Omelettes
Replies
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One of my favourite omelettes is made the day after we have tacos for dinner and there's some leftovers.
I put in the seasoned ground beef, chopped tomatoes, shredded cheese, a bit of sour cream. It's yummy! Serve with salsa on the side and some salad. Makes an awesome lunch or even dinner the next day.2 -
Maybe twice a month. Cooking ones right now--bacon is bakin'--with mushrooms, three eggs, sprinkle of cheese and olives. Thanksgiving ham bits, too. 4 slices of bacon. Not more than 700 calories, of which 750 will be burned off on a bike ride today.0
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I always put black beans in my omelettes. Usually with spinach, but will use red peppers, onions and mushrooms if I run out. It may seem weird to add beans, but to me it makes it a complete meal, ready in a couple minutes in one pan.1
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I always order Greek omelettes if I have an omelette. They have gyro meat, feta cheese, kalamata olives and tomatoes with tzatziki (sp?) sauce on top. I don't have any idea if it's possible to have gyro meat at home or it's just an "eat out" kind of dish, but it's my favorite!0
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Saw this gem from the 1970's and thought I would share what appears to be perhaps the most disgusting idea for an omelette ever.
Loads of butter to make it greasy, mincemeat (as in the sweet pie filling, probably including suet in that era), cooked very wet and then smothered in icing sugar.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9O5WDPSpI1A
Fanny Cradock always dressed up for TV rather than dress to cook but came across as terrifying.2 -
Mushrooms and onions galore! I prefer scrambled tofu, use nutritional yeast and hemp seeds for a cheese sauce. Mix in tons of veggies but heavy on the onions and mushrooms. Also throw in some black beans once in a while and some shredded potato. Delish!1
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I always order Greek omelettes if I have an omelette. They have gyro meat, feta cheese, kalamata olives and tomatoes with tzatziki (sp?) sauce on top. I don't have any idea if it's possible to have gyro meat at home or it's just an "eat out" kind of dish, but it's my favorite!
I've made gyro meat at home. It was pretty intensive. I had to beat my blend of lamb and ground beef to get it to the right texture, then add all the seasoning, onions, garlic etc. Then pressed it into loaf pans, making sure to mash it all down to avoid air pockets and make the dense, smooth grained texture. Baked my two loaf pans in a water bath until done, then when pulled out of the stove, pressed them by placing a loaf pan on top of each and adding about 10lbs of weight and let them sit like that for 20 minutes or so. Poured off the fat and de-panned and then let them rest to near room temperature and then got to slicing.
It was super delicious, my kids loved it too, but lamb is expensive and it basically took hours, so I haven't done it again. I did eat gyro salad alot!1 -
The last omelette I made I added leftover roasted Brussels sprouts, gruyere and some parm. I love Brussels sprouts.1
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I do omelets often. Some of my favorite combinations are:
Caramelized onions, spinach and Swiss
Ham, green peppers, mushrooms, and pepper jack
Asparagus, bacon, and cheddar1 -
I love omelettes. I usually make them to help clean out the fridge at the end of my shopping cycle. Some favorite combos are:
spinach, mushroom, tomatoes and feta cheese
turkey and cheese topped with avacado and salsa (and maybe a dab of Greek yogurt)
bacon and carmelized onion
zucchini and anything...I love zucchini!
Oh yeah, and cheesesteak omelettes: roast beef, onions, peppers, mushrooms and cheese1 -
nicsflyingcircus wrote: »I always order Greek omelettes if I have an omelette. They have gyro meat, feta cheese, kalamata olives and tomatoes with tzatziki (sp?) sauce on top. I don't have any idea if it's possible to have gyro meat at home or it's just an "eat out" kind of dish, but it's my favorite!
I've made gyro meat at home. It was pretty intensive. I had to beat my blend of lamb and ground beef to get it to the right texture, then add all the seasoning, onions, garlic etc. Then pressed it into loaf pans, making sure to mash it all down to avoid air pockets and make the dense, smooth grained texture. Baked my two loaf pans in a water bath until done, then when pulled out of the stove, pressed them by placing a loaf pan on top of each and adding about 10lbs of weight and let them sit like that for 20 minutes or so. Poured off the fat and de-panned and then let them rest to near room temperature and then got to slicing.
