Top chefs have warned that adding milk to scrambled eggs is ruining them.
Whether you add milk to make it creamier or just so you have a bit more scrambled egg on your toast, several top chefs says it’s actually doing more harm.
Dan Joines, who runs several award-winning restaurants in London, says adding milks saps the flavour out of the eggs.
He said: “Never add milk to your scrambled eggs – it dilutes the flavour and makes them more likely to turn out rubbery.
Adding: “It’s always butter for me. Make sure your butter is golden, but not brown, before you put your eggs in. Keep stirring on a medium to low heat.
“Keep them moving and folding with a spatula until slightly runny, but bound together.”
Luke Selby who works at Hide in London also agrees, saying: “Putting milk in your scrambled eggs is a cardinal sin!
“It just makes them too wet, like school dinners.”
Australian-French chef Manu Feildel, who hosts My Kitchen Rules, recommends putting your pan on a medium heat and melting butter until it bubbles before adding your eggs.
He adds that it’s important to keep your pan at a steady temperature and to ‘not let the pan get too hot’.
He explains: “If the pan is too hot the eggs will cook too quickly, burn, and rather than be lovely and light, have a rubbery texture.”
Manu adds that you should take them off the stove quicker than you’d expect. He added: “Remove them from the heat when still a little wet in places.
“The residual heat from the pan and the eggs will finish cooking them through.”
So – butter, low and slow, and take them off the heat before they finish cooking and you’ll have scrammy eggs that even Gordon Ramsey would be proud of!