From the Midwest

From The Midwest

From The Midwest
Location
North Carolina,
Birthday
September 29
Title
CEO
Company
Never Give Up! Never Doubt Goodness and that Includes YOU!
Bio
Former English teacher-artist from the Midwest and just another statistic of "The Great Recession." Life goes on . . .

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FEBRUARY 7, 2012 12:23PM

Oeufs en Concotte (Baked Eggs)--Foodie Tuesday

Rate: 8 Flag

 

Baked eggs offering their warm, yellow yolk like the sun itself. Perfect
to take off the chill of a winter's morn.

 

 

It was chilly this morning with a thin layer of ice on the birdbath. I wanted eggs for breakfast, but not fried, scrambled or boiled. Omelet? Nay.

 

Baked eggs seemed the perfect ticket. 

 

This is a recipe you can make up as you go depending on ingredients you have on hand. I had some mushrooms, smoked hog jowl and onion. I also had cheese. On one I used a combo of Parmesan and fresh rosemary. On the other, I used Pepper Jack. I preferred the pepper jack.

 

You may, of course omit the onions, mushrooms and bacon. It's up to you. Even though I sauteed the mushrooms, they made the egg whites a bit more watery than I would have liked, but it was perfect for dunking crusty bread.

 

 

A few mushrooms, bacon slices, some chopped onion

2 eggs

1-2 tablespoons heavy cream

Pepper jack cheese

Pepper

Boiling water

 

 

Fry bacon or smoked hog jowl until brown and not overly crisp. Remove from pan and allow to drain. 

 

Remove some of the fat from the pan add the chopped onions and mushrooms and saute until onions are soft and mushrooms have released their liquid. Remove from pan and allow to drain.

 

I love smoked and sliced hog jowl!

 

Butter a ramekin and pour one tablespoon heavy cream in the bottom. Add some of the mushroom/onion mixture. Add some crumbled or torn cooked bacon.

 

Fill a shallow pan with boiling water. Place ramekin in the pan to begin warming the cream and vegetable mixture.

 

Carefully, break two eggs per ramekin. (I break each egg separately on a saucer then slide it into the ramekin ensuring an unbroken yolk.) Put a bit more cream over the eggs and then cover with cheese.

 

 

 

 

Place pan into a pre-heated 375-400 F degree oven. Bake for ten minutes until set. The whites will have set up and it should still be "jiggly." Remove from oven. I left mine in the hot water bath for a few minutes before removing. The yolk was just the way I liked it: creamy and custardy but not runny.

 

 

 

Serve with chunks of a crusty, artisan bread. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Notes: I probably would not have made this if I didn't have my Breville countertop oven. Since I purchased it, I haven't turned on my standard oven once!)

 

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Comments

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I cannot do runny eggs but this looks delicious.. You should try out for Chopped!!!
HUGGGGGGGGGGGG
looks good. I've never tried baking eggs but you've inspired me.
I love, love baked eggs and these look wonderful. -R-
Darn, and I went and had boring old oatmeal this morning. It must have been the absolute absence of available hog jowls in my fridge. This sounds delicious. =o)

rated
Linda: I love runny eggs . . . but noses are a whole 'nother story . . . LOL

Walter: It's all about the yolks, I think. They become "custardy."

Christine: And now you need to get hold of some smoked hog jowl.

Shiral: LOL . . . but, honestly, after eating smoked hog jowl . . . there's no going back to bacon. Hog jowls are a kind of cross between bacon and thin slice of ham. I'm the one should've had oatmeal! Especially since I'm considering making a whiskey choc. cake tomorrow . . . (no hog jowls, tho).
Linda: I love runny eggs . . . but noses are a whole 'nother story . . . LOL

Walter: It's all about the yolks, I think. They become "custardy."

Christine: And now you need to get hold of some smoked hog jowl.

Shiral: LOL . . . but, honestly, after eating smoked hog jowl . . . there's no going back to bacon. Hog jowls are a kind of cross between bacon and thin slice of ham. I'm the one should've had oatmeal! Especially since I'm considering making a whiskey choc. cake tomorrow . . . (no hog jowls, tho).
Didn’t even know you could bake eggs
Jack: ancient cultures define and begin "ages" in terms of "the egg." Be happy . . .
Smoked jowls.... yet another food item I've never seen in Canada.
This sounds stupendous! Now I've got to find hog jowl. I'm in South Carolina, it must be available here somewhere.