There’s more to eggs than scrambled breakfast. Poached, fried or soft-boiled, premium eggs are getting serious culinary treatment at some of the finest restaurants these days. They’re cracked onto wood-fired pizzas, tossed into pasta, and some are even taking a solo turn as an amuse bouche on some tasting menus.

At Woodside, Calif.’s Village Pub, for example, executive chef Dmitry Elperin’s signature glistening poached egg isn’t accompanied by bacon or home fries. Rather, it’s perched atop house-made spaghettini and served with sauteed artichokes, shaved bottarga and a vegetable nage — a flavorful French stock — for dinner.

“Eggs are the most simple form of elegance,” says Elperin, who loves serving poached eggs with crispy sweetbreads and chicory. “We relate them to caviar. And to our childhoods. They’re rich, neutral and simply a great vehicle for transporting flavor.”

Eggs have firm roots in classic French cooking, say Elperin and his colleagues, and Americans are catching on — and adding their own spin.

Elperin so respects the egg that he uses a sous vide immersion circulator to maintain a water bath at exactly 144.5 degrees Fahrenheit, the optimal temperature for poaching an egg slowly, in its own shell, for 45 minutes.

“It ensures that the egg is the perfect consistency and dates back to the French techniques of cooking eggs in the most delicate way possible,” says Elperin, who sources his prized organic eggs from Glaum Egg Ranch in Aptos, Calif.

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At Oakland, Calif.’s Marzano and its sister restaurant, Hudson, eggs are cooked to perfection atop artisanal pizzas in wood-fired ovens. Two-year-old Marzano offers nine delicate, blistered, Neapolitan pizzas, including a garlicky meatball marinara, all with the option of an added egg for $2. And on Hudson’s opening night Jan. 18, executive chef Robert Holt was cracking eggs onto pizzas topped with wild nettles and fresh goat cheese, or spicy pork sausage with braised Tuscan kale.

“Egg on a pizza is just like breakfast, but you’re eating it for dinner,” says Holt. “People just love that savory flavor and texture.”

Eggs may be a simple pleasure, but they’re not necessarily easy to cook, Holt says. All chefs have their secrets to avoid wetness or icky curdles. Holt pulls the pizza from the wood-fired oven halfway through the cooking process, waiting until the hot dough is already beginning to blister before cracking a raw egg into the center and returning it to the intense heat.

Jonathan Hall at Parcel 104 in Santa Clara, Calif., relies on a specific tool to crack the tops of his Capay Valley Farms eggs when he steams them in their own shells.

For Valentine’s Day, Hall was planning to serve eggs as an amuse bouche, topped with whipped, truffle-salted potatoes.

“It’ll melt in your mouth,” he says.

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And he knows a quality egg when he tastes it.

“Vendors are realizing that chefs are calling for fresh eggs that don’t come from mass production farms,” says Hall, who pays almost a dollar apiece for the Capay eggs — three times the price of your average egg.

Another tip for home chefs: Philippe Chevalier, the French-born and trained chef of Lafayette, Calif.’s Chevalier Restaurant, says a few drops of vinegar are a must when poaching an egg in water, chicken stock or red wine. It helps the whites “fix” and gather around the yolk. Also, once the water is boiling, Chevalier advises reducing the heat to medium-high before cracking the egg in the bath.

Cook it for two to three minutes before removing it gently with a slotted spoon. Finally, put the egg in ice water immediately to keep it from cooking more.

“You want your yolk very soft,” says Chevalier, who plans to serve a poached quail egg in a mushroom consomme as part of his Valentine’s Day menu. Another favorite of his: Oeuf Cocotte Parisian, a quick-baked egg dressed with creme fraiche and any number of mix-ins, from prosciutto to lentils or foie gras.

“Prepared this way, eggs are a classic in France,” he says. “They’re huge.”

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For some chefs, including David Kinch of Manresa in Los Gatos, Calif., eggs are a fine dining classic stateside, too. Until recently, the famed Los Gatos chef had showcased a quail egg amuse bouche on his menu. The restaurant became closely associated with the dish, he says, but after eight years, Kinch is switching gears.

“The funny thing is, we decided to take it off the menu because we saw so many egg dishes popping up around the Bay Area,” Kinch says. “We got culinary hate mail when we tried to take it off the menu another time. Egg dishes are hot. They’re in. Everyone’s doing them. And we pride ourselves on blazing the trail, not following it. So, we’re taking a break from eggs.”

Not completely. Black truffles are in season, and Kinch can’t resist the savory, aromatic effect they have on the eggs from Love Apple Farm, a biodynamic ranch in Santa Cruz. So, he offers an omelet. Talk about simple elegance: He cracks the eggs, stirs them with a fork, adds the truffle shavings and lets the mixture sit at room temperature before preparation. The way Kinch describes it, the result is almost sinful:

“When the doors of that kitchen open, boy, does everyone’s head turn.”

