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Binging with Babish: Eggs in a Nest from Lots of Stuff - YouTube
Channel: Babish Culinary Universe
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<movie / tv clips begin>Now you take a piece of bread like this, and you look through it like this
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Then you wink, and you drop it in a little hole, like that.
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What? No, I just thought you liked your eggs with the bread with the hole in the middle, 脿 la me. [Laugh Track]
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[Man humming and eggs sizzling with soft track as background]
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I made you Eggs In a Nest.
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Ah yes.
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The Crane family specialty: Fried eggs swimming in fat,
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served in a delightfully hollowed-out piece of white bread.
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I can almost hear my left ventricle slamming shut as I speak.
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[Laugh Track] <clips end>
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Hey, what's up guys? Welcome back to Binging with Babish. For this week, we're exploring
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what might be one of the most frequently occurring foodstuffs in all of film: "Eggs in a Nest",
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which starts with the humble egg,
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but first we gotta bake bread. My escape here in Vermont has largely been
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dedicated to the baking of bread, and this was no exception. It took me five tries
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to get a halfway decent sandwich loaf going,
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and I attribute this entirely to not measuring my ingredients by weight,
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but instead by volume; resulting in loaf after useless loaf.
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So, let me take this opportunity- Ow, ow!
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-to come out loudly and proudly in favor of using a kitchen scale in the pursuit of great bread
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so you don't end up with this crap. We're starting off our good loaf with 400 milliliters of water at
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110 degrees Fahrenheit, 100 milliliters of which we're going to combine with a packet of instant yeast, and half of our
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650 grams of all-purpose flour, along with 50 grams of sugar, 5 grams of salt, and 45 grams of unsalted butter, at room temperature.
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Stir to combine before adding the remaining 300 milliliters of water; stirring again to form a
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"pancake-batter-like" paste, adding the remainder of the flour, and stirring one last time with our dough whisk, until a shaggy dough forms; that
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we will turn out onto a counter top, and knead for seven to nine minutes until a smooth, supple dough forms.
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Generously oil a large bowl, plop our dough inside, and roll it around a little bit to make sure that it's evenly coated in oil so,
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we don't have sticking issues down the line. Cover with plastic wrap, and let sit at room temperature for 45 minutes to 1 hour,
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or until the dough has doubled in size.
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Turn out onto a lightly floured countertop, and punch down until it's back to its original size, and then start forming it into a
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loaf. We want to sort of... tuck it under itself to make a nice round top. Shove it into a loaf pan
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that's been prepared with butter and parchment paper, cover loosely with plastic wrap (we want to give this thing plenty of room to expand for...).
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Another hour, or until redoubled in size.
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Brush this beautiful blimp down with a bit of butter, and place in a 400 degree Fahrenheit oven for 25 to 35 minutes, being extra
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polite to Siri. "Set a timer for 35 minutes, please."
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It's good luck to be polite to Siri. That, or it's good luck to measure by weight, because we have here, a perfectly shaped and
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risen loaf, that measures 200 degrees Fahrenheit
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internally, that we're going to brush down once again with melted butter; and set aside until the morning, for breakfast.
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Give it a little kiss goodnight before we go to bed. Get a good night's sleep, get in your comfiest jammies and wake up to
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a perfect metaphor of just how good and just how bad life can be when you're baking with volume versus
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weight. Learn the difference. We had a nice crumb going here.
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Give it a little touch, and hack off a nice thick slice for our nest, of the Eggs in a Nest. Now you could just stamp
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out the center using a glass or a mason jar,
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but I like to cut it out, because I want to preserve that centerpiece for some auxiliary yolk mopping.
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That was the hardest sentence I've ever said. Melt a tablespoon and a half of butter, or
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45 grams of butter, in a stainless steel skillet, and coat both sides of the bread thoroughly with the butter, before plopping down and letting
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sit for at least half of one of your favorite songs. Observe:
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This all translates to about 2 minutes, on
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medium low heat, and then for a little flavor bonus round:
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I'm going to put a little dollop of bacon fat in the center of the bread, before cracking the egg inside,
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cranking the heat up to medium-high, and jamming out for about 1 minute, or 84 snaps in the case of this song, and giving our
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guy a flip while we add our auxiliary yolk mopper in for a little toast.
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Continue to cook for no more than 10 or 15 seconds on this side, while seasoning some kosher salt and
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preferably freshly ground, but in this case some plain old black pepper. Now
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let's grab a fork and knife, and see if we did our job right. Oh yeah, a runny egg,
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freshly baked bread, and a soup莽on of bacon fat?
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Even with the four dud loaves, this was, in the end worth the effort, and you can tell because it's the recipient of the coveted
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2018 Binging with Babish clean plate prize. Both this, and the second one I made after the camera stopped.
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[Outro music]
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[Snapping with music in background]
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[Sound of spatula scrapping against the pan]
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Oops, too much.
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