I saw the YouTube short from Chef John about poaching eggs.
I’ve never poached an egg. I have double-boiled/steamed an egg in one of those pans for poaching eggs, but I’ve never done it in just boiling water. I learned two things.
The obvious-after-the-fact one is that if you create a vortex in the water before putting the egg in, it stays together in the center. “Creating a vortex” is probably better known as “stirring”.
The one I had never heard of is “watery store-bought eggs”. Say what? Store-bought eggs are watery? Since when? The solution is obvious if one knows that there is a problem: Crack the egg into a sieve and let the water drain out, then proceed as usual.
The latter is what prompted this experiment. I wasn’t particularly hungry for eggs, but I got two for what would be “lupper”, I suppose. I did one each way starting from a clean pan, on high to start boiling, turned down to be barely bubbling, vortexing the water, then sliding the egg in from a custard cup and boiling for three minutes.
| Regular Egg | Strained Egg | |
| Mess | not egg-drop soup, but lots of white billowing around in the water | much less white floating around, but still some |
| Size | nominal | significantly smaller |
| Texture | rubbery | not rubbery |
Chef John said that one could poach two or three eggs at the same time. With regular eggs, I don’t think that would work well. The white billows in the boiling water and I think they would attach to one another (like cookies too close together when baking). With strained eggs, I think it would be fine; it was much more compact and what white did separate drifted away unattached.
I’m going to remember the sieve thing next time I fry eggs as well.
LikeLike