Turkish eggs are the most garlicky, buttery way possible to start the day | Salon.com

2022-09-17 19:04:06 By : Ms. Sunny Cheung

In "Quick & Dirty," Salon Food's Mary Elizabeth Williams serves up simplified recipes and shortcuts for exhausted cooks just like you — because quick and dirty should still be delicious.

I can't figure out the oven thing here. I have tried. I have read the instructions, in confusingly translated English. I have pushed random buttons for days. But while staying temporarily in the Netherlands, I have so far had to accept my limitations and stick to stovetop dinners.

If I could never bake again, this would be a problem. But for a few weeks, I can comfortably subside on boiled things and sautéed things. And so came to pass that one recent evening, scrounging through my tiny refrigerator for dinner ideas, I decided it was time to face one of my biggest cooking fears — the poached egg.

Poached eggs are fine when you'e out for brunch, but at home, the possibility of chaos just always seems too great. The whites can feather off into infinity, leaving you with a pan full of streaky, soggy, deeply unappetizing matter. But a recipe from my local supermarket for "Turkish poached eggs with garlic yogurt" contained all the words that make me say, "I want to eat that," so I faced my fears and started simmering.

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The Turkish eggs dish known as çilbir is one of the most versatile dishes to learn and keep under your belt. Garlicky yogurt gets drizzled in peppery oil and delicate, oozy eggs, a combination that's somehow incredibly bold and incredibly comforting. And poaching eggs, it turns out, isn't really that intimidating. Mine still got a little streaky, but simmering them for exactly 3 minutes made made them perfectly runny and delicious, which is the most important thing.

These egg make an ideal dinner, but of course they're also stunning breakfast. I could happily eat these morning, noon and night never get tired, never even miss turning on the oven.

Inspired by Albert Heijn and Nigella Lawson

1/2  cup of full fat plain Greek yogurt, room temperature

1 teaspoon of aleppo pepper or smoked paprika

salt and pepper to taste

It's traditional to warm the yogurt, but I think you lose nothing but eating it at room-temperature.

Depending on your desires and appetites, you can of course make this with just one egg, and/or serve with salad or pita bread. 

of our favorite ways to enjoy eggs

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Mary Elizabeth Williams is a senior writer for Salon and author of "A Series of Catastrophes & Miracles."

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