Experimental Eggs Benedict

finished eggs benedict

As Jeremy was wandering around YouTube, he happened upon a video titled, Eggs Benedict 5 ways. It was named after 2 people, a retired Wall Street wiz named Lemuel Benedict who ordered “buttered toast poached eggs, crisp bacon and a hooker of hollandaise” as a hangover cure in 1894 at the Waldorf Hotel, and an 1860’s Delmonico’s frequenter, Mrs. LeGrand Benedict who went straight to Chef Charles Ranhofer wanting something more unique to eat. We thought it would be fun to see what sort of interesting combination we could invent to create our own spin. What came were 2 sandwiches. One made with pulled pork, the other with greens and mushrooms.

Happy to serve
Happy to serve

I’ll be honest. This was my first hollandaise and my first double-boil. I’ll take it from here, Darling. All that goes into a hollandaise is egg yolk, butter and lemon juice.

Cracking an egg with one hand
Cracking an egg with one hand, because I can do it.
One-handed egg separating
Crack and pull just enough to let the whites seep out a bit at a time. That way, you can plop the yolk alone into the bowl.

You see, heat cooks the eggs and along with acidic lemon juice (it has a ph of about 3) kills bacteria, but you have to continuously whisk the mixture in the double boil or the eggs will solidify into essentially, scrambled eggs. 

Hollandaise over a double boil
Hollandaise over a double boil

What’s a double boil, you ask, essentially a pot of simmering to hard-simmering water with a bowl or smaller pot on top. It keeps things warm without putting things on direct heat. It is good for melting chocolate, or in our case, for making hollandaise sauce. In our opinion, ours tasted like mustard. We’ll need to further investigate with different methods to see if next time we can get something closer to that French lemony butter everyone else describes it to be.

Hollandaise sauce being whipped
Hollandaise sauce as it’s being whipped looks looks like a runny yellow mustard

Let me tell you, whisking meringue by hand is tiring.

whisking meringues by hand
Look how fast this whisk can go!
whisking meringues by hand
Cloudy meringues

Last time, I used an electric hand mixer. Since Jeremy was here and we were using such tiny containers, the beaters wouldn’t have fit. It took both of us to get it thick enough to scoop. Turns out, it was slightly over-whisked. You can see the clear run-off on our baking sheet. Into the oven that went for 4 minutes. 

2 clouds of meringue
2 clouds of meringue, slightly over-beaten

Yeah, According to Kitchn, there are various stages of whipping: no peaks, soft peaks, firm peaks, and stiff peaks. When egg whites are over whipped, the fat and water will separate with no coming back.  The whites turned crispy and brown for the most part.

2 clouds out of the oven
2 clouds out of the oven

The reason that they tasted so bland was because someone forgot to season them before scooping. That’s executive chef rule #4. Season everything as needed. These whites need it otherwise, they taste exactly like Styrofoam. As a last resort, we threw down a large pinch of black pepper over the cooked whites on both sandwiches.

cooked pulled pork
Cooked pulled pork reheated over the stove.

Why did we choose pork for our first sandwich? My mother had some in the fridge from a few nights ago fully cooked and just needing to be reheated. I watched so many “Cutthroat Kitchen” challenges where the chefs had to harvest their ingredients out of tea sets, macaroni sculptures and massive sandwiches that I started taking spare left-over dinner parts and turning them into new dishes. It’s a bit unconventional, but then again, it does bring new life into what may seem boring the second and third time or otherwise will rot behind the milk. Since we’re not being judged for it by Antonia Lofaso or Jet Tila, we’ll make the best of what we have in stock. We slapped a thin slice of sharp cheddar halfway and let it melt inside.

Quick side-note, the color of the cheese is the result of dying and the sharpness has to do with the aging process: the longer it’s aged, the sharper it will be. Sharper cheese tends to have less moisture and will not melt as easily.

ready to assemble
Ready to assemble

On the other half of the bagel, we had an arugula salad, stirred up a little olive oil with a pinch of onion powder, garlic (aka, the staple seasoning of the Italian-American home) and added a tiny bit of salt and black pepper. We decided to mix in some spinach with the arugula to balance out the peppery taste. Turns out (according to Biology Q&A) the same chemical found in arugula is also found in mustard plants. So to avoid having too much of the same thing, we mixed in some spinach. 

Let’s talk about #1 the pulled pork. It had a BBQ taste and came off as being very meaty (obviously). I’d give it a good 3.5 out of 5. It was a sandwich by definition, but from what we tasted, it was a burger in disguise. I agree. None of it was dried out, and it had that fatty pork flavor coming through in every bite. It became the main focus of the sandwich, putting the meringue down to non-existence. If we had followed the original 1896 cookbook recipe using my brother’s ham, it might have tasted more like the typical American breakfast. For all of you kosher folks, I would suggest using sliced beef, or sirloin. If people can order a breakfast burger with an egg, this substitution is only a slight breach from that. 