It was super delicious, my kids loved it too, but lamb is expensive and it basically took hours, so I haven't done it again. I did eat gyro salad alot!
The texture of this isn't like authentic gyros but the flavor is good:
Mix all in food processor:
* 1/2 C chopped onion
* 2 t minced garlic
* 3/4 t salt
* 1 t Italian seasoning
* 1/4 t black pepper
* 1 pound raw ground lamb
Refrigerate for 1-2 hours
Bake like a meatloaf 60 minutes at 325 degrees
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My uncle raises sheep and sent my mom a bunch of lamb. If she gives me more than one pound, I will make that. But I'm reserving the pound I did get for Cumin Lamb Shepherd's Pie from "Double Awesome Chinese Food" - it's a pretty traditional shepherd's pie only with Chinese spices.1 -
kshama2001 wrote: »nicsflyingcircus wrote: »I always order Greek omelettes if I have an omelette. They have gyro meat, feta cheese, kalamata olives and tomatoes with tzatziki (sp?) sauce on top. I don't have any idea if it's possible to have gyro meat at home or it's just an "eat out" kind of dish, but it's my favorite!
I've made gyro meat at home. It was pretty intensive. I had to beat my blend of lamb and ground beef to get it to the right texture, then add all the seasoning, onions, garlic etc. Then pressed it into loaf pans, making sure to mash it all down to avoid air pockets and make the dense, smooth grained texture. Baked my two loaf pans in a water bath until done, then when pulled out of the stove, pressed them by placing a loaf pan on top of each and adding about 10lbs of weight and let them sit like that for 20 minutes or so. Poured off the fat and de-panned and then let them rest to near room temperature and then got to slicing.
It was super delicious, my kids loved it too, but lamb is expensive and it basically took hours, so I haven't done it again. I did eat gyro salad alot!
The texture of this isn't like authentic gyros but the flavor is good:
Mix all in food processor:
* 1/2 C chopped onion
* 2 t minced garlic
* 3/4 t salt
* 1 t Italian seasoning
* 1/4 t black pepper
* 1 pound raw ground lamb
Refrigerate for 1-2 hours
Bake like a meatloaf 60 minutes at 325 degrees
***************
My uncle raises sheep and sent my mom a bunch of lamb. If she gives me more than one pound, I will make that. But I'm reserving the pound I did get for Cumin Lamb Shepherd's Pie from "Double Awesome Chinese Food" - it's a pretty traditional shepherd's pie only with Chinese spices.
The texture on mine was pretty close and the flavor was fantastic.
I grew up eating what my mom called shepherd's pie, but it was made with ground beef. I believe that would actually be cottage pie, lol0 -
I love eggs but not omlettes.
Putting all of that stuff into an omelette, especially cheese and the butter often used to cook them, just adds cals and can turn an turn an omelette into a calorie bomb.
Feel the same way about coffee, which I drink black w/o sugar, cream and other stuff that just adds cals.
So just scrambled eggs (no milk added) cooked w/1 tsp of olive oil in a non-stick skillet and black coffee for me, thank-you.
All my omelettes end up as scrambled eggs anyway2 -
^^ they shouldn't - unless you keep vigorously stirring the egg mixture in the frypan, rather than letting it set.
When it is almost set I put the fillings on top then cook a bit more then fold in half so fillings are in the middle of egg either side.2 -
nicsflyingcircus wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »nicsflyingcircus wrote: »I always order Greek omelettes if I have an omelette. They have gyro meat, feta cheese, kalamata olives and tomatoes with tzatziki (sp?) sauce on top. I don't have any idea if it's possible to have gyro meat at home or it's just an "eat out" kind of dish, but it's my favorite!
I've made gyro meat at home. It was pretty intensive. I had to beat my blend of lamb and ground beef to get it to the right texture, then add all the seasoning, onions, garlic etc. Then pressed it into loaf pans, making sure to mash it all down to avoid air pockets and make the dense, smooth grained texture. Baked my two loaf pans in a water bath until done, then when pulled out of the stove, pressed them by placing a loaf pan on top of each and adding about 10lbs of weight and let them sit like that for 20 minutes or so. Poured off the fat and de-panned and then let them rest to near room temperature and then got to slicing.
