So, I thought I'd give it a try.
Please join me as a I attempt eggs à la Jetboil in The Jetboil Sol -- Cooking Report #2
HJ
Adventures In Stoving
photohiker wrote:So Jim, you don't do any stirring or movement of the mixture in the pan? I've not seen them done that way before.
We call them Omlettes here (well, I do, anyway) Maybe an Omelet is a different method?
Strider wrote:photohiker wrote:So Jim, you don't do any stirring or movement of the mixture in the pan? I've not seen them done that way before.
We call them Omlettes here (well, I do, anyway) Maybe an Omelet is a different method?
Jim calls it an omelette on his blog?
Hiking Jim wrote:And the taste? Excellent. Every bit as good as an omelet cooked at home.
Omelette or omelet, both are considered acceptable spellings although I think omelette is actually more common. I guess I was just being lazy. My spell checker doesn't care either way.photohiker wrote:So Jim, you don't do any stirring or movement of the mixture in the pan? I've not seen them done that way before.
We call them Omlettes here (well, I do, anyway) Maybe an Omelet is a different method?
hikin_jim wrote:No stirring, flipping, or movement. You pour in the eggs, add the ingredients, and let it cook. That's why flame control is so important. An omelette lives or dies by the correct amount of heat.
Interesting. I just add everything and let it cook. The amount of flame and the quality of the pan does the cooking. That's just the way I've always done it. Seems to work if you strike the right balance with the flame.photohiker wrote:hikin_jim wrote:No stirring, flipping, or movement. You pour in the eggs, add the ingredients, and let it cook. That's why flame control is so important. An omelette lives or dies by the correct amount of heat.
Thanks Jim, I'll have to try that method out, looks way better for trips away from the kitchen.
I use the first method in this video: (there is a lot of cooking on youtube, isn't there?)
stepbystep wrote:This is the business https://vimeo.com/20148626
I made this video and ate 3 of them, the BEST ever
photohiker wrote:stepbystep wrote:This is the business https://vimeo.com/20148626
I made this video and ate 3 of them, the BEST ever
Omelletes look good. This is the basically the same method I use, similar results - haven't tried zucchini though. Also use a smaller pan, 2 eggs is enough.
That video was 'made' a year ago. When you've finished with your time machine, can I borrow it?
stepbystep wrote:Que? Do I need to make a new video in order to make a comment about an omelette? Vimeo is my time machine....
photohiker wrote:stepbystep wrote:Que? Do I need to make a new video in order to make a comment about an omelette? Vimeo is my time machine....
No, you don't, I clearly misunderstood your meaning. Nice video, well done.
Yipes. That sounds like work. I just beat everything thoroughly until it's as uniform a mix as I can make it. Tastes pretty darned good.north-north-west wrote:To make a proper omelette the egg whites should be beaten until stiff and then the yolks carefully folded in...
Good video. It looks like an excellent omelette. I never drag the edges in, though. I just set the flame, and let everything cook. Works pretty well. I make rather thick omelettes though. Quite a bit more egg. I'll make a 4 egg omelette in a 13cm diameter pan. That's a pretty thick omelette; very different than the one in the video.stepbystep wrote:This is the business https://vimeo.com/20148626
I made this video and ate 3 of them, the BEST ever
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