Braised Eggs With Zucchini, Feta and Lemon

- Total Time
- 35 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2lemons
- ⅓cup/70 milliliters olive oil
- 3small garlic cloves, crushed with the back of a knife
- 1red chile pepper (such as serrano), roughly chopped (and deseeded if you don’t like heat)
- Flaky sea salt
- 1⅓pounds/600 grams zucchini, thinly sliced on a mandoline
- 2leaves rainbow chard (about 3 ounces/80 grams), thinly sliced
- 2tablespoons roughly chopped chives
- 2tablespoons dill
- ⅓cup/40 grams roughly crumbled feta
- 6eggs
- 6zucchini blossoms, stemmed, halved lengthwise
- 1tablespoon/15 grams unsalted butter
- ¼teaspoon Aleppo pepper (or ⅛ teaspoon red pepper flakes)
Preparation
- Step 1
Take one lemon and use a vegetable peeler to remove 4 strips of zest. Squeeze the lemon to get 1 tablespoon juice, then set aside.
- Step 2
Add the oil, garlic, chopped red chile pepper, lemon zest strips and ¾ teaspoon salt to a large, preferably nonstick sauté pan (for which you have a lid) set over medium heat. Gently fry for 3 to 5 minutes, stirring often, until the oil begins to bubble. (Turn the heat down to medium-low if the oil bubbles too quickly.) Decrease the heat to low, add the zucchini slices (not the blossoms) and continue to cook for 15 to 20 minutes, stirring often, until the zucchini slices are very tender and beginning to brown. Stir in the chard and cook for another few minutes, until wilted.
- Step 3
Drain the zucchini and chard over a saucepan to collect the oil, then return the vegetables to the sauté pan. Stir in the herbs, reserved lemon juice and feta. Create 6 hollows with the back of a spoon and carefully break an egg into each hollow (take care not to break the yolks). Lay the zucchini blossoms around the eggs and drizzle them with a teaspoon of the reserved frying oil. Cover the pan with the lid and cook for 4 to 5 minutes over medium-high heat, until the whites are almost set and the yolks are still runny (the eggs will continue cooking once uncovered and taken off the heat).
- Step 4
While the eggs cook, add the butter to the reserved oil and gently heat until beginning to brown and bubble, then drizzle over the eggs when they’re done. Sprinkle with the Aleppo chile and a good pinch of salt and serve hot with juice from the remaining lemon squeezed on top.
Private Notes
Comments
Try treating the male blossoms like flowers--cut long stems and put in a glass of water and store in the refrigerator. They should keep for a day or two while you collect enough for serving.
Have had some luck storing mine for a about 4 days if I wrap them in a dry paper towel and then keep them in the fridge in a ziploc bag. seems to keep them fresh!
This another variation of eggs in purgatory or shakshuka, etc. I love shakshuka and I always finish that in the oven Bet you could here, too. I use a 350 oven and keep the lid on. Timing will vary depending on how much liquid surrounds the eggs so keep an eye on them.
This is a great and very flexible recipe. We changed it up based on what we received (and didn't have) in our CSA box. We sizzled the lemon peel and garlic with red pepper flakes, then added thinly sliced yellow squash and the chopped chard stalks. Once cooked, we added the chard leaves (large bunch). We stirred in fresh zaatar leaves instead of dill with vegan feta and lemon juice, then topped with eggs. We sprinkled them with chopped green onions, and served with tomato slices and toast. YUM!
Made with what was in the garden only one squash one eggplant extra chard - pecorino instead of feta but added after still delicious. Nice flexible recipe to riff off of.
Delicious. Wish I had made full servings minus three eggs for two hungry adults.
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