It’s really no problem with refrigerated eggs. I steam my eggs, and it’s six minutes straight out of the fridge. No matter what your method is, it’s not that difficult to figure it out. Make an egg using your preferred method. Is it too runny? Cook a little longer next time. Is it too cooked? Cook a little less.
Why do we say ‘over easy’ instead of ‘easy over’? Given that ‘easy’ describes how you want the yolk, the former implies that you want the yolk more done than you really do, while the latter plainly says that you want the yolk runny and the egg to be flipped on both sides.
I mean, everyone knows what you mean, because that’s how it’s always been used. But why didn’t we start out with the more logical order?
More than sunny-side-up and over-easy? I guess in theory you could have six permutations of up, over, easy, medium, and hard, but only those two are common.
Sometimes I wish I did. Such a cheap, easy, convenient food. But unless you hide them in brownies or cookies, I can’t eat them. When I was a kid, after Mass on Sunday my father would make a big breakfast for the whole family. Bacon, eggs, toast, orange juice, etc. I would sit outside until it was all cleared away and eat cold toast & bacon. I couldn’t even smell the eggs cooking.
Threads like these always amuse me when there’s the tone of ‘why don’t you live exactly like I do?’ I have hot tea once every few months and boiled food once every week or two, why would I need some super special device for boiling water when I can just nuke a cup for tea or put a pot on the stove to boil potatoes or noodles? It’s the same way with soft-boiled eggs, this thread doesn’t make them sound like something I’d eat, they’re way too much work and trouble for a quick breakfast and not elaborate enough for a full breakfast (I’d rather have a sunny side up egg or eggs benedict if I’m sitting down).
Crab is about the only food that I’ll buy a specialized eating device for, and the cracker can just go in a drawer. Buying and keeping up with egg cups and special serrated knifes seems way over the top for me, like one of those things rich people do to show they have time or servants.
Me, too. I don’t think I’ve had a hot beverage at home in decades, bar the odd cup of cocoa in mid-winter. What possible use would I have for an electric kettle?
That’s not quite true. Plenty of people don’t like runny yolks, so at least “Fried hard” and “over hard” are common as well. I’d also add “over medium” to the list.
Quicker and more energy-efficient than on a stovetop. When making instant coffee, the water won’t boil out of the cup the way it does when you microwave it.
Once you have one, you find a lot more uses for it. Making a cup of soup late at night, f’rinstance.
Boil them softly, peel, and crack onto something? Though my working definition of “soft-boiled” is “hard white, slightly gooey yolk.” I don’t know what’s the precision of a so-called “egg timer”, but I require a kitchen timer that can be programmed to the second.
I did encounter an egg-cup once when visiting in Germany, and I found it a charming but unnecessary bit of ceremony.
If they are way too much work and trouble for a quick breakfast, and not elaborate enough for a full one, what can the poor benighted souls who cook and eat them be thinking? It’s lunacy! Frankly, it makes you wonder why people don’t live exactly like you do, doesn’t it?
There’s a general point that you shouldn’t have too many one-use items in your kitchen, but no-one blinks at the following, at least one of which it is quite likely you own:
Special glasses just for wine;
Special cups just for coffee;
Special serrated knives just for steak;
Special serrated knives just for bread;
Special spoons just for soup.
(Oh, and you don’t need special serrated knives for eggs. That would be weird. And egg cups are not a Veblen good. They’re really, really not.)
I do, however, have a set of egg coddlers. Coddled eggs are yummy. I cut little strips of cheddar and tuck them in there with the egg, put salt, a touch of cumin, some pepper, seal 'em up and cook them.
Until fully congealed, by the way, not runny and gicky. It’s a different process entirely.
I doubt it would be quicker, as I’d have to remember, find, and plug in a device that’s off somewhere else instead of just getting a pot. Also, since it’s electric, I probably can’t just toss it in the dishwasher the way I can a pot, I’ll have to hand-wash it which is WAY more effort than a quick rinse before setting it on a rack.
Also I doubt the claim of energy efficiency when you factor in the energy cost to manufacture it in the first place, or compare the alleged energy savings with the base cost of the unit. If I save 20 cents per year, it’s not actually going to pay for itself.
I don’t make instant coffee. When I heat water for tea in a microwave, I have never managed to have water boil out of the cup, I’m not sure why you think that has to happen. And if you’re not competent enough to heat water in a microwave, the last thing you need is to add more possible-fire-starting devices to the kitchen.
I don’t make cups of soup, and if I did I would rather just microwave a cup of soup than have to clean soup out of a device late at night.
I really don’t get why people like you refuse to realize that other people don’t live your exact life and have to try an argue that I should blow money on a gimmick kitchen gadget. We’re not all Brits chugging down tea and soup at all hours of the day to the point that boiling water is a routine thing.
I’m dreadfully sorry, but even I as a German engineer wouldn’t have thought that German engineering and especially the art of naming devices precisely, but clumsily, could go that far :D.