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Jacques Pépin makes classic scrambled eggs
Special | 4m 55sVideo has Closed Captions
Jacques Pépin makes scrambled eggs "the classic way" for an elegant, simple dinner.
"The way I scramble eggs is to put them into a heavier saucepan over moderate heat, and to use a whisk to constantly move the eggs, ensuring that they get the creamiest texture without large curds. This is usually finished with a little bit of cream. It’s a sophisticated way of enjoying eggs, one I often serve as a first course for an elegant dinner."
Support for American Masters is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, AARP, Rosalind P. Walter Foundation, Judith and Burton Resnick, Blanche and Hayward Cirker Charitable Lead Annuity Trust, Koo...
![American Masters](https://image.pbs.org/contentchannels/FgDyXIn-white-logo-41-8ZBpyZC.png?format=webp&resize=200x)
Jacques Pépin makes classic scrambled eggs
Special | 4m 55sVideo has Closed Captions
"The way I scramble eggs is to put them into a heavier saucepan over moderate heat, and to use a whisk to constantly move the eggs, ensuring that they get the creamiest texture without large curds. This is usually finished with a little bit of cream. It’s a sophisticated way of enjoying eggs, one I often serve as a first course for an elegant dinner."
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipMore from This Collection
Jacques Pépin Makes Tuna Tartare
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Pépin serves his tuna tartare with onions, scallions and a garnish of bread and cucumbers. (6m 39s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Sautéed Cod with Mushrooms
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Pépin serves cod with a garnish of vegetables including mushrooms, radishes and olives. (5m 44s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Baked Salmon with Sautéed Endive
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Pépin shares his method for a simple baked salmon served with caramelized endive. (4m 2s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Pork Roast with Ratatouille
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Pépin slow roasts this dish for a tender and juicy pork. (5m 25s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Pasta Fagioli
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Pasta fagioli, or "pasta and beans," is a filling dish with pantry friendly ingredients. (4m 28s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Pasta Primavera
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This versatile pasta recipe can be made with any seasonal vegetables. (5m 32s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Spaghetti with Basil Pesto
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In the summer, Pépin likes to use fresh basil from his garden to make this pesto recipe. (8m 9s)
Jacques Pépin Prepares Blueberries with Lemon and Mint
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Another take on blueberries, lemon and mint from Jacques Pépin. (3m 24s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Lemon Posset for Dessert
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This lemon posset is one of Jacques Pépin's simplest recipes. (4m 16s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Ice Cream French Toast
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Jacques Pépin adapted this recipe from his time as a breakfast cook in Paris. (3m 33s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Tomato Toasts
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This recipe for tomato toasts with olives is inspired by Pépin's time in Spain. (6m 41s)
Jacques Pépin Makes Quiche Lorraine
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Pépin's recipe for quiche Lorraine is inspired by his mother. (12m 9s)
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- Hi, I'm Chef Jacques Pépin and this is "American Masters At Home".
I want to show you how to make scrambled eggs.
Scrambled eggs my way or the classic way.
I'm doing a little bit of a garnish here.
You don't have to, or you can have all kinds of other things.
You know, I have a couple of mushroom and a third of a cup of diced tomato that I had around, so.
I could saute that other garnish to fill on top and eggs, I have five eggs, six eggs here.
Make sure you break your egg on something flat like this, rather than on something pointed like this, because it bring the shell inside and produce bacteria very often and often break the yolk.
So here I have salt, pepper.
I think I'm gonna put some, a bit of chive in there, tap them to be here, and with a fork.
Now you don't want to turn this gently in the middle because it's like a wet mop.
You gotta go from one side to the other side to really break the white.
To really break the white like that.
So that I don't have any long string.
Okay.
Here is my tomato in there.
Dash of salt.
I sautee for a minute, 30 seconds.
And that basically it all the garnish.
Now your egg, you cook, you would do that at the last moment, not ahead.
And I like to have a sturdy pan like that to do my eggs.
A good tablespoon of butter.
The idea here is that you want to keep the creamiest possible eggs.
So what I do, I'm going to keep a little bit of, like two tablespoon, a couple of tablespoons of this to add to it at the end to stop the cooking.
I also may add a tablespoon of cream to do that.
So this is the classic way of doing the scrambled eggs.
I have a nice pan here because that pan doesn't really have any corner like that.
Otherwise you really have to go in the corner here.
With this one being this way, like a ball.
And now I will start with this.
Sometimes people do it classic way in a double boiler to go slowly in the double boiler.
And it fine too.
But I prefer to do it directly on the heat like that.
If I feel that the heat goes too far, I pull it out.
Clearly a classic French omelet.
We try to have the curl of the egg, very, very smooth also.
As I say, if I feel that it's going a bit fast like that, I remove it from the heat, continue mixing it.
It's going to be ready soon.
As soon that I see the bottom of the pan like this, because there is a lot of heat in that plan which will continue cooking.
So I will stop it here.
And that's one.
I add a little bit of the egg leftover, which will cook in there and cool off my mixture and maybe a tablespoon of cream too.
Remember that.
Yeah, that part will keep the heat quite a lot.
And that basically it.
So you serve that sometime in that bread casing, but usually.
It's a nice portion of egg that my wife would love egg like this.
Little of this.
Little bit of my garnish in the center of it here.
"oeufs brouillés a la tomate" I hope you enjoyed it.
Happy cooking.
Support for American Masters is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, AARP, Rosalind P. Walter Foundation, Judith and Burton Resnick, Blanche and Hayward Cirker Charitable Lead Annuity Trust, Koo...