Breakfast Thai Style, Thai Fried Omelet from Andrea Nguyen 'Banh Mi Handbook'

Breakfast Thai Style, Thai Fried Omelet from The Banh MI Handbook,  Recipes for Crazy-Delicious Vietnamese Sandwiches ( Ten Speed Press, July 2014) by Andrea Nguyen...

Thai Fred Omelet

Makes enough for 1 sandwich ■ Takes 5 minutes

With two eggs on hand, you can make a fried egg banh mi (banh mi trung)—breakfast for many people and my own favorite anytime food. The default is to make sunny-side up eggs or a French-style omelet, but I like to fry the eggs Thai style, in hot oil, for a fluffy, golden brown omelet with a bit of crispness. It’s brilliant, simple cooking.

2 pinches of black or white pepper
1 teaspoon cornstarch
1 teaspoon fish sauce or soy sauce
1 teaspoon water
2 large eggs, at room temperature
3 to 4 tablespoons canola oil

Thai fried omelet

When the omelet has nearly set (it’s still wet but not jiggly), raise the heat to medium-high or high. Fry for about 1 minute, until the edges are golden and the bottom browns a bit. Use one or two spatulas to flip the omelet over. Cook for 30 to 60 seconds longer, or until the bottom picks up some browning. If you like, In a bowl, stir or whisk together the pepper, cornstarch, briefly refry the fish sauce, and water. Add the eggs and beat or whisk well to combine. Set aside.

Heat a wok or a small nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add oil to thickly film the bottom (thick as a bean sprout). Heat until the oil is very hot, nearly smoking; a drop of egg dabbed into the oil should immediately sizzle and bloom.

Pour in the egg (from as high as 12 inches / 30 cm if you love drama). It should spread and puff like a self-inflating raft. Use a spatula to pull and push the edges toward the middle, allowing excess egg to flow out into the oil to expand the size of the omelet. Expect a crazy shape and uneven texture.
first side.

Drain and cool the omelet on a rack. Blot excess oil with paper towels, if you like, then fold it over before sliding into bread for banh mi.

NoTES:
Let this omelet fly solo in a Thai fried omelet banh mi with all the fixings, or use it with another filling, such as the grilled portobello (page 105) or the sardine and tomato sauce (page 76). Make 3 or 4 omelets for a round of banh mi lettuce wraps (page 120), cutting the omelet into bite-size pieces and drizzling on some spicy hoisin sauce (page 31).

Revive a cold omelet in a toaster oven preheated to 375°F (190°C) for 5 to 6 minutes, flipping midway.

(Reprinted with permission from The Banh MI Handbook by Andrea Nguyen, copyright © 2014.
Published by Ten Speed Press, an imprint of Random House LLC. Food Photography credit: Paige Green © 2014)

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