Poaching eggs in microwave
Discussion
Having watched this done numerous times I will say it can be done but its crap and not the same as poaching in a pan so TBH why bother?
Pan, water, vinegar to taste, quick swirl and 2 Mins 45 seonds and thats it. Use the pan water to help remove excess yolk from the plate afterwards and you are good.
Pan, water, vinegar to taste, quick swirl and 2 Mins 45 seonds and thats it. Use the pan water to help remove excess yolk from the plate afterwards and you are good.
I use one of these:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Microwavable-Breakfast-Co...
Only 4 quid, and seems to do a decent job.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Microwavable-Breakfast-Co...
Only 4 quid, and seems to do a decent job.
21TonyK said:
Having watched this done numerous times I will say it can be done but its crap and not the same as poaching in a pan so TBH why bother?
Pan, water, vinegar to taste, quick swirl and 2 Mins 45 seonds and thats it. Use the pan water to help remove excess yolk from the plate afterwards and you are good.
Easier in a work kitchen where there’s only a microwave. Pan, water, vinegar to taste, quick swirl and 2 Mins 45 seonds and thats it. Use the pan water to help remove excess yolk from the plate afterwards and you are good.
I am trying to experiment. But the trouble is that in order to interpret the results of my experiments I need to know whether my breakfast has gone wrong because of too much water, or not enough, or too long in the microwave or not long enough ETC.
At the moment I don't know which way to adjust. An egg didn't look done to me, so I left it longer and it disintegrated totally. So was it underdone at first then overdone and I should have gone for a time in between? Or was it overdone when I first looked at it? Or was it the water that was wrong? Or both?
At the moment I don't know which way to adjust. An egg didn't look done to me, so I left it longer and it disintegrated totally. So was it underdone at first then overdone and I should have gone for a time in between? Or was it overdone when I first looked at it? Or was it the water that was wrong? Or both?
Dr Jekyll said:
I am trying to experiment. But the trouble is that in order to interpret the results of my experiments I need to know whether my breakfast has gone wrong because of too much water, or not enough, or too long in the microwave or not long enough ETC.
At the moment I don't know which way to adjust. An egg didn't look done to me, so I left it longer and it disintegrated totally. So was it underdone at first then overdone and I should have gone for a time in between? Or was it overdone when I first looked at it? Or was it the water that was wrong? Or both?
Only change one variable at a time until you have identified the problem ?At the moment I don't know which way to adjust. An egg didn't look done to me, so I left it longer and it disintegrated totally. So was it underdone at first then overdone and I should have gone for a time in between? Or was it overdone when I first looked at it? Or was it the water that was wrong? Or both?
But TBH the answer to the question "why are my poached eggs a cloudy stringy mess" is almost always "use fresher eggs".
48k said:
Only change one variable at a time until you have identified the problem ?
But TBH the answer to the question "why are my poached eggs a cloudy stringy mess" is almost always "use fresher eggs".
Changing one variable at a time is precisely what I'm doing. But without some way of telling an undercooked egg from an overcooked one, and without knowing whether the other variables are such that it would work even if the cooking time was spot on it's all a bit meaningless.But TBH the answer to the question "why are my poached eggs a cloudy stringy mess" is almost always "use fresher eggs".
The suggestion that's what I'm seeing is a symptom of unfresh eggs is useful, thanks.
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