231 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
231 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3607
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Title: HPR3607: The Best Eggs in the World
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3607/hpr3607.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 02:05:41
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,607 for Tuesday the 31st of May 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, The Best Eggs in the World.
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It is part of the series' cooking.
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It is hosted by Poké, and is about 13 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is.
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The Emergency Show, The Best Eggs in the World.
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This show is from the Emergency Show Pool.
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You are hearing this because there was a free slot that was not filled.
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Hacker Public Radio is a community effort that will only continue with people like you
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submit shows.
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If you have not submitted a show this year, then please record an introduction about yourself
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and how you got into tech.
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Then post it to hackerpublicradio.org forward slash upload.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm Poké, and yet again, I am your host for today.
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Today's episode is going to be on hacking together a good breakfast.
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My world-famous best eggs in the world to be specific.
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I called them the best eggs in the world because no one else has laid claims to eggs any
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better.
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Their world-famous, because Peter 64 even said they were the greatest eggs in the world.
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Thanks Peter 64.
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Appreciate that.
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This is a really quick and easy way to throw together some really, really tasty eggs.
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What I do usually on a Sunday night or a Monday is I will chop up a couple of onions, and
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that's enough to make my eggs for the whole week.
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A lot of people don't like to chop onions, so I think I've kind of perfected the art
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of getting an onion chopped really quickly to get the least amount of tears out of it.
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So what I usually do, very important, you get a cutting board, you need a cutting board
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if you're going to cut with a sharp knife.
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First reason is because anything else is probably going to dull your knife, you don't want
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to dull your knife.
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Knives are important, and it's important that they're sharp.
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The second reason is if your knife is sharp, it's going to cut your onion a lot better,
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but it'll cut basically anything else you put under it, it'll cut your counter, and
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you don't want to be cutting on a glass dish because it isn't flat, and it's very hard,
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it will dull your knife.
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So get a cutting board, get a big cutting board, nice and flat.
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My cutting board is flat on one side and has a channel on the other for like drippings.
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If you're cutting meat, I use the flat side of it, and it is a very sharp knife.
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I cut a little bit off of each end of the onion, and then I throw those pieces away.
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Then I cut from the white of the onion to the white of the onion, but not all the way
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through.
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I just kind of cut through one or two layers of the onion, and I peel those layers off
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and throw them away.
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It's the cleanest way to get those outer onion skins away from your cutting surface so that
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you're not getting them in your food.
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Next, I will set the onion down on one of those flat ends and cut it completely in half.
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Take the halves, lay them on the wide sides, and most onions that are probably say four
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inches.
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We get the big vidalius.
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We get the nice big vidalius onions and about four inches across.
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Maybe three inches across.
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It's probably about three inches across.
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I'll make three cuts in that so that each section is about an inch wide, sorry, two cuts
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making three sections, each about an inch wide in each of those halves.
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So it's four cuts total after the thing's been cut in half.
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When I say that I cut them, I'm cutting in such a way that you have half rings is what
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those pieces are made of.
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I will take each of those pieces, which is like a semi-circle, half a circle, and I'll
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lay it down flat, and I will cut, usually keeping the knife pretty straight, and I'll start
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one edge, and I'll kind of rotate that onion slice as I move it through the knife so that
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I'm getting pretty consistent little pieces of onion through there.
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That works really well for me, and it gets it done really, really fast, and I can throw
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those in a tupperware.
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One of those disposable zip lock is the brand that we have on those disposable plastic containers
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or reusable.
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They're cheap enough you can dispose of them, but they're dishwasher safe, whatever.
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You know what I'm talking about.
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Put it in the plastic bag for like, I don't care.
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It's just a good way to get done.
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I will use one, you know, the middle pieces of that, or maybe two of the ends, or one
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a little bit of the end, worth of onion, each time I make eggs.
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And I will throw those into a, what I'm looking at here is I'm going to 10 inch frying pan,
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and it is Teflon coated.
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I like the Teflon so that nothing sticks in there, you can throw it all in.
