Egg
Frittata with Cheese, Sun-Dried Tomatoes, and Basil
Jennifer Martin of Portland, Oregon, writes: "I am not formally trained in cooking but grew up working in food service, from chopping vegetables at food festivals to catering parties for a little extra income. Today I own Epicure Custom Cooking, a gourmet takeout shop and catering company with a few tables for dining. Our specials change weekly and are geared toward what I like to cook and eat. I simply love the business, even with my 12-hour days. At home when I'm not working, I'm usually cooking just for myself, and I don't have a lot of time. I love a good breakfast — when I have Saturday and Sunday mornings off — so that's why I came up with the frittata."
Three-Cheese Baked Eggs with Roasted Peppers
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 1 1/2 hr
Eggs Baked in Pipérade
Piperade, a saucy tomato and pepper mixture from the Basque regions of France and Spain, is often paired with eggs.
Basque-Style Tortilla with Tuna and Tapenade
Tortilla à la Basquaise au Thon et à la Tapenade
Use a deep 12-inch-diameter nonstick skillet to make this Spanish-style frittata.
Baked Eggs with Spinach and Mushrooms
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 40 min
New Year's Morning Omelet
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Poached Eggs in a Red Wine Sauce
Oeufs en Meurette
Sauce meurette is one of the grand classics of French country cooking, a dark concentrated essence of red wine, stock, and vegetables. You would expect it to be paired with the equally powerful flavors of meat or poultry, but no — meurette is unique in accompanying fish, or poached eggs, as here. For extra flavor, I like to poach the eggs in the wine, which is then used for the sauce; they emerge an odd purple hue, but this is later concealed by the glossy brown sauce. For poaching, it's well worth looking for farm-fresh eggs as they hold their shape better than store-bought eggs.
Oeufs en meurette is a favorite restaurant dish, not least because it can be prepared ahead and assembled to order. However, most regrettably, it is not a dish to make in a hurry. All the elements can be prepared in advance, but the full glory of oeufs en meurette is ruined by trying to cut corners.
Wine for Cooking For six months in the year, we live in northern Burgundy, where the local pinot noirs are inexpensive and appropriately light for this dish. Equally good for meurette would be a pinot from the northern end of Oregon's Willamette Valley. Avoid the "blockbuster" type of heavy pinots that come from the hotter climes of California and Australia.
Wine to Drink To do justice to the richly flavored sauce, let's move up to something grander. A premier cru red from one of the villages in Burgundy's Côte de Beaune would do nicely, as would one of the more refined pinots from California's Carneros district.
Tuscan Rice Salad
Serve this main-course salad with some crusty bread, and offer fresh fruit for dessert. To prepare the dish, use leftovers from the Roast Pork Loin with Garlic and Rosemary , or broil two 4-ounce boneless pork loin chops until cooked through and then dice. Note that nutritional numbers are for either cut of pork.
Quail Eggs with Toasted-Sesame Salt
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Green Chili and Chorizo Breakfast Strata
This zesty, eye-opening casserole can be made with either pork or beef chorizo.
Herbed Cheese Scrambled Eggs on Asparagus
Crusty French bread and baked potatoes with butter are terrific alongside the eggs and asparagus. Add a fresh fruit tart from the bakery, and you'll know that this is definitely not breakfast.
Caramelized Apple Omelet
Omelette Pomme Colette
Jan Case of Cornelius, Oregon, writes: "A jar of confiture de lait, a caramel-like sauce made from whole milk and sugar, along with some fallen apples found on a morning walk after my return home from France, where I spent three perfectly glorious months, inspired this omelet." We substituted dulce de leche for the confiture de lait because it is more readily available in the U.S.