Absolute Best Tests
The Absolute Best Way to Fry an Egg, According to 42 Tests
Columnist Ella Quittner never wants to eat another egg again—possibly ever.
Photo by Ella Quittner
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320 Comments
Ant888
February 11, 2024
After reading the article and comments I will chalk this up to preference and what you’re in the mood for and a take away to avoid stainless steel pans for obvious reasons. Some morning or whatever you may want creamy, or you may want crispy. Maybe you may watch to match it up with what you’re serving it with whether creamy or crispy would be the best option. An example would be a dish in Hawaii called loco moco, a bed of rice topped with a seasoned hamburger patty (another subjective subject on how to make the best patties/burger) once again I feel it depends on your mood, but the burger is tops with a fried eggs and mushroom or onion gravy. The loco moco is usually preferred with a crispy fried egg for that crunch.
Jeremy W.
October 29, 2023
Perhaps I'm super minority here, but I prefer my sunny side eggs *not* crispy. I start with a cold copper pan. I spray it with olive oil cooking spray. Set heat to low. Immediately add butter watching the pan till its last bit of solid butter is still visible, then add my eggs with a sprinkle of salt and pepper. Before any browning occurs, usually about 4 mins, I turn off the heat and shake the pan to loosen the beautifully unbrowned whites. I don't enjoy caramelized whites. To me, the softness of everything is perfect for sourdough toast with butter that I smuggle back from France. Yum!
Linda T.
October 28, 2023
Try avocado oil, higher smoke point, adds a buttery taste, and a healthy oil option.
susanne
October 28, 2023
Love the old standby of butter and the non-stick skillet. What I have done differently, and now cannot stop doing it, is sprinkling some fresh shaved Parmesan on the egg whites. The cheese melts and caramelizes and crisps on the edges. Just another level of flavor.
[email protected]
August 27, 2023
The egg in cream is Absolutely the best fried egg I’ve ever had. I usually use bacon grease but the cream made it special. Divine. Thank you
Chenai
August 24, 2023
Bacon grease is undefeated! Butter when I don't have any bacon grease on hand. Will have to try the coconut oil though. Great read.
Reuben
July 30, 2023
Have you considered the freshness of the eggs? Not all eggs are created equally and change over time. Am lucky enough to have 3 chickens. A slightly older egg is often better for frying. I feel like the results could be impacted by this! (This is from a person who believes the results are wrong and cast iron and butter is absolutely the correct way)
Chris G.
June 12, 2023
I have a VERY thin cast-iron pan crafted in Japan that is genius. It is lightweight, so it is easy to handle. It has never warped, absolutely flat. It behaves in every other way as my trusty Lodge cast-iron pan. Years of use has rendered it super-seasoned and is a dream to cook with. I heat it on med-high and then add good quality olive oil to coat. (A visit to Florence with eggs in olive oil have forever set my taste to this method.) I gently lay the egg in the pan and wait for the whites to become lightly opaque and then flip the egg. I turn off the heat and let the egg rest for a minute and then remove from the heat. I salt and pepper on the plate. I'm in league with the non-crispy edges—4-minute soft-boiled, light & wet scrambled in olive oil, cracked raw over hot rice with soy sauce, always soft, tender, runny make for the perfects eggs for me!
Cindycin
April 29, 2023
I enjoy your writing Ella! It’s real and fun! We do the butter /non-stick pan method. And personally, I LOVE THE CRISPY EDGES! Omg! it’s BLISSSSS♥️ As a cardiology nurse, I must not indulge in the bacon grease, (tried it a couple of times, sinfully good!) Eating the bacon is my contribution to elevating my triglycerides and LDL🤣 BUT! I will try the cream —- as I say YOLO! Everything in moderation , right? Thanks for frying all those eggs! My boyfriend still swears his cast iron is the holy grail of EVERYTHING!!! He’s partly right. Don’t tell him I said that!
Linda T.
October 28, 2023
Try avocado oil, higher smoke point, adds a buttery taste, and a healthy oil option.
Rhiamom
April 25, 2023
You missed trying the holy grail of pans: cast iron with a smooth porcelain enamel finish inside as well as outside. It is naturally nonstick without any seasoning needed, and you can wash it properly. And I agree, crispy edges are not everyone.
mmcdaniel
April 25, 2023
a) you are operating on the assumption that everyone wants crispy edges. Not everyone does.
b) Food 52's standard silly parentheticals are tedious. If you deleted all parentheticals from your writing, it would be greatly improved. They are never clever and always silly.
b) Food 52's standard silly parentheticals are tedious. If you deleted all parentheticals from your writing, it would be greatly improved. They are never clever and always silly.
Westcoasty
April 25, 2023
I enjoy the parentheticals. I feel that they add personality to the writing, speaking from my past experience as a successful professional writer.
catalinalacruz
April 25, 2023
I like the parentheticals. I hate crispy edged eggs. It's like chewing on cellophane.
Gafrank
March 17, 2023
I was probably on my 30’s before I found out done people actually fried an egg in something other than bacon grease. If you don’t have bacon grease on hand, you’re not a cook 😃. And no crispy edges please
DarwinW13
February 27, 2023
The butter and Water egg is the only one that looks edible. Crispy whites is akin to cooking a steak well done and makes a mockery of the animal's sacrifice.
Stephanie A.
February 27, 2023
As one of the judges would say on "The Good Wife"....
"In your opinion!"
"In your opinion!"
Sqsh
February 27, 2024
To me, non-crispy whites are akin to cooking a steak without searing it to produce a tasty browned crust! But, each to their own...
Connie W.
February 27, 2023
From Chef Jose (I think it’s fantastic, use olive oil to heat a non-stick)…This method is a little nontraditional because you are separating the eggs and then cooking only the whites, then you add the yolk on top once the whites are off the heat. I know it sounds crazy but trust me, this method is perfect if what you like is crispy whites and soft, creamy yolks that you can scoop up with a piece of crispy bread.
Gnm
February 27, 2023
Until recently, I never knew how delicious the fried white could be. By accident, I made this discovery. I use olive oil in a non stick pan on high. Shortly afterwards I turn the stove down to medium. I love my egg every morning including the crispy white. I think I’ll try the cream method. Loved your article. Have never heard anyone else liking and desiring the crispy edge.
Anne M.
February 26, 2023
If you ever do decide to consume another egg (I would not blame you if it takes 5 years) definitely go for the duck fat! I nearly always have rendered duck fat in my fridge - lasts forever - and as you wrote -- it's a culinary marvel.
Elizabeth M.
February 26, 2023
Invection stove top.
Anne M.
February 26, 2023
Induction? Works like a charm for cooking absolutely anything, including eggs. I love mine, but you have to keep an eye on it -- it works much more quickly than conventional stove tops.
A. R.
February 26, 2023
You can’t just test one kind of fat in different pans because butter in stainless steels make’s stainless steel non-stick! I agree with others, more testing is necessary to really find the absolute best method!
Vicki J.
February 26, 2023
While my convenient and always on hand go-to is butter in a nonstick pan, if I have some some bacon fat around, I will often use that ~ bacon and eggs (with or without the bacon) truly are a match made in heaven!
Another heavenly match is keeping it all in the family with chicken fat (makes sense of you think about it). And if you want to take it up a notch or two, render your own chicken fat from chicken skin by making chicken skin chicharrones to serve alongside 😉!
Another heavenly match is keeping it all in the family with chicken fat (makes sense of you think about it). And if you want to take it up a notch or two, render your own chicken fat from chicken skin by making chicken skin chicharrones to serve alongside 😉!
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