• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to footer navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

RecipeTin Eats

Fast Prep, Big Flavours

Small book

My cookbook "Dinner" now available!

  • My RecipeTin
  • My cookbook!
  • Recipes
  • Recipes By Category
    • Mains
      • Chicken
        • Chicken mince
      • Beef Recipes
        • Ground Beef (Mince)
      • Pork
      • Lamb
      • Turkey
      • Shrimp / Prawns
      • Salmon
      • Fish
      • Salad Meals
    • Quick and Easy
    • Soups
    • One Pot
    • Stews
    • Slow Cooker
    • Sides
      • All
      • Vegetables
      • Show Off Salads
      • Rice (all)
      • Fried rice recipes
      • Rice (plain)
      • Potato
    • Pasta
      • All
      • Pasta bakes
      • Pasta salads
    • Sweet
      • Cakes
      • Cheesecakes
      • Cupcakes & Muffins
      • Cookies
      • Puddings & Cosy Desserts
      • Bite Size
      • Pies
      • Slices & Bars
      • Frosting & Icing
      • Ice cream
    • Cuisine
      • Asian
        • All
        • Stir fries
        • Noodles
        • Soups
        • Chinese
        • Japanese
        • Korean
        • Thai
        • Vietnamese
      • French
      • Greek
      • Indian
      • Italian
      • Mediterranean
      • Mexican
      • Middle Eastern
      • South American
    • Dietary
      • Gluten Free
      • Low Calorie
      • Vegetarian
    • Other Categories
      • BBQ
      • Breakfast
      • Burgers
      • Cocktails
      • Party Foods
      • Rice Recipes
      • Roasts
      • Sandwiches & Sliders
  • Collections
  • About
    • Me
    • RecipeTin Meals
    • Free Recipe Books
    • Contact
    • Food Bloggers Central
    • Nitty Gritty
      • Policy: Use of Recipes & Images
      • Privacy & Disclosure
Home Egg Recipes

Scrambled Eggs

By:Nagi
Published:8 Jul '20Updated:8 Dec '20
106 Comments
Recipe v Video v Dozer v

No one should tell you how to take your eggs. But everyone should know how to make scrambled eggs well! 60 seconds, soft, creamy, custardy. Perfection! Serve on homemade crusty Artisan bread for the ultimate eggs on toast – now officially the world’s easiest yeast bread.👌🏻

Close up of soft Scrambled Eggs on toast

How I make Scrambled Eggs – soft and creamy

One might assume that everyone knows how to scramble eggs – until you see someone frantically stirring and you peer into the skillet to see a pile of crumbly mound of tortured yellow stuff that used to be eggs….😩

Bad scrambled eggs compared to good scrambled eggs

So today I’m sharing how to cook scrambled eggs well, like the way diners make them.

I’m not here to tell you how you should take your scrambled eggs, just how to make them well! Choose your desired level of doneness:

  • soft and custardy (as pictured) – the status quo served at bistros if you don’t specify otherwise;

  • ever so slightly underdone; or

  • 100% fully cooked and set (it’s almost like an omelette, except in scrambled egg form. And still NOT dry and crumbly!).

Good scrambled eggs is a life essential that takes all of 60 seconds. I like to make mine soft and custardy. But who am I to judge? Make yours as you please!

Overhead photo of soft Scrambled Eggs on toast

What you need for scrambled eggs

Here what you need to make scrambled eggs:

Milk for scrambled eggs - 1/2 tbsp per egg

  • Eggs – 2 per serving is my standard. Organic free range is better than normal free range is better than caged. The hen’s diet determines the colour of the yolks. Pasture diets (ie. free range) tend to produce eggs with the most deeply coloured orange or yellow yolks.

  • Butter – for flavour and greasing the skillet;

  • Milk – makes the eggs extra moist and creamy but it’s not essential, scrambled eggs can still be creamy without. Use 1/2 tablespoon per egg – eggs can’t hold any more than that, it makes them runny. Some people use cream – I personally find it too rich, you get that creamy mouthfeel; and

  • Salt and pepper (let’s pretend it’s in the photo).


