Search
by Ingredient

Easy Breakfast Omelet

StarStarStarHalf starEmpty star

Submitted by sheila12345

Classic French breakfast omelet with butter, eggs, a touch of cream, and seasoned salt. A fluffy 5-minute folded omelet ready for fillings or served plain over toast.

YIELD

2 servings

PREP

5 min

COOK

5 min

READY

10 min

The five-minute breakfast omelet that the French taught the world to make properly. Four eggs, a tablespoon of cream for richness, butter, and seasoning. The technique is the magic, not the ingredient list.

Low heat is the rule. High heat browns the bottom and gives a leathery, blistered omelet (the diner-style version that some folks love but is not what this recipe is after). Gentle, patient heat lets the eggs set without coloring, leaving you with a tender, pale gold fold.

The lift-and-tilt move is the technique to master. As the eggs set around the edges, lift one side with a spatula and tilt the pan so uncooked egg flows underneath. Repeat around the pan until the surface is mostly set with just a slick of liquid on top. That liquid is your insurance against an overcooked dry omelet.

A tablespoon of cream is the small detail that separates good from great. The fat keeps the eggs tender and adds a richness that water or milk cannot match. Skip the cream and you get scrambled eggs in folded form.

Whatever filling you use (cheese, ham, sauteed mushrooms, chives) goes on top while the surface still has that slick of unset egg. The residual heat melts cheese and warms fillings without overcooking the egg.

Pro Tips

  • Use a 8 to 10-inch nonstick or well-seasoned cast iron pan. The right size makes the fold proportional; too big and you get a thin pancake.
  • Beat the eggs only until just blended, with streaks of yolk and white still visible. Overbeaten eggs go flat and rubbery.
  • Pull the pan off the heat 30 seconds before you think it’s done. Carryover cooking finishes it on the plate.
  • Serve immediately. Omelets do not hold; they go from perfect to dense in 60 seconds.

Variations

  • Stir 2 tablespoons of grated Gruyere and a tablespoon of fresh chives into the eggs for an Alpine omelet.
  • Add a tablespoon of sliced smoked salmon and a teaspoon of capers as a filling for a brunch upgrade.
  • Top with a spoonful of salsa and a sprinkle of cilantro for a Tex-Mex twist.

Ingredients

2 30
TABLESPOONS ML BUTTER
4 4
LARGE LARGE EGGS
1 15
TABLESPOON ML HEAVY WHIPPING CREAM
½ 2.5
TEASPOON ML SEASONED SALT
1

Directions

Melt butter in non-stick omelet pan or skillet.

Cover pan well with butter as it melts.

Beat eggs with remaining ingredients.

Pour into pan and tilt to spread eggs to edges.

Cook over low heat. Loosen eggs from sides of pan with spatula as they begin to set.

Lift eggs with spatula and tilt pan to allow uncooked eggs to run to sides and under eggs to continue cooking.

Carefully lift one side of outer edge of eggs with spatula and fold over towards center making a half circle or flattened cone.

Slide omelet out of pan onto dish and serve.

If filling omelet, spoon filling mixture on top of and in the center of omelet prior to folding edges over to form half circle.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

Comments


 

 

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 123g (4.3 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 267 81% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 24g 37%
Saturated Fat 12g 60%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 463mg 154%
Sodium 813mg 34%
Total Carbohydrate 0g 0%
Dietary Fiber 0g 0%
Sugars g
Protein 26g
Vitamin A 19% Vitamin C 0%
Calcium 6% Iron 10%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
 
More health news

Email this recipe