Mother’s Day Breakfast Idea: Incredibly Simple Eggs Benedict with Blender Hollandaise & a little history


 

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This week we’ve celebrated the wonders of American Fare. Served up today is another U.S culinary phenomenon, Eggs Benedict!

Contrary to popular belief Eggs Benedict’s origin is not that of foreign ground. Yep, it’s all American! It even possesses its own National Day, April 16th, which I missed this year. Better late than never, so I hear, it’s the thought that counts…

Allow me to fortify its origin with a few historical credits. There are two versions of Egg Benedict’s beginning—pick a favorite?

Charles-Ranhofer-The-Epicurean.jpg#1: 1860s – Credit is given to Delmonico’s Restaurant, the very first restaurant or public dining room ever opened in the United States. In the 1860’s, a regular patron of the restaurant, Mrs. LeGrand Benedict, finding nothing to her liking and wanting something new to eat for lunch, discussed this with Delmonico’s Chef Charles Ranhofer (1936-1899), Ranhofer came up with Eggs Benedict. He has a recipe called Eggs a’ la Benedick (Eufa a’ la Benedick) in his cookbook called The Epicurean published in 1894:

Recipe: Eggs à la Benedick- Cut some muffins in halves crosswise, toast them without allowing to brown, then place a round of cooked ham an eighth of an inch thick and of the same diameter as the muffins one each half. Heat in a moderate oven and put a poached egg on each toast. Cover the whole with Hollandaise sauce.  

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#2: 1894 – The following story appeared in the December 19, 1942 issue of the weekly New Yorker Magazine “Talk of the Town” column and is based on an interview with Lemuel Benedict the year before he died.

In 1894, Lemuel Benedict, a Wall Street broker, who was suffering from a hangover, ordered “some buttered toast, crisp bacon, two poached eggs, and a hooker of hollandaise sauce” at the Waldorf Hotel in New York. The Waldorf’s legendary chef, Oscar Tschirky, was so impressed that he put the dish on his breakfast and luncheon menus after substituting Canadian bacon for crisp bacon and a toasted English muffin for toasted bread.

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1896 – Fannie Merritt Farmer’s (1857-1915) revised, edited, and reissued Mary J. Lincoln’s cookbook called The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book. In it is a recipe for Eggs à la Benedict. The recipe is as follows:

Eggs à la Benedict – Split and toast English muffins. Sauté circular pieces of cold boiled ham, place these over the halves of muffins, arrange on each a dropped egg, and pour around Hollandaise Sauce II , diluted with cream to make of such consistency to pour easily.

On this belated National Eggs Benedict day I offer you a simple Eggs Benedict recipe for beginners. You will find yourself using it as you advance to any cooking level…promise!

This version of the highly adored (well, I adore it) classic Eggs Benedict recipe is virtually ready in minutes without all of the once feared preparation. Never fear your food, bad joo joo. Plus good cooking truly isn’t rocket Science; it’s about creativity–your creativity 🙂 Makes 4-6 Servings

chihillicious.jpgIngredients

  • 4-­6 English Muffins, cut in half
  • 4­-6 slices of thick cut bacon or Canadian Bacon
  • 4­-6 eggs
  • 1 recipe easy blender hollandaise sauce

Directions:

  • Preheat oven to 400º  Spray a muffin tin with nonstick cooking spray. Set aside.
  • Place bacon on a fully rimmed baking sheet that has been topped with a cooling rack. Bake for 15­-20 minutes.
  • Add 2 tablespoons of water to each indention of the muffin tin. Crack an egg into each individual indentation, taking care not to break the yolk. Place in the oven along with the bacon the last 9­-10 minutes of cooking.
  • Place English muffins on another baking sheet. Spread with butter and place in oven at the same time as adding eggs.
  • As bacon, eggs, and muffins are baking, prepare hollandaise sauce. Pour into a small serving pitcher or pour able container.
  • Place English Muffins on each plate, top with one slice of bacon folding to fit on the English Muffin. Using a silicon spatula, gently remove a poached egg from the muffin tin, draining on a thick kitchen or paper towel before placing on top of bacon.
  • Drizzle with hollandaise sauce, chopped chives or parsley and fresh cracked pepper. Serve warm.

kitchencounters.jpgEasy Blender Hollandaise

This recipe for rich, super easy, blender hollandaise sauce is the quickest and simplest version of classic hollandaise sauce that I have ever found or developed. It’s so simple you’ll find yourself preparing it to drizzle over your favorite veggies; asparagus, broccoli, artichokes—any and all as you like them!

Serves: 1 cup

Ingredients

  • 3 egg yolks
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice
  • 8 tablespoons salted butter
  • 1 tablespoon hot water
  • pinch of nutmeg
  • pinch of cayenne pepper

Instructions:

  • Melt butter in microwave or in a small pot over the stove. Allow the butter to begin to bubble, but not reach a full boil.
  • As butter is melting, add egg yolks and lemon juice into your blender. Blend at a medium setting until yolks lightens to a light yellow color. This will take about 20­-30 seconds.
  • Slowly drizzle hot butter into egg yolks while blender is at the medium setting.
  • Add hot water and nutmeg while blending sauce.
  • If you prefer your hollandaise sauce a bit thinner, add additional hot water a tablespoon at a time, pulsing after each addition until hollandaise reaches the consistency you prefer.
  • You may add more lemon juice if you like more lemon flavor as well.
  • Add a pinch of cayenne pepper to final hollandaise

Historical timeline offered by Linda Stradley

3 Comments Add yours

  1. Osyth says:

    I’ve always privately thought that my last supper would be Eggs Benedict of choice. And I know how to make the Hollandaise in a blender BUT I knew nothing of the history. I thank you and I will be making this for Russian friends staying the weekend on Saturday morning because nothing but nothing restores a sore traveller nor sets up a great weekend like them eggs!

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  2. I love eggs benedict but rarely make them for myself. Great history Lana, and yum!

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  3. chefkreso says:

    Looks really delicious and love the story 🙂

    Like

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