Now, let’s discuss sandwich #2 the garden. Every bite seemed complete from the elusive umami flavor in the mushrooms, the bitter arugula balanced by filling vitamin-rich spinach, our tangy hollandaise and the sweetness of toasted honey wheat bagels. Again, the baked meringue was completely lost. You’re Right. As it’s mostly vegetables, this one is satisfying, but not enough to hit like a cinder box. What really struck us was how hard the pepper hit the tongue. We really overestimated when it came to how much to season the individual contents. It may be a sheer disappointment to eat bland food, (As Gordon points out in all of the restaurants on “Kitchen Nightmares”) but it doesn’t help anyone to drown it all in salt and pepper. We must remember; the key is balance. If nothing is overpowering or understated, everything will have a chance to shine in its own right. 

finished eggs benedict
Finished eggs benedict

What if next time, we reel in a seafood meat like crab or tuna mixed in with mayo and celery and no cheese? That would feel lighter on the stomach and satisfy any cravings for omega-3. I remember having salmon benedict scones when you took me out on my birthday to Tailored Tea in Latham.  I remember it being a savory, dune of runny yolk, buttery sauce and salty Canadian bacon with a personal tea pot on the side. That was made in the classic style. If we can find a stellar place for some fresh crab, we’ll simply have to put it to good use. Catch you later! Bye!

Lauren in the kitchen
Lauren in the kitchen

Spring into Shrimp Salad

It’s transitioning quickly from winter to summer now, as is usual for New York around this time of year. In my experience, I am no longer craving hearty meals during this season. If I am going to be running around outdoors, I don’t want to be carrying around heavy food in my stomach which will only slow me down. Something lighter more refreshing will do. While scrolling through my news feed on Facebook the other day, a friend of mine posted a link to a simple recipe that fits the bill for me and Lauren. The name is “Avocado Shrimp Salad” which already wins the two of us over. This is a simple yet delicious salad that fits perfectly with this time of year and is easy on the budget, another plus.

Serving avocado Shrimp Salad
Serving my darling and myself some avocado shrimp salad.

This is a very straight-forward recipe. All you need is some good shrimp, greens, avocados, and veggies. By “good”, I don’t mean little tiny ones used for stir-fry. (Sorry to Natasha, but I like my shrimp a little bigger) But at the same time, we found out after the fact, that huge shrimp are not the way to go either, unless you cut them up first before serving. Since this is billed as a Cajun dish, big bright flavors are essential – lemon juice, chili pepper and cumin, the works. The avocados serve to cool down some of the spiciness, if you are not a big spice junkie such as me. 

The dressing should not be very heavy, something delicate to tie everything together. We followed along with a simple olive oil base, cilantro and lemon juice. In my opinion, cilantro is the bacon of the herb world. You can add it to just about any non-dessert dish, the smell is strong enough to distinguish it from parsley and it packs a punch in the flavor category!

It was my turn to “mise-en place” (French for “Put in place”) the vegetables and tomato this time while Jeremy handled the hot shrimp. We didn’t have any corn or red onion available, so we substituted with jalapeno and poblano peppers, but still had avocado, cucumber, tomato and lettuce. (Don’t you just love how a salad can be so adaptable?) Knife cuts have a three point check list.

  1. Use the right knife for the job. The wrong knife can make it harder to cut through and/or look sloppy, especially soft and juicy foods like tomatoes or bread.
  2. Cut on a clean cutting board. Keep it kosher and don’t let germs spread all over.
  3. Cut evenly so that everything looks similar and cooks at about the same pace. You “eat with your eyes” first.

    Nice and neat knife cuts
    Don’t they look even? Everything so nice and neat?

I had the loco-motion going smoothly in the wrist. I think of it like my arm is the main rod on a train car cranking the wheels. With a little attention to sizing, my julienne was straight on.

Peeling a cucumber
Can’t you smell the cucumber?

The first sign that shrimp are fully cooked is in the color. They go from gray and black to a peachy pink with red tails. After that, the middle has to cook through until it’s tender and slightly firm. If it gets to be rubbery and chewy, you’ve gone too far. 160 degrees F and opaque are your main goals. You want them to curl up like a “C”. When they’re raw, they kind of stretch out. Betty’s Kitchen Quick Tip #40 shows this in action. Sometimes, you can let them rest off of the heat and let it cook the rest of the way through with the residual heat if it just needs another 30 seconds. You don’t want to accidentally cook the juices out of it. Whenever I cook with chopped garlic, it chars or burns more than I’d like it. The rest period might help with that too. If anyone has any advice on this problem, please comment us your solutions.

Our 8 seasoned shrimp fresh out of the skillet.
Our 8 seasoned shrimp fresh out of the skillet.

Once the shrimp finished cooking among the spices, it was time to put our 2 halves together and toss them around so that the dressing could seep through.

The shrimp was seasoned perfectly, but we could’ve cooked them about a minute longer. The dressing was just right. As it turned out, I forgot to cut all the way through the slices and had to separate them by hand! How embarrassing! Everything else seemed crisp, dynamic and perfect for a summer-like spring day.

Toasting to spring salads
Toasting to spring. *Clink*