Curried duck eggs
Preparation Time: 10 minutes
Cooking Time: 25 minutes
Serves: 4
This is one of those dishes you might find in old cookbooks such as Mrs Beeton's and Dorothy Hartley. It's a London gentlemen's club classic and probably something you would have found on the menu at Simpsons in the Strand or The Savoy, and perhaps now due for a revival.
Proper curry sauce is not the sort of thing you want to start making in the early morning for breakfast, so I suggest making a batch of the sauce and freezing it in little pots so that you can take them out of the freezer when
Ingredients:
- 100g-basmati-rice
- 1tsp cumin seeds
- 1tsp onion seeds (nigela)
- 4 Clarence Court duck, hen, bantam or quail eggs
- For the sauce
- A good knob of butter
- 2 medium shallots, peeled and finely chopped
- 1 clove of garlic, peeled and crushed
- A small piece of root ginger, peeled and finely grated or chopped
- ¼ tsp ground turmeric
- ¼ tsp ground cumin
- ½ tsp curry powder
- ½ tsp fennel seeds
- A few curry leaves
- A pinch of saffron threads
- 2tsp flour
- 100ml fish stock (a quarter of a good-quality cube will do, dissolved in that amount of hot water)
- 400ml double cream
- Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Method
Rinse the rice a couple of times in cold water to remove any starch and cook it in plenty of boiling salted water with the cumin and nigela seeds for about 12-15 minutes until just cooked. Briefly drain in a colander and return it to a pan off the heat with a lid on. This allows the rice to steam dry and gives it a nice light, fluffy texture.
To serve, soft boil the eggs for 5 minutes then run under the cold tap for a couple of minutes so you can peel them; you can hard boil them if you wish or cook them so that they are somewhere in between; it's up to you. Re-heat the sauce, spoon the rice into a warmed bowl, place the egg on top and spoon the sauce over.