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So I will have preheated that pan.
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My stove top goes from off to low, and if low, we're one, and it goes all the way to high,
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high would be nine on mine, so from one to nine is the scale that I'm working with, I always
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set mine on three and a half, is where I put it for cooking my eggs.
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It's hot enough that you can saute the onions and the mushrooms which I'm getting to, and
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it's cool enough so that you're not burning your eggs rubbery.
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If you cook your eggs too quickly, they turn rubbery, or really if you're cooking too
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slowly, there is a right speed for cooking eggs.
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And on my particular oven, it's three and a half.
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Try yours at three and a half, if yours goes from one to nine, and adjust, you know, up
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and down from there to try.
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So I throw those onions in the pan with no lubrication in there, no butter, no grease,
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no pan, no nothing.
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It's got teflon in there, that's plenty to keep your onions from sticking.
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Then I will use about three fresh mushrooms, now you can, you can do your mushrooms any
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way you like.
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I've had, you know, if it doesn't seem to be any difference in flavor or in noticeable
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texture in how I cut my onions, I mean, excuse me, my, well, even my hands, I just cut
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them that way because it's quick.
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There seems to be no noticeable difference in how I cut the mushrooms, but what I'll usually
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do is I'll take three to four large, what do you call them, button mushrooms.
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I think the white ones, white button mushrooms, and I'll cut the stems off, and I will not
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discard the stem.
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The stem, I'll just cut it off so that I can lay the mushroom flat on the cutting board.
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And I'll use three or four, depending on how big they are or how much I want to eat
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mushrooms that day.
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I love mushrooms.
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And then I'll either cut it in slices or I'll quarter it, or if it's a huge mushroom,
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you can cut it in like six, or even eighths if it's big enough, you don't usually get
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them that big though.
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And then you throw that in with the onions in the pan.
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Now, meanwhile, you can hear your onion sizzling and they're throwing off a nice smell
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and it's appetizing you, so you can't wait to eat these things already.
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So already they're going to be good just by the appetizing that's going on.
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Once they're in the pan, you've got a couple choices.
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I prefer a fresh garlic powder or granulated garlic, sometimes it's called.
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The powdered garlic is usually a little too powdery.
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It's nice, it's nice in the eggs, but it's a hassle to use because the steam makes it
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stick to the bottle and makes your whole experience using that little jar of garlic powder,
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a pain in the neck.
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But the granulated stuff works really nice.
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I do not like to use garlic salt if I have the choice because I like to control how
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much salt I put on my own.
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I don't like that to be a predetermined thing.
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And of course you can always add more salt to garlic salt, but you can never add less salt
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to garlic salt and the only way to do that would be to add more garlic powder.
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So why not just buy garlic powder in the first place because I'm willing to bet you already
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have a shake or full of salt that you can use.
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So I like to use garlic powder and I like to use salt and I like to use cracked pepper.
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And I will put those things over the top of the mushrooms and the onions.
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I don't really bother stirring it yet.
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And then I put to that size to a sixth of an onion and three or four mushrooms, I usually
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add a tablespoon, maybe a tablespoon and a half of real butter.
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Real butter is the key here because margarine tastes like crap.
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And all of the imitation butter is tastes like crap.
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If you're health conscious and you eat that stuff because you think butter is too fattening,
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think about the other things that imitation butter carries with it.
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It's probably not as healthy as you think.
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And if you're that concerned, just use a little bit less butter.
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But real butter is important because it tastes really good.
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Salty is important, real sugar is important in the kitchen because they taste really good.
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And health conscious folks can always eat less of those things rather than substituting
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with stuff that isn't perhaps as good for you, even though we think most people seem
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to think that they're better and maybe have other physical and physical effects that we're
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not thinking about.
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Anyway, that's that.
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I put a tablespoon and a half of butter on top of there.
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And a tablespoon and a half of butter is not real hard to estimate if you're used to
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using a real stick of butter because every stick of butter has eight tablespoons in it.
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And the package is labeled with lines where the table spoons are.
