Hi, Lisa.
Thanks for such a wonderful description of the omelette maker. I've
gotta get one. I'm horrible at doing them on the stove, and it's nice
to know there's a microwave alternative.

More Later,
Dani

On 8/12/20, Lisa Belville via Cookinginthedark
<cookinginthedark@acbradio.org> wrote:
> Hi, Ron.
>
>
> I do scrambled eggs and omelets in the microwave all of the time.
>
>
> You've actually got a good start because a scrambled egg is just an egg
> cracked and beaten with a fork.  So, you would just poke the yoke a few
> times as you usually do, then use a quick back and forth motion to whisk
> the yoke and white around in the mug until the yoke and white are
> thoroughly combined.  Then add a teaspoon or so of water to the mix and
> give it a gentle stir. I don't know why, but eggs in the microwave taste
> better with water.  Someone told me that a long time ago and I didn't
> believe it, I was always a milk person, but for the microwave, it seems
> to work better than milk and makes the eggs fluffier..
>
>
> I have my favorite egg cooker. . . A silicone omelet maker I got at
> Target last year.  It's designed to be used either opened or closed, and
> it does a great job with just scrambled eggs or omelets.
>
>
> It's a single piece of silicone that folds in half.  To start you crack
> eggs and whisk them as if making scrambled eggs and pour them into the
> maker when it's unfolded and laid out flat.  Cook for about a minute or
> a minute and 20 seconds, depending on the number of eggs and the wattage
> of your microwave.  Then remove the maker from the microwave and add
> your omelet ingredients, bacon, cheese, sausage, veggies. . Whatever you
> want.  Then carefully fold the silicone in half.  There are raised
> pieces at one end that line up with wholes in the other side of the
> maker, so it fits perfectly and isn't hard to line up.
>
>
> Pop it back in the microwave and cook for another 45 seconds to a minute.
>
>
> If you just want to scramble a few eggs, you can just pull the maker out
> after a minute or so and stir things gently with a fork, then pop it
> back in for thirty seconds or so. This would also be when you could add
> cheese if you like scrambled eggs with cheese.
>
>
> The downside to this omelet maker is that it's small, only three or so
> eggs will work well.  The first time I made a three egg omelet I put in
> a bunch of cheese and bacon and it was a bit runny.  I cooked it for a
> few seconds longer, and it was cooked all right, but there was some egg
> juice in the microwave.  The finished omelet was good, though.
>
>
> I believe the Blind Mice Mall sells a silicone omelet maker.  If not,
> they're about $10 or so at Wall Mart, Target, even Amazon.
>
>
> You could also try silicone muffin pans, even the larger sized muffin
> pans would work.  Silicone is nonstick and very easy to clean.  If you
> clean it right and take care of it it will last and not take on smells
> of cooked items.
>
>
> Hope this helps some.
>
>
> Lisa
>
>
> On 8/11/2020 9:58 PM, Ron Kolesar via Cookinginthedark wrote:
>> Here's my recipe for homemade egg muffins.
>> 1. I take a coffee mug per egg.
>> That keeps the mess down and easy to clean up.
>> We all need to remember rehab 101, you make the mess, you clean it up.
>> SMILES.
>> Make sure you spray a little cooking spray in the mugs first.
>> Then crack your egg into each mug.
>> 2. With a fork, stir up your egg and make sure you poke the egg
>> mixture with the fork so that the egg doesn't explode in the microwave
>> oven.
>> 3. I always cover my egg cups with the microwave cover to also keep
>> the mess down.
>> The best tip I can share with you to make fried eggs in the microwave
>> is to have the microwave on half power for two minutes.
>> Each microwave is slightly different.
>> But for a reference, my Panasonic microwave oven has 1,400 watts of
>> power.
>> So, at half power, that would be 700 watts.
>> But I might play with that even more, even though I have a perfect
>> power setting for fried eggs only.
>> Would love advice on doing eggs sunny side up/over easy to sop up the
>> yoke with my toast and or biscuits.
>> And also would love some advice on doing scrambled eggs as well.
>> But place your eggs in the microwave oven for two minutes on half power.
>> Place what you would want on your sandwich in a toaster oven, if you
>> have one.
>> I love my talking toaster oven.
>> But I know not everyone can afford this oven.
>> I usually have a sausage patty on my sandwich.
>> I place the patty in the toaster oven for ten minutes at 350 on the
>> bake feature.
>> I also throw in a frozen hash brown in with my sausage patty and let
>> both cook for ten minutes at 350.
>> I then build my breakfast sandwich and might throw in a slice of
>> cheese while building the sandwich.
>> I take a English muffin out for my bread.
>> I build the sandwich and then place it back into the toaster oven and
>> switch from bake to toast and with the hash brown patty still in the
>> oven, I cook everything on the toast feature for five minutes.
>> That gives this breakfast a total cooking time of fifteen minutes.
>> Fast and hot.
>> With a tall ice cold glass of chocolate milk in the morning.
>> That is my breakfast. SMILES.
>> Now my question is this.
>> Has anyone had good luck at doing eggs sunny side up/over easy in the
>> microwave and or doing omelets or scrambled eggs in the microwave?
>> The only style of eggs I have down is fried eggs for my breakfast
>> sandwiches.
>> When I try scrambled eggs or omelets, they still come out runny.
>> I might try scrambled eggs, Sunnyside up and or over easy and omelets
>> at full power for sixty seconds, to see if that works out better.
>> So, would appreciate the help and advice for cooking time in the
>> microwave and at which power setting as well.
>> My power setting goes down by tens.
>> So, 90 percent power, 80 percent power, and so on.
>> So, to all, enjoy.
>> This blind flight simmer can't wait until next Tuesday the 18th, when
>> Microsoft will release the new Microsoft Flight simulator 2020 program
>> for we Blind flight simmers to stress test out and to enjoy.
>> This rich playboy flight simmer pilot only flies the Dassault Falcon
>> 7X and hopes to get his hands on the successor the DF8X for private
>> flights.
>> Ron Ham Radio Station KR3DOG
>> In the good old days of Morse code Shorthand, 73's AKA Best Regards
>> and or Best Whishes,From
>> Ron Kolesar
>> Volunteer Certified Licensed Emergency Communications Station
>> And
>> Volunteer Certified Licensed Ham Radio Station
>> With the Call Sign of KR3DOG
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