Scrambled Eggs for a Crowd
Published Dec. 19, 2024

- Total Time
- 25 minutes
- Prep Time
- 5 minutes
- Cook Time
- 20 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 24large eggs
- ½cup half-and-half or heavy cream
- 1½ teaspoons Diamond Crystal kosher salt or ¾ teaspoon fine sea salt
- 6tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into ½-inch cubes
- Black pepper and sliced chives, for serving (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Blend or whisk the eggs, half-and-half and salt together until no streaks remain.
- Step 2
In a large Dutch oven or nonstick pot, melt half the butter cubes over medium. Refrigerate the remaining butter. When the butter is melted, swirl the pot to coat, then add the eggs.
- Step 3
Use a wooden spoon to slowly scrape the sides and bottom of the pot in figure-8 motions. As you do so, big clumps will form. Repeat until one drag of the spoon reveals the bottom of the pot, then quickly fills with runny egg, 6 to 8 minutes.
- Step 4
Working quickly, immediately remove the pot from the heat and add the remaining chilled butter. Scrape and flip the clumps over until slightly underdone, 30 seconds to 1½ minutes, depending on how firm you like your eggs. The runny egg should be barely set but still shiny.
- Step 5
Transfer to a bowl or plates, sprinkle with black pepper and chives, if using, and serve right away; while it’s tempting to serve the eggs from the pot, they will overcook as they sit.
Private Notes
Comments
I followed the recipe to the letter to great success. I did have to make a few changes in ratios as I was cooking for a horde and not a crowd, and I ended up serving with bits of cured mutton and kumis (a fermented beverage made from mare's milk) instead of coffee and toast. All the same, I sent everybody off to the steppe well fed from the perfectly cooked eggs and slightly buzzed from the kumis.
Add a handful of a cheese that melts really well, like pepperjack or Colby. It helps keep it even creamier. A smidge of bacon fat is also amazing
Would this work if one only needed to cook 12 eggs?
Skim milk instead of cream. Added amount is a bit of trial and error. Too much, and they become runny. Just enough with a whisk after initially scrambling the eggs produces a healthy, fluffy texture.
The result of this recipe sounds so much like the best eggs we've ever had. We were in a small Chinese restaurant and the dish included large barely cooked shrimp. Absolutely perfect.
The key to the above recipe is the fat from the butter and half and half or cream. The fat added before cooking helps coat the protiens in the eggs to slow down the coagulation process. This results in the more tender scrambled eggs. There is also the added flavor benefit but there is some science behind the fat that helps explain why it is important.
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