It was super delicious, my kids loved it too, but lamb is expensive and it basically took hours, so I haven't done it again. I did eat gyro salad alot!
The texture of this isn't like authentic gyros but the flavor is good:
Mix all in food processor:
* 1/2 C chopped onion
* 2 t minced garlic
* 3/4 t salt
* 1 t Italian seasoning
* 1/4 t black pepper
* 1 pound raw ground lamb
Refrigerate for 1-2 hours
Bake like a meatloaf 60 minutes at 325 degrees
***************
My uncle raises sheep and sent my mom a bunch of lamb. If she gives me more than one pound, I will make that. But I'm reserving the pound I did get for Cumin Lamb Shepherd's Pie from "Double Awesome Chinese Food" - it's a pretty traditional shepherd's pie only with Chinese spices.
The texture on mine was pretty close and the flavor was fantastic.
I grew up eating what my mom called shepherd's pie, but it was made with ground beef. I believe that would actually be cottage pie, lol
My understanding is that lamb meat is shepherds pie - since shepherds had lambs.
Beef is cottage pie.
I make it sometimes, usually beef mince, topped with mashed potato and grated cheese.
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paperpudding wrote: »nicsflyingcircus wrote: »kshama2001 wrote: »nicsflyingcircus wrote: »I always order Greek omelettes if I have an omelette. They have gyro meat, feta cheese, kalamata olives and tomatoes with tzatziki (sp?) sauce on top. I don't have any idea if it's possible to have gyro meat at home or it's just an "eat out" kind of dish, but it's my favorite!
I've made gyro meat at home. It was pretty intensive. I had to beat my blend of lamb and ground beef to get it to the right texture, then add all the seasoning, onions, garlic etc. Then pressed it into loaf pans, making sure to mash it all down to avoid air pockets and make the dense, smooth grained texture. Baked my two loaf pans in a water bath until done, then when pulled out of the stove, pressed them by placing a loaf pan on top of each and adding about 10lbs of weight and let them sit like that for 20 minutes or so. Poured off the fat and de-panned and then let them rest to near room temperature and then got to slicing.
It was super delicious, my kids loved it too, but lamb is expensive and it basically took hours, so I haven't done it again. I did eat gyro salad alot!
The texture of this isn't like authentic gyros but the flavor is good:
Mix all in food processor:
* 1/2 C chopped onion
* 2 t minced garlic
* 3/4 t salt
* 1 t Italian seasoning
* 1/4 t black pepper
* 1 pound raw ground lamb
Refrigerate for 1-2 hours
Bake like a meatloaf 60 minutes at 325 degrees
***************
My uncle raises sheep and sent my mom a bunch of lamb. If she gives me more than one pound, I will make that. But I'm reserving the pound I did get for Cumin Lamb Shepherd's Pie from "Double Awesome Chinese Food" - it's a pretty traditional shepherd's pie only with Chinese spices.
The texture on mine was pretty close and the flavor was fantastic.
I grew up eating what my mom called shepherd's pie, but it was made with ground beef. I believe that would actually be cottage pie, lol
My understanding is that lamb meat is shepherds pie - since shepherds had lambs.
Beef is cottage pie.
I make it sometimes, usually beef mince, topped with mashed potato and grated cheese.
Ground beef (beef mince), mashed potatoes, shredded cheese. That's exactly how my mom made it. Loved that stuff as a kid. My husband however, was not big at all on it early in our marriage and I probably haven't made it in 15 years.1 -
I think omelettes are too much work (I'm probably just stupid lol) but I like quiche and frittatas. Or just scrambling it all up together in a pan which is what I did last night. I used bacon, onion, sweet peppers, cheddar cheese and milk. Spinach would also be good. potatoes. Beans.Tomato and avocado added at the end so they don't cook. Steak is the best to add in, but I never do because it's expensive.
Last nights was around 500 calories (3 eggs) which is fine for me... I also ate some toast with it.0
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