egg in the basket" or "toad in the hole" (which is not the same dish as the British toad-in-the-hole.)
Apparently, it's got a whole mess of names.Egg in the basket or Egg in a window (egg in the hole in Commonwealth countries and toad in a hole or bird's nest in many parts of the United States) refers to a chicken's egg fried in a hole of a slice of bread. It is a common comfort food, and is known by many names in various countries. For example, this dish is sometimes referred to as one eyed jack when the cut out section of bread is fried and then placed back on the yolk, like an eye patch. Another name common in the United States is "Rocky Mountain toast". In the Northeastern United States it may be referred to as a "Bulls-eye." Other names include "Egg-Hole Bread", "Hole-E-Bread", "Top Hats", "Hole-in-a-Bucket", "Eggies in a Nest", "Hole in the Wall", "One-Eyed Susie", "Bird's Nest", "Toad on a Lilly", "Magic Egg", "Wesleys on Horseback", "Egyptian Toast" and "Indian Eye". A variation called "Indian Winking Eye" is done by putting the circle of bread back on the egg while cooking it.
Cathy2 wrote:I glanced over and reported, "Oh that's the plate I burned my bra on."
Gypsy Boy wrote:Cathy2 wrote:I glanced over and reported, "Oh that's the plate I burned my bra on."
Okay, now I know that this is not egg-related but I just GOTTA ask. Huh?
In the great food culture wars of the 21st century, the egg-spoon skirmishes may one day be remembered as pivotal. Recent conflicts over this long-handled cooking tool have fostered a new social-media meme, a fresh front in the #MeToo movement and a handcrafted version that costs $250, not to mention new volleys lobbed by Alice Waters and Anthony Bourdain.