Eggs
1930 recipes found

Red Bean Tempeh Breakfast Scramble
We got some lovely Red Bean Tempeh the other day and after using half for a steak dinner I used up the remainder in this hearty 2-part breakfast scramble recipe.

Rainbow Cake
This Technicolor cake is a project, but one you can pull off with a little elbow grease and lots of butter (nine sticks, to be exact). Most rainbow cakes call for coloring the individual layers of cake batter, but here, the frosting is tinted, creating an impressive rainbow inside each slice. The batter uses egg whites for a light, fluffy, just-sweet-enough layer cake, while the leftover egg yolks in the frosting make it smooth and creamy. We’ve included instructions for making the ombré and piped versions of the cake below, but you’ll need to make an extra half-batch of frosting for the piped version. A standard mixer cannot accommodate more than one batch of frosting at a time, so you’ll need to make the half-batch separately, then combine them before coloring and frosting.

New Shrimp Louie (Poached Shrimp Salad)
In this spirit of classics like shrimp Louie or niçoise salad, this is a fairly basic, highly customizable salad-for-dinner deal, in which the nonnegotiables are fresh seafood (shrimp or salmon), crunchy lettuce (romaine or Little Gems) and tons of lemon (which comes in a tangy vinaigrette made with shallot and tarragon). From there, you can add any number of raw or lightly blanched vegetables, like shaved radish, sliced avocado or blanched green beans. To make things easy and efficient, the shrimp, eggs and green beans can all be cooked in the same pot of boiling water, so it’s not much of a fuss.

Scrambled Eggs With Buttery Bread Crumbs
Also known as the “poor man’s Parmesan,” pan-fried bread crumbs are most often found on top of pasta. But it turns out, they’re great on just about anything. Case in point: tender, fluffy scrambled eggs. Think of it like eggs and toast, just different. I always have English muffins around, but feel free to swap in your favorite bread. Sourdough, whole-wheat, multigrain, rye, anything works. And while this is wonderful with just the eggs and crumbs, if you’re feeling ambitious, you could call in some finely chopped chives, hot sauce, or even—wait for it—grated Parmesan.

Daneta Budalich’s PB, Chocolate Chunk Cookies
Recipe courtesy of Daneta Budalich for Green & Black’s
A Mid-Week’s Dinner Idea: Italian Tuna Loaf and Salsa Verde
This mid-week’s dinner loaf recipe is mainly prepared with tuna fish. This dish is present all over Italy, but every family has their own traditional recipe.

Spaghetti Carbonara Frittata
This Big Little Recipe takes the same ingredient as classic spaghetti carbonara, but reworks the quantities and technique so you end up with—ta da!—a frittata.

Loco Moco
This classic Hawaiian dish is similar to Japanese hambagu, a ground beef patty topped with a ketchup-based sauce, but loco moco is heartier, served atop a pile of white rice, smothered with caramelized onion gravy and topped with a fried egg. People in Hawaii enjoy it for breakfast, lunch, dinner or any time in between. This version is adapted from “Aloha Kitchen: Recipes From Hawai‘i,” by Alana Kysar, a cookbook of Hawaiian classics.

Asparagus With Soft-Boiled Eggs & Anchovy Bread Crumbs
Bright-green asparagus do most of the talking here. The anchovy bread crumbs, jammy eggs, and polka dots of chile paste make this filling enough for dinner. And, I know, a pound of asparagus per person sounds scandalous. And it sort of is. But that’s what makes it fun. Of course, this would also make a great side next to any protein, like roast chicken, pan-fried pork chops, or crispy-skinned fish.

Chicken Piccata Hilary
My kids favorite chicken picatta

Garlic Aioli
Zuni Café in San Francisco makes a traditional aioli with only four ingredients: garlic, egg yolk, olive oil and salt. No lemon or vinegar, no mustard, no pepper. Quarts of aioli are produced daily, mounted by hand with a wire whisk. You can, of course, make aioli with an electric blender or food processor in a matter of seconds, but, in “The Zuni Café Cookbook,” the chef Judy Rodgers describes how to make aioli with a mortar and pestle, the old-fashioned way. It takes patience, but the result is sublime. Choose a mild-tasting extra-virgin olive oil, perhaps a French one, or use a mixture of half-olive oil and half-neutral-tasting vegetable oil.

Chocolate Nemesis
This chocolate nemesis cake has all the deep, creamy chocolate flavor of the best chocolate mousse. But it also has structure due to the fact that it's a cake.

