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Friday, December 29, 2017

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Eggs Benedict Recipe - NYT Cooking
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Eggs Benedict (also called by the slang term "Eggs Benny") is a traditional American brunch or breakfast dish that consists of two halves of an English muffin each of which is topped with Canadian bacon, ham or sometimes bacon, a poached egg, and hollandaise sauce. The dish was first popularized in New York City. Many variations on the basic recipe are served.


Video Eggs Benedict



Origin

There are conflicting accounts as to the origin of Eggs Benedict.

Delmonico's in lower Manhattan says on its menu that "Eggs Benedict was first created in our ovens in 1860." One of its former chefs, Charles Ranhofer, also published the recipe for Eggs à la Benedick in 1894.

In an interview recorded in the "Talk of the Town" column of The New Yorker in 1942, the year before his death, Lemuel Benedict, a retired Wall Street stock broker, said that he had wandered into the Waldorf Hotel in 1894 and, hoping to find a cure for his morning hangover, ordered "buttered toast, poached eggs, crisp bacon, and a hooker of hollandaise". Oscar Tschirky, the maître d'hôtel, was so impressed with the dish that he put it on the breakfast and luncheon menus but substituted ham for the bacon and a toasted English muffin for the toast.

Another, later claim to the creation of Eggs Benedict was circuitously made by Edward P. Montgomery on behalf of Commodore E. C. Benedict. In 1967 Montgomery wrote a letter to then The New York Times food columnist Craig Claiborne which included a recipe he said he had received through his uncle, a friend of the commodore. Commodore Benedict's recipe--by way of Montgomery--varies greatly from Ranhofer's version, particularly in the hollandaise sauce preparation--calling for the addition of a "hot, hard-cooked egg and ham mixture".


Maps Eggs Benedict



Variations

Several variations of Eggs Benedict exist.

  • Eggs Blackstone substitutes streaky bacon for the ham and adds a tomato slice.
  • Eggs Blanchard substitutes Béchamel sauce for Hollandaise.
  • Eggs Florentine substitutes spinach for the ham or adds it underneath. Older versions of eggs Florentine add spinach to poached or shirred eggs.
  • Eggs Chesapeake substitutes a Maryland blue crab cake in place of the ham.
  • Eggs Mornay substitutes Mornay (cheese) sauce for the Hollandaise.
  • Eggs Trivette adds Creole mustard to the Hollandaise and adds a topping of Crayfish.
  • Eggs Omar (also known as a steak benedict) substitutes a small steak in place of the ham, and sometimes replaces the hollandaise with béarnaise.
  • Eggs Atlantic, Eggs Hemingway, or Eggs Copenhagen (also known as Eggs Royale and Eggs Montreal in New Zealand) substitutes salmon or smoked salmon for the ham. This is a common variation found in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United Kingdom. This is also known as "Eggs Benjamin" in some restaurants in Canada.
  • Huevos Benedictos substitutes sliced avocado and/or Mexican chorizo for the ham, and is topped with both a salsa (such as salsa roja or salsa brava) and hollandaise sauce.
  • Eggs Hussarde substitutes Holland rusks for the English muffin and adds Bordelaise sauce.
  • Irish Benedict replaces the ham with corned beef or Irish bacon.
  • Dutch Benedict replaces the ham or bacon with scrapple. Popular in the eastern region of Pennsylvania.
  • Eggs Hebridean replaces the ham with black pudding, often from Stornoway.
  • Eggs Cochon, a variation from New Orleans restaurants which replaces the ham with pork "debris" (slow roasted pork shredded in its own juices) and the English muffin with a large buttermilk biscuit.
  • Eggs Dean substitutes the English muffin for cheese and chorizo pancakes, bacon in place of ham, and the hollandaise with cheese and jalapeno sauce.

Eggs Benedict - Science of Cooking
src: scibosnian.com


See also


Classic Eggs Benedict with Blender Hollandaise recipe | Epicurious.com
src: assets.epicurious.com


References


Eggs Benedict â€
src: www.shelterharborinnri.com


External links

  • Who Cooked That Up? page on origin of the dish with a recipe
  • "Was He the Eggman?" An account in The New York Times about Lemuel Benedict and the efforts of Jack Benedict, the son of Lemuel's first cousin, to promote Lemuel's story. Article includes link to an audio slide show.

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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