• Fats Food Copycats - 05

    From Dave Drum@1:2320/105 to All on Tue Jun 11 07:14:00 2024
    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Copycat Mcdonald's Egg Mcmuffin
    Categories: Breads, Pork, Cheese, Eggs
    Yield: 1 servings

    1 English muffin; split open
    1 tb Butter
    1 sl American cheese
    1 lg Egg
    pn Salt
    1/4 c Water
    1 sl Canadian bacon

    Toast both halves of the English muffin until they're golden brown.
    Spread the butter over the insides.

    Place the bottom of the English muffin on a plate and lay the slice of
    cheese over it.

    Lightly grease the inside of the egg ring with vegetable shortening
    or oil, then set the egg ring on your nonstick skillet. Let the
    skillet and ring get good and hot over medium heat. Crack the egg
    into the egg ring and use a fork or the tip of a knife to pierce the
    yolk. Sprinkle the salt over the egg.

    Here's the big secret that I learned from a family friend, Oliver
    Alvarez, who works at McDonald's: Add steam. Trapping steam around
    the egg while it cooks helps it set quickly, and gives it a puffy,
    light texture. To do this, pour a bit of water in the pan around the
    outside of the egg ring and cover with a lid. Let the egg cook for
    about three minutes until it's set. Remove the pan from the heat, and
    gently lift the egg ring to reveal your cooked, perfectly round egg.

    Use a spatula to move the egg onto the cheese slice on the muffin.

    Add the Canadian bacon slice to the still-hot skillet and cook it for
    one minute on each side. Slide the hot bacon on top of the egg. Add
    the top half of the English muffin to complete the sandwich, and
    enjoy it while it's hot!

    HOW DO I GET THE PERFECT ROUND EGG? Look for metal egg rings with a
    little heft (instead of lightweight silicone). The extra weight will
    help prevent the egg white from seeping under the bottom. Make sure
    you let the skillet and egg ring get hot before adding the egg. The
    heat will quickly set the egg white, which helps keep it in the egg
    ring.

    If you don't want to use an egg ring, look around your kitchen! Round
    cookie cutters (make sure they're heat-resistant) and Mason jar lids
    can work just as well as an egg ring. Whichever method you're using,
    be sure to grease the egg ring generously (as well as the pan). If
    you really want to experiment, you can also use a thick onion ring
    slice as an egg ring-but the egg may not release from the onion.

    Nancy Mock, Horse Apple, Vermont

    Makes: 1 serving

    RECIPE FROM: https://www.tasteofhome.com

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