Konbi’s Egg Salad Sandwich
This famous egg salad sandwich comes from Konbi, the tiny Los Angeles cafe run by the co-chefs Akira Akuto and Nick Montgomery. It’s not always the case that sensational, Instagram-famous dishes are carefully calibrated to taste so good, but this one breaks the mold: It’s as pretty as it is delicious. The egg salad is brightened with a touch of rice wine vinegar and mustard and bound with Kewpie mayonnaise. When making it at home, be careful not to undercook the eggs or you’ll cross that fine line between jammy and runny. At the heart of the sandwich is a perfect hard-boiled egg, and we suggest cooking a couple extra in case they break or you have trouble peeling them. Extra eggs, still warm, with a touch of salt and pepper, make for a great snack while you're assembling.

Chocolate Lava Cake for Two
Chocolate lava cakes gained popularity in the late 1990s thanks to the chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, and they have stuck around on dessert menus for good reason: They are rich chocolate cake and velvety sauce all in one, and they are surprisingly easy to make in under an hour. If you like to plan ahead, you can prepare the batter a day in advance, refrigerate it, then pop the cake into the oven when you are ready for dessert. This recipe, made in a 10-ounce baking dish, is meant for sharing, but you can also make it in two 6-ounce ramekins. Just cut the baking time to 7 to 9 minutes. Also, be sure to use chopped chocolate bars or chocolate fèves rather than chocolate chips here. Chips are made with stabilizers that inhibit melting and will negatively affect the texture of your dessert.

Omelette with leeks, garlic and spinach
A quick and healthy omelette to get you through those long mornings.

A ZHOUGY EGG SALAD WITH TOAST
A yummy twist on egg salad with toast

Decadent Chocolate Mugcake for One
This dessert is perfect for those looking to curb a craving or packing a dessert for the holiday! It is 100% gluten and dairy-free.

Baked Eggs for a Crowd
The French long ago mastered eggs en cocotte —slightly coddled eggs baked at high heat with butter and cream, which thicken to a gravy as it cooks. There’s no finer way to enjoy an egg. To pull this off for a crowd, a large casserole dish coated with butter and partly filled with heavy cream acts as a bath in which to gently cook the eggs. To dress them up, add smoked salmon, a handful of kale or spinach leaves, thinly sliced ham, halved cherry tomatoes or sliced, cooked mushrooms to the mix before you crack in the eggs. Really anything goes here, but keep the accoutrements light and let the eggs take center stage. Finish with flaky sea salt (those large crystals melt on your tongue in just the right way) and any fresh herb you love.

Tart Lemon Pie
This vibrant pie is especially tart, due in part to the high quantity of lemon juice, but also due to the fact that it has no meringue. Use fresh squeezed lemon juice for the brightest flavor. Serve it with lightly sweetened whipped cream to temper the tartness, if you like; you could also skip the decorative triangles for a more classic look (in which case you only need to prepare dough for a single crust). You can make and chill the pie up to 1 day ahead, but don’t add the triangles until just before serving. Store leftovers in the refrigerator, covered with plastic wrap.

Migas Breakfast Tacos
Tortilla chips in tacos may seem like overkill, but they’re not. Set into scrambled eggs that are loaded with onions and poblanos, they soften and enrich the mix while keeping some crispiness. A slice of avocado on top — along with melted cheese — adds a nice creaminess to the mix. These tacos work well with red or green salsa, so use your favorite. While these would impress at a weekend brunch, they also come together quickly on weekday mornings, and can be wrapped in foil to be eaten out of hand.

Fried Eggs With Fried Herbs
Try chives, torn mint, oregano, thyme leaves, or even diced scallions before cracking your egg to be fried. This herb fried egg recipe is delicious!

Roasted Eggplant and Buffalo Mozzarella Pizza
In Italy, when high-quality buffalo mozzarella is used to top a pizza, it’s often added after baking instead of before. The heat of the just-cooked pizza softens but doesn’t melt the cheese, which retains its milky, sweet flavor and stays supple instead of becoming stretchy. Here, the cheese crowns a pizza topped with tomato, roasted eggplant, chile flakes and fresh basil leaves. If you can’t get good buffalo mozzarella, substitute dollops of fresh ricotta. Or, you could experiment with burrata, draining it first. Save the cream, mix it with olive oil and salt, then use it to top ripe tomatoes instead of dressing. And if you are in a rush, substitute store-bought pizza dough.

Uber-Umami Egg Skillet
These eggs are not just for breakfast! Creamy over-medium eggs temper the spice of a generous spoonful of harissa, the salty bite of soy sauce, and balance nicely with the chewy, savory bits of shiitake mushrooms and browned garlic.

Umami Toast
This Japanese-inspired breakfast dish was born of necessity. I had some leftover miso butter and thought that the best way to use it would be to slather it on toast. I had no idea what I was getting myself into when I topped it with a sunny-side up egg and sprinkled furikake seasoning over it. It was an umami kick in the mouth! Now, I always have miso butter on hand so that I can enjoy this quick and easy breakfast at least once a week.