Because the cooking times are similar. Assuming your omelette is 90 seconds, the scrambled omelette (scrambled eggs) is not taking longer that twice that (3 minutes, tops). If I'm knocking out 25 of each the cooking times will be near identical. At 20 minutes, you'd need to use the 350btu sim-burn and you're still probably eating army scram. |
Runny eggs are a health hazard if you're using cheap ingredients. But yes, if you buy your eggs from a concentrated animal feeding operation - rather than a farm - then yes, you should prepare your eggs in a kiln. |
Thank you for the LOL today. |
| Was just in Europe and I loved the soft scrambled eggs on the hotel buffet. My DH might agree with you, he thought they should be more cooked. |
Snookums, your attempt at snark is so embarrassing for you. I most recently encountered this at Hotel Skeppsholmen in Stockholm, where I encountered that. In Singapore, it was Marina Bay Sands. You may go slink away, now. You clearly suck at the internet. |
Your reaction is embarrassing. |
This, regardless of which chicken laid the egg or where... |
+1 Dear chatgpt what is the fanciest place in europe also make sure they have a breakfast with eggs because those beeeyothces in DCUM can sure research. |
Agree on both! |
| That’s how they should be. Scrambled eggs here are too dry. Scorched. |
We also sanitize the eggs so the shells don't keep them hygienic and thus they must be refrigerated. Which means we have to cook them longer too. |
Not just Europeans. -Appalled American |
This. |
BS. Maybe it's just hard if you don't speak German. https://german-meat.org/fleisch-aus-deutschland-gb/beef.html#:~:text=Germany%20is%20the%20second%20largest%20producer%20of,*%20Processing%20*%20Performance%20and%20quality%20checks |
That's for fertilized eggs, moron. |