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Hereto, you read it correctly, coddled eggs. I thought my oh had gone mad when he announced he wanted cobbled eggs at the weekend. A little searching online revealed it was actually cobbled eggs he meant and after a few minutes I had a rough idea on how to make them without specialist coddled eggs makers, yep they exist
What you need for the easy method minus special equipment.
A ramakin for each egg.
Foil
Salt and pepper
Cream or soya cream
Eggs
And finally a basin that will act as as bain marie to stand the ramakins in.
Method
Put a tablespoon of cream in the bottom of each ramekin being used.
Crack the egg into the ramekin
Add salt and pepper as needed
Wait for the cream to start to work to the top
Wrap the ramekin in foil, gathering it at the top
Stand the ramekin in the bain marie equivalent in boiling water up to the height of the egg minimum and put into a hot oven (roughly 200°C 400F Gas 6).
Ours took roughly 12 minutes to cook but they were very large duck eggs, so aim for 10 minutes. The ideas is that the yolk is still runny but the whites are cooked.
Serve immediately over toast!
What you need for the easy method minus special equipment.
A ramakin for each egg.
Foil
Salt and pepper
Cream or soya cream
Eggs
And finally a basin that will act as as bain marie to stand the ramakins in.
Method
Put a tablespoon of cream in the bottom of each ramekin being used.
Crack the egg into the ramekin
Add salt and pepper as needed
Wait for the cream to start to work to the top
Wrap the ramekin in foil, gathering it at the top
Stand the ramekin in the bain marie equivalent in boiling water up to the height of the egg minimum and put into a hot oven (roughly 200°C 400F Gas 6).
Ours took roughly 12 minutes to cook but they were very large duck eggs, so aim for 10 minutes. The ideas is that the yolk is still runny but the whites are cooked.
Serve immediately over toast!