Rolled Thick Omelet
- Vegetable oil for greasing the omelet pan
- 4 large eggs, broken into a large bowl
- 3 tablespoons dashi (fish stock)
- 1 1/2 tablespoons mirin (sweet cooking wine)
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 tablespoon sugar
- 1 teaspoon shoyu (soy sauce)
- Break the eggs into a large bowl and, with a whidk, gently stir (do not beat) until the egg white is broken up.
- Add the dashi, mirin, salt, sugar, and soy sauce and mix together gently (you do not want to create much foam).
- Set the tempered pan with 1 tablespoon of the reserved oil over medium-high heat and, when hot, wipe out the excess oil with a paper towl (leaving too much oil makes the omelet taste greasy).
- Pour in 1/4 cup of the egg mixture.
- It should make a sizzling sound.
- Quickly swirl the eggs to coat the bottom of the pan and then cook them over medium-high heat until the bottom is cooked and barely golden and the surface is still moist.
- During this stage, bubbles from trapped steam may push the thin layer of egg up from the bottom, making it inflate like a balloon here and there.
- With chopsticks or with the sharp edge of a flat stainless steel spatula, poke a small hole through the bubbles to deflate them and let the uncooked egg liquid run through the holes and under the omelet.
- Roll the thin omelet toward you with chopsticks or a spatula.
- Push the rolled omelet to the far end of the pan.
- Grease the entire bottom of the pan again using an oil-soaked paper towel.
- Add another 1/4 cup of the egg mixture.
- Spread it out over the bottom of the pan.
- With chopsticks or a spatula, lift the rolled omelet you have just made so that some of the new egg flows underneath.
- Cook until the bottom is firm underneath.
- Cook until the bottom is firm and the surface is moist, poking the steam vents if necessary.
- With chopsticks or a spatula, loosen the second thin omelet from the pan along with the first omelet, then lift them up over the second sheet of omelet and turn them both together to make a two-layered omelet.
- Return it to the back of the pan.
- Repeat with process with another 1/4 cup of the egg and finally with the remaining egg.
- With the help of a spatula, press adn form the hot tender omelet into a neat rectangular shape in the pan.
- Remove the omelet from the pan and let it stand to cool to room temperature.
- The omelet tastes best after 3 to 5 hours at room temperature.
vegetable oil, eggs, mirin, salt, sugar, shoyu
Taken from www.cookstr.com/recipes/rolled-thick-omelet (may not work)