Eggses!

How do you prefer your eggs prepared?

  • Raw

  • Soft boiled

  • Hard boiled

  • Scrambled

  • Fried

  • Sunny side up

  • Over easy

  • Over hard

  • Poached

  • Omletted

  • Microwaved

  • Baked

  • Creamed

  • Other (please explain)


Results are only viewable after voting.
If you eat eggs .. how do you prefer them prepared? Favorite egg dish?

Came out of curiosity as I was preparing some basic eggs for my wife while she wasn't feeling well. I default to scrambled; when she makes them for herself it's more a cross between fried and over-hard (done like an over-hard egg but with the yolk broken before flipping). I like omelettes too ... or a lovely smashed avo (which is probably more about the rocket and avo and less about the egg). or for quick simplicity a nuked cup egg on a muffin.
 

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I have no idea what over easy and over hard mean! Or what the difference between fried and sunny side up is. But I like them scrambled and I like a boiled egg which isn’t quite hard.
 


Fried, Over Easy but I usually need to order them Over Medium in diners instead because I’ve gotten a lot of runny egg whites before.
 

I have no idea what over easy and over hard mean! Or what the difference between fried and sunny side up is. But I like them scrambled and I like a boiled egg which isn’t quite hard.
Grain of salt ... I'm no chef nor an egg dish expert. But here's what they translate to to me (edit: i.e., what I'd expect to get if ordering at a diner or restaurant in the US):

Sunny side up: egg cracked into pan, heated until solid, yolk intact. Yolk solidity depends on how long it's cooked from mostly liquid to fully hardened.

Over easy: Flip the sunny side up egg over, but not for so long that the yolk fully solidifies, but remains unbroken.

Over hard: Flip the sunny side up egg over, keep it there until the yolk is fully cooked and everything is solid, and remains unbroken.

I guess all of the above are fried egg variations. Though I generally think of "fried" eggs as having a broken yolk (in the pan) that continues to cook. Edit:: I'm not a fried egg variation fan, but if I ordered a "fried egg" at a diner here without specifying one of the intact-yolk variations (sunny side, over easy, over hard, etc) I'd expect pre-broken and cooked yolk.
 
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Grain of salt ... I'm no chef nor an egg dish expert. But here's what they translate to to me:

Sunny side up: egg cracked into pan, heated until solid, yolk intact. Yolk solidity depends on how long it's cooked from mostly liquid to fully hardened.

Over easy: Flip the sunny side up egg over, but not for so long that the yolk fully solidifies, but remains unbroken.

Over hard: Flip the sunny side up egg over, keep it there until the yolk is fully cooked and everything is solid, and remains unbroken.

I guess all of the above are fried egg variations. Though I generally think of "fried" eggs as having a broken yolk that continues to cook.
Americans have a whole bunch variations which I would just call “fried egg”. We don’t subdivide it down to that much detail. The two biggest mysteries in life: American school terminology and American egg terminology. Nobody will ever understand either of them!*


*Well except Americans, presumably, but I wouldn’t want to speak for them. They might be just as mystified as the rest of us!
 

How could you forget "deviled"?
Deviled Eggs Egg GIF
 

Americans have a whole bunch variations which I would just call “fried egg”. We don’t subdivide it down to that much detail. The two biggest mysteries in life: American school terminology and American egg terminology. Nobody will ever understand either of them!*


*Well except Americans, presumably, but I wouldn’t want to speak for them. They might be just as mystified as the rest of us!
So what do you expect to get if you're in a restaurant and order a "fried egg"?

(And what's the school terminology confusion? Public = publicaly funded, private = privately funded? Or Primary/Elementary - Middle/Jr High - High?)
 


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