Omlette Soufflé

Modern cookery for private families · Acton, Eliza · 1845
Source
Modern cookery for private families
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (5)
for serving
Instructions (11)
  1. Separate the whites from the yolks of six fine fresh eggs.
  2. Beat the yolks thoroughly, first by themselves and then with four tablespoonsful of dry, white sifted sugar, and the rind of half a lemon grated on a fine grater.
  3. Whisk the whites to a solid froth.
  4. Just before the omlet is poured into the pan, mix the whites well but lightly with the yolks.
  5. Put four ounces of fresh butter into a very small, delicately clean omlet or frying pan.
  6. As soon as the butter is all dissolved, add the eggs and stir them round that they may absorb it entirely.
  7. When the under side is just set, turn the omlet into a well-buttered dish.
  8. Send it to a tolerably brisk oven.
  9. Serve the instant it is taken out; carry it as quickly as possible to table from the oven.
  10. If sugar be sifted over it, let it be done with the utmost expedition.
Optional Serving Suggestion
  1. This omlette may be served on a layer of apricot-marmalade which must be spread over the dish in which it is to be baked, and sent to table before the omlette is turned into it.
Original Text
AN OMLETTE SOUFFLÉ. SECOND COURSE REMOVE OF ROAST.[133] 133.  Served also as an entremets. Separate, as they are broken, the whites from the yolks of six fine fresh eggs; beat these last thoroughly, first by themselves and then with four tablespoonsful of dry, white sifted sugar, and the rind of half a lemon grated on a fine grater. Whisk the whites to a solid froth, and just before the omlet is poured into the pan, mix them well, but lightly, with the yolks. Put four ounces of fresh butter into a very small delicately clean omlet or frying pan, and as soon as it is all dissolved, add the eggs and stir them round that they may absorb it entirely. When the under side is just set, turn the omlet into a well-buttered dish, and send it to a tolerably brisk oven. From five to ten minutes will bake it; and it must be served the instant it is taken out; carried, indeed, as quickly as possible to table from the oven. It will have risen to a great height, but will sink and become heavy in a very short space of time: if sugar be sifted over it, let it be done with the utmost expedition. Eggs, 6; sugar, 4 tablespoonsful; rind, 1/2 lemon; butter, 4 oz.: omlet baked, 5 to 10 minutes. Obs.—This omlette may be served on a layer of apricot-marmalade which must be spread over the dish in which it is to be baked, and sent to table before the omlette is turned into it.
Notes