GRILLED BROCCOLI RABE

AND RADICCHIO WITH PANCETTA

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DRESSING AND SOFT-COOKED EGG

Serves 4

2 slices day-old rustic bread, crusts removed

Olive oil

Coarse salt

¼ pound pancetta, cut into ¼-inch dice

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½ cup white balsamic vinegar

1 tablespoon mustard seeds

1 teaspoon red pepper flakes

2 tablespoons sugar

1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves, roughly chopped

6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

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¼ cup diced red onion

¼ cup finely chopped fennel (about ½ bulb)

1 pound young broccoli rabe, leaves removed

2 heads radicchio, cored and leaves separated

2 tablespoons blended olive and grape seed oil

2 teaspoons minced garlic

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4 large eggs

20 shavings Parmigiano-Reggiano

1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Lightly oil and salt the bread; bake until golden brown, 10 minutes. Let cool, tear into pieces, and grind to fine breadcrumbs in food processor.

2. In a medium skillet, cook pancetta over medium-high heat until lightly golden brown, 5 minutes. Drain on paper towels. In a bowl, mix the vinegar, mustard seeds, red pepper flakes, sugar and thyme. Whisk in melted butter; add red onions, fennel and pancetta. Set the pancetta vinaigrette aside.

3. In a large bowl, toss the broccoli rabe with the radicchio leaves, blended oils, and garlic; season with salt. Heat a grill or grill pan until hot but not smoking. In batches, grill the broccoli rabe and radicchio for 30 seconds, turning frequently, until just wilted; transfer to a large bowl. When done, toss them with 4 tablespoons pancetta vinaigrette.

4. Bring a medium pot of water to a boil over medium-high heat. Adjust heat to maintain a simmer and cook eggs for 5 minutes. Plunge eggs into an ice water bath. When cool enough to handle, peel.

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5. To serve, mound the grilled broccoli rabe and radicchio on 4 serving plates. Top each with Parmigiano shavings and a whole soft-cooked egg. Drizzle with remaining vinaigrette and top generously with breadcrumbs.

Darryl Estrine and Kelly Kochendorfer, “Harvest to Heat: Cooking with America’s Best Chefs, Farmers, and Artisans” (Taunton Press, 304 pp., $40)

SPAGHETTINI WITH POACHED EGG, ARTICHOKES AND BOTTARGA

Serves 4

4 whole eggs (free-range and pasture raised)

4 large artichokes, cleaned, chokes removed

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1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil

¼ cup white wine

1 pound fresh pasta

1 cup vegetable stock

Salt, pepper, lemon juice, to taste

Butter or olive oil, to taste

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1 tablespoon chopped parsley

1 Bottarga Di Muggine (mullet roe)

1. Place four eggs in a pot and add cold water to a depth of 4 inches above the eggs. Set the heat to medium-low and place a thermometer in the pot. When the temperature reaches 145 degrees, set the timer for 45 minutes and continue cooking, maintaining the temperature by adjusting the heat.

2. While the eggs cook, place a 2-gallon pot of water on the stove to boil for the pasta.

3. Slice the cleaned artichokes and saute them in 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil and white wine until tender.

4. Place the pasta in the boiling water and cook until barely al dente. Remove it from water and add to saute pan with the artichokes. Add the vegetable stock, season the pasta with salt, pepper and lemon, and finish with a little butter or olive oil, and parsley.

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5. To serve, divide the pasta and liquid among serving plates. Carefully crack the softly cooked eggs and place one on top of each serving. Using a microplane, shave copious amounts of Bottarga over each dish.

— Dmitry Elperin, The Village Pub, Woodside, Calif.

OEUF COCOTTE PARISIAN

Serves 1

Softened butter

Olive oil

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1 ounce prosciutto, lentils or cooked chicken breast

2 ounces mushrooms, sliced

½ clove garlic, finely minced

2 teaspoons creme fraiche, divided

1 egg

Salt, pepper to taste

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½ teaspoon chives, chopped

1 slice white country bread, toasted

1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Grease the sides and bottom of a small ramekin with softened butter.

2. Heat frying pan to medium high. Add olive oil, prosciutto, mushrooms and garlic. Saute 3-4 minutes. Transfer to ramekin and top with 1 teaspoon creme fraiche.

3. Carefully crack the egg into the center of the ramekin, so you don’t break the yoke. Add salt and pepper as desired, then top with second teaspoon of creme fraiche. Bake 5-6 minutes. Garnish with chopped chives and enjoy with toast.

— Philippe Chevalier, Chevalier Restaurant

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EGG-TOPPED PIZZA TIPS

The trick to doing an egg-topped pizza successfully, say Hudson’s executive chef Robert Holt and Chez Panisse’s Alice Waters, is using a pizza stone and a very hot oven, 500 degrees or more. Wait to add the egg until halfway through the pizza baking time, then continue baking until the white has set, but the yolk is still a little runny. An egg is splendid on nearly any mixture of toppings, but here are two ideas.

Chez Panisse Cafe: Brush the dough with a mixture of olive oil and minced garlic. Add thinly sliced onion and grated mozzarella and fontina. Halfway through the cooking time, add the egg and finish baking. Garnish with sliced prosciutto, chopped parsley and a drizzle of white truffle or olive oil. (“Chez Panisse Cafe Cookbook,” Harper Collins 1999)

Hudson: Holt tops his favorite pizza with oven-roasted San Marzano tomatoes, spicy house-made pork sausage, braised Tuscan kale and aged provolone, plus an egg. He serves it garnished with Parmesan and flat-leaf parsley.

 


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