How to make scrambled eggs

Great scrambled eggs is all about slow, sleepy strokes and low heat:

How to make scrambled eggs

  1. Whisk the eggs, milk, salt and pepper;

  2. Melt butter in a non stick pan or well seasoned skillet over medium heat (or medium low if your stove is strong);

  3. Add egg mixture, wait 5 seconds (for the base to just start setting) then start leisurely (not frantically!) running a rubber spatula or flat edge wooden spoon in long strokes back and forth across the pan, and around the edges. This technique pushes the cooked egg off the base and piles them up (which creates those beautiful soft curds you see) and lets the raw egg spread out into the pan to cook;

  4. After 30 seconds, also start gently folding the eggs over (ie scoop and gently flip). Keep pushing/folding for 60 seconds total cook time or until raw runny egg no longer spreads out onto the pan and you have a pile of soft, custardy egg, ever so slightly underdone;

  5. Remove from the stove, stir / fold for another 10 seconds or until cooked to your taste. If you want it cooked more, return it to the stove briefly. Photo below shows the eggs just off the stove, ready for serving.

How to make Scrambled Eggs

Perfect Scrambled Eggs…

The scrambled eggs in the photo above are finished, just ready for serving. Notice how:

  • all the egg pushes into a pile and stays together, indicating it’s cooked ie. there’s no raw, runny egg leaking around the edges;

  • the surface is shiny so you can tell it’s still custardy and moist;

  • how the egg on the rubber spatula is semi transparent but sticking to the rubber – this is a small bit of semi cooked egg (if it was fully raw, it would not stick to it it just slides off) that will finish cooking in the time it takes for the egg to go from the skillet onto the toast and into your mouth. Egg cooks super fast; and

  • you can pile the eggs up high on toast – unlike crumbly overcooked scrambled eggs that scatter everywhere!

Soft, custardy scrambled eggs piled onto toast

Scrambled Eggs Tips

  • Stove heat – eggs cook super quickly. Use medium for a standard stove, or medium low if your stove is strong/hot/big burner.

  • Use a smaller skillet if cooking less eggs. ~25cm/10″ for 4 eggs, ~20cm/8″ or less for 2 eggs.

  • Non stick or well seasoned cast iron skillet highly recommended for ease – eggs are the ultimate food glue.

  • Rubber spatula is best, follow by a flat edge wooden spoon (or similar shaped utensil), so it can scrape along the skillet to create beautiful soft curds.

  • Scrambled eggs should not be browned or crispy at all, it should be yellow and creamy all the way through.

  • DO NOT viciously stir around in circles, or zig zag frantically back and forth! This will create rough, “chopped up” dried scrambled eggs (like pictured at the top of the post), rather than soft and creamy. Use gentle, leisurely, sleepy strokes.

  • Use pushing / folding / turning motions with the rubber spatula so you get soft, creamy scrambled egg curds, rather than crumbly eggs.


This is what perfect creamy scrambled eggs looks like inside

And here’s a close up of what soft and creamy scrambled eggs look like inside – shiny with moisture but not a single droplet of raw egg running down the cut face bitten face of the toast.

Showing inside of soft Scrambled Eggs on toast

Serve on starch of choice, though for me, I can’t go past a hot buttered slice of toasted Artisan Bread which I’m pretty sure we can now officially call the world’s easiest yeast bread, being that it’s no knead and incredibly flexible and the astonishing number of people who have made and left lovely messages on it.

To make a full English breakfast, add a side of bacon, sausages or sausage patties*, garlic butter mushrooms and sautéed spinach. Devour and weep with joy. – Nagi x

* Use the patties in the Sausage and Egg McMuffins recipe – the seasoning is terrific (and so it should be – it’s a McDonald’s copycat!)


Watch how to make it

Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

Close up of soft Scrambled Eggs on toast

Scrambled eggs - soft and creamy, just as they should be!

Author: Nagi
Prep: 1 min
Cook: 1 min
Breakfast
Western
5 from 27 votes
Servings2
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. No one should tell you how to take your eggs. But everyone should know how to make scrambled eggs well! 60 seconds, soft, creamy, custardy. Perfection!
Scrambled egg calories - 91 calories per egg (182 cal per serving of 2 eggs), including the butter.

Ingredients

  • 4 eggs
  • 2 tbsp milk , any fat % (optional, Note 1)
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 2 grinds black pepper
  • 1 tbsp / 15g butter (or margarine or oil)

For serving:

  • 4 slices bread , toasted & slathered with butter

Instructions

  • Use a non stick skillet or well seasoned cast iron pan (about 25cm / 10") and a rubber spatular (or flat edge wooden spoon).
  • Whisk together eggs, milk, salt and pepper.
  • Melt butter over medium heat (Note 1), then pour egg in.
  • Wait 5 seconds, then start leisurely pushing the rubber spatula back and forth in long strokes, and all around the skillet edges, to push the set egg out of the way and let raw egg run onto the skillet to cook. After 30 seconds or so, start adding some folding action too.
  • Cook for 60 seconds in total until you have a pile of soft, custardy scrambled egg folds ("curds") and no raw egg leaking on the edges of the pile.
  • Take it off the stove when it's still a bit undercooked for your taste.
  • Gently push /fold the eggs for another 10 seconds - it will finish cooking with residual pan heat - then slide onto hot toasted crusty bread slathered with butter.
  • Sprinkle with extra pepper then devour immediately! For a touch of garnish, look no further than an 80's style sprig of curly parsley. 👌🏻

Recipe Notes:

1. Milk - optional, makes the eggs a bit more creamy but you can still make wonderful scrambled eggs without.
Cream? Some people enjoy cream instead of milk - I find it unnecessarily rich but it's an option (same amount as milk - or halve).
Water? With older eggs (as some grocery eggs can be) are already watery and added water can exacerbate the wateriness. Milk works better, more consistently.
2. Homemade toastable bread options:
  • World's easiest crusty Artisan bread
  • No yeast sandwich bread
  • Irish soda bread (a no yeast bread)
3. TIPS:
  • Stove heat - use medium low if your stove is strong/hot.
  • Use a smaller skillet if cooking less eggs. ~25cm/10" for 4 eggs, ~20cm/8" or less for 2 eggs.
  • Non stick or well seasoned cast iron skillet highly recommended for ease - eggs are the ultimate food glue.
  • Scrambled eggs should not be browned or crispy at all, it should be yellow and creamy all the way through.
  • DO NOT viciously stir around in circles, or zig zag frantically back and forth! This will create rough, "chopped up" dried scrambled eggs, rather than soft and creamy. Use gentle, leisurely strokes.
  • Use pushing / folding / turning motions with the rubber spatula so you get soft, creamy scrambled egg curds, rather than a raggedy chopped up dry pile of scrambled eggs.
4. Nutrition per serving (2 eggs, 1/2 tbsp butter), excludes bread.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 182cal (9%)Carbohydrates: 1gProtein: 12g (24%)Fat: 14g (22%)Saturated Fat: 6g (38%)Cholesterol: 343mg (114%)Sodium: 473mg (21%)Potassium: 145mg (4%)Sugar: 1g (1%)Vitamin A: 683IU (14%)Calcium: 68mg (7%)Iron: 2mg (11%)
Keywords: scrambled eggs
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @RecipeTinEats.

Life of Dozer

The only one happy about overcooked, tortured scrambled eggs – because he gets to have them!

Dozer scoffing down overcooked scrambled eggs

Previous Post
Garlic Butter Roasted Mushrooms
Next Post
Spanish Paella

Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

Read More

Free Recipe eBooks

Join my free email list to receive THREE free cookbooks!

Related Posts

Close up of a bowl of Carbonara ready to be eaten

Carbonara

Overhead photo of Baked Frittata with Roasted Vegetables cut into slices, fresh out of the oven

Baked Vegetable Frittata

Freshly made Baked Eggs (shirred eggs) being eaten

Shirred Eggs (Baked Eggs with Spinach & Mushrooms)

More Egg Recipes

Reader Interactions

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Cooked this? Rate this recipe!




106 Comments

  1. RAELENE WANG says

    July 11, 2020 at 3:07 am

    I had eggs cooked this way as a teenager and love them! Yet, I could never the milk ratio right as grandma made them without a recipe. Plus, she made an entire skillet full at a time. When I saw this recipe, I was overjoyed. My husband grew up eating the eggs cooked until browned. I never liked them, so I quit eating scrambled eggs altogether. This morning I made your eggs for myself and thought I had died and gone to heaven. In fact, I ended up eating 4 eggs, because I couldn’t stop. Thank you doesn’t even begin to express my gratitude. Who would think that such a simple dish could get so messed up? But, never again. Thank you Nagi! Your my β€œgo to” for any recipe!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 6:11 pm

      I truly love hearing this Raelene ❀️

      Reply
  2. Lisa says

    July 10, 2020 at 11:10 pm

    5 stars
    I was so excited about this simple dish that I went home and made breakfast for dinner just so I could try it. AMAZING!! Thank you so much! You and Dozer ROCK!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 7:02 pm

      Wahoo!!!! N x

      Reply
  3. Stella says

    July 10, 2020 at 10:54 pm

    5 stars
    GAME CHANGER. Thank you!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 6:25 pm

      You’re so welcome Stella! N x

      Reply
  4. Elle says

    July 10, 2020 at 8:44 pm

    5 stars
    Love this Nagi! Hollandaise next please please please please!! (Cue Dozer puppy dog eyes)

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 6:32 pm

      Oh yes!!! N x

      Reply
  5. Rebecca Reitze says

    July 10, 2020 at 9:18 am

    So THATS how they’re done! Thanks! Love them! HHS’s dinner- some steak-ums egg than sprinkle of cheese. Mmmmm

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 10:21 am

      Sounds delicious Rebecca! N x

      Reply
  6. Vera G says

    July 10, 2020 at 9:03 am

    Bone Appetito Dozer! Am to make it now for my b’ fast. Will spoile my self by adding truffle, am having black eye after surgery. Ok, be good but Happy.!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 10:21 am

      How decadent Vera, hope your surgery went well – take it easy! N x

      Reply
  7. Sharon R says

    July 10, 2020 at 8:48 am

    5 stars
    I hate to admit I used to torture my eggs. The little bit of milk and technique made all the difference in the world! Now, all I need is smoked salmon and a fruit salad!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 10:22 am

      Sounds like the perfect breakky Sharon! N x

      Reply
  8. Mike Gibson says

    July 10, 2020 at 1:38 am

    Thanx Nagi–now I know what’s for breakfast this A.M.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 7:43 am

      Enjoy Mike! N x

      Reply
  9. John Crockett says

    July 10, 2020 at 12:26 am

    5 stars
    Who knew? You can teach an old dog new tricks! Thanks for the tips, Nagi.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 7:52 am

      You’re so welcome John! N x

      Reply
  10. Ralph says

    July 9, 2020 at 9:58 pm

    I love the simple way you make scrambled eggs Nagi and have always done it so myself.
    The only other step I would like to suggest is ‘pour some of the melted butter from the pan and into the egg mix and stir it in before pouring the mix into the pan’
    P.S. I also add chilli flakes to give it a little warmth. πŸ™‚

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 8:08 am

      Yum, I am known for adding extra butter too – can never have enough πŸ™‚ N x

      Reply
  11. Ina Scott says

    July 9, 2020 at 9:53 pm

    Exactly the way I cook the scramble eggs too.
    Most importantly Eggs once cooked to your liking &served on toast will still cook further from the heat inside the eggs!!!!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 8:09 am

      Yes 100% Ina! N x

      Reply
  12. Dr.DEEPA CHOUDHRIE says

    July 9, