Recipe Mollet Eggs Florentine

TastyReuben

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Mollet Eggs Florentine
Serves 8

8 large eggs, preferably organic

SPINACH:
2 pounds spinach
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
3 tablespoons grated Gruyère or Emmenthaler cheese

MORNAY SAUCE:
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 cup half-and-half
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground white pepper
1 large egg yolk
1 1/2 tablespoons freshly grated Parmesan cheese

Bring 4 to 6 cups water to a boil in a shallow saucepan (about 8 inches wide and 3 inches deep). With a pushpin or thumbtack, prick a small hole in the rounder end of each egg (this will help prevent the shells from cracking during cooking). Using a small sieve, lower the eggs into the boiling water, and let it come back to a simmer. Cook for about 6 minutes. Pour the water out and shake the pan to crack the eggshells. Cool thoroughly.

Gently shell the eggs (to prevent breaking them) under cold running water.

FOR THE SPINACH: Bring about 1/2 inch of salted water to a boil in a stainless steel pot. Meanwhile, remove and discard the spinach stems. Drop the leaves into the boiling water and boil, covered, for about 1 minute, until wilted. Drain the spinach in a colander and immediately refresh under cold running water to stop the cooking and keep the color. Drain again, pressing on the spinach to extract as much water as possible.

Put the spinach on a chopping block and coarsely chop.

Melt the butter in a skillet over high heat and cook until it turns brown. Add the spinach, salt, pepper, and nutmeg, mix well with a fork, and cook for 2 minutes.

Arrange the spinach in the bottom of an ovenproof dish large enough to accommodate the eggs. Arrange the cold eggs on the spinach, with a little space between them, and sprinkle the cheese on top.

FOR THE SAUCE: Melt the butter in a heavy saucepan. Stir in the flour until smooth and cook, stirring constantly, for about 1 minute, until the mixture froths, without browning. Add the half-and-half, whipping constantly with a whisk, and bring to a boil, whisking constantly. Stir in the seasonings and continue cooking over low heat for 1 minute, stirring constantly with the whisk. Cool for 6 to 8 minutes.

Preheat the broiler. Add the egg yolk to the sauce, whisking very fast and hard.

Coat the eggs with the sauce and sprinkle with the Parmesan cheese. Place under the hot broiler (not too close, so the eggs have a chance to get hot inside) for 5 minutes, or until the sauce is nicely browned. Serve immediately.

Recipe courtesy of Jacques Pepin - Essential Pepin

The CookingBites Recipe Challenge: Potatoes

Note: there's a video of Pepin making this, but he doesn't follow this recipe exactly. When I made this, I also added in several small red potatoes, boiled then seared in a skillet.


 
Eggs Florentine is one of my all time favourite dishes ever. When I was a post-grad student at the Royal College of Art, I used to eat lunch sometimes in an Italian café in South Kensington. They made the most wonderful Eggs Florentine - it was served in the oval metal dish in which it was baked.

I never thought to put potatoes in it as well - nice idea!
 
I never thought to put potatoes in it as well - nice idea!

The potatoes were my own addition, because I wasn't making six eggs for two people, and I thought that eggs and potatoes were a natural match, but so are eggs and spinach, so why not. It made the meal a little more substantial and filled up the pan.

I did make too much sauce. I made the full recipe of sauce, and with the size of that pan, it looks like they're swimming in custard, but it plated up a little better.

They look so scrummy, well done!

Thanks!
 
This may be why dishes with spinach are called á la Florentine in classic French cuisine:

Where did the name Florentine Come From?
Florentine refers to Florence, Italy, and the term would translate into something like “in the manner of Florence.” The origin of the term comes from a French queen named Catherine de Médicis, who was born in Florence and, in 1533, married Henri (Henry), the second son of King Francois I. Henry was the heir-apparent to the French throne, known as the dauphin in those days. When Francois I died in 1547, Catherine became the Queen of France. Quite ruthless, and justifiably paranoid, she imported her own cooks from Florence, and also is said to have brought along spinach seeds to grow. Se had her cooks make dishes with spinach, and this practice became popular enough that it came to be known as spinach à la Florentine, to denote the origin of the vegetable, and then eventually simply Florentine. Catherine is also claimed to have introduced many aspects of table etiquette to France, and to have introduced the fork to that country.

Why are Dishes That Feature Spinach called Florentine?
 
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