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So if you can just pay a little bit of attention to that and estimate a little bit, it's not
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that hard to figure out how much a tablespoon of butter is or a tablespoon and a half if you
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want to use that much.
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Once I have the butter on top of there, I put the lid on.
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I still haven't stirred anything.
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I leave the butter right on top of everything and I don't stir anything.
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And I go make a pot of coffee, rinse my coffee pot out, rinse my filter out, put the coffee
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in, put the water in, start that up, go back to the pan and lift the lid.
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If the butter is completely melted and it's disappeared, then you're ready for your next
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step.
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So with the lid back on, walk away and check your podcasts that morning or check your
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email or whatever it is you're doing, give it another minute or so.
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It's at that point that the butter is completely melted and it's gone that I will go reach
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for the eggs and the cheese.
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So what I'll do then is once the butter's gone, then I'll take and stir it up.
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And I use two forks every morning.
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I use one fork that I stir up, all that stuff with, the sauteed onions and mushrooms
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and butter and garlic, and salt and cracked pepper.
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I like cracked pepper.
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I like pepper from a pepper mill.
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It's much better than the powdered stuff.
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I'll stir that up with a fork and then I'll use that same fork to crack the eggs.
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I don't like cracking eggs on the side of a pan because I'm too messy that way.
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You may be good at that.
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Go for it.
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And I'll put two eggs on top of that stirred up mixture.
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Sometimes I'll try to make a little couple of pockets for the eggs to sit in so they
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don't roll around too far in there before they're done cooking.
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But I'll just, I'll use two eggs, put them on top of the sauteed onions and mushrooms
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and I will put the equivalent of a slice and a half of American cheese.
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Of whatever cheese I'm using that day on there.
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My very favorite cheese to use with my eggs is, it's a sharp cheddar.
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Wait, I wish I could ruin the name.
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Hoffman's, I believe, Hoffman's ultra-sharp cheddar.
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I get it in the deli and it's really funny because it doesn't even taste like cheddar.
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It's not sharp at all.
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I don't know why they call it ultra-sharp cheddar because it doesn't taste like that.
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But it's delicious cheese.
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It melts nice, leaves a nice consistency on top of there.
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Next is Harvardi.
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Harvardi's nice on there or American cheese or whatever you like.
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Whatever your favorite cheese is.
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Throw your cheese on top of there.
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Like I said, I use the equivalent of a slice and a half of American.
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Sometimes I'll put shredded cheese on there, but I'll try to use only that much.
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And once I lay the cheese on top of the eggs, I put the lid back on the pan.
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Throw two slices of toast in the toaster, whatever your favorite toast is.
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I kind of like rye or moral rye or bumper nickel.
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Those are great.
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But even, you know, American white bread is fine, whatever.
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So two slices of toast in the toaster oven and start the toaster.
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And I wait to start the toaster until after the lid is back on,
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because that's almost the perfect amount of time to cook those eggs.
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The time it takes to toast, two slices of toast, will have your eggs just slightly undercooked
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if you like them, the white fully cooked and the yolk runny.
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It'll be just slightly runny white at that point.
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And if you leave it in for another maybe 30 to 45 seconds,
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the white is going to fully cook, and you're going to have a slightly runny yellow slightly runny yolk.
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If you like your yolk cooked more, obviously leave it in longer.
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But I can do that.
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The toaster will ding, grab the toast, put the butter on it, set it on the side of the plate,
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grab the pan.
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What I usually do is just shake the pan side to side a little bit between the butter that's in there,
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and the teflon and the pan, usually just shaking it a little bit as enough to break all your eggs free,
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and you can pour them quickly and easily out of the pan onto your plate.
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Next to your toast, where that second fork is lying,
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and you are ready, my friend, to go.
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And by now your coffee's going to be done too.
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So enjoy your breakfast and have a great day.
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You have been listening to Hecker Public Radio at Hecker Public Radio.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by
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an onsthost.com, the internet archive, and our sings.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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an attribution 4.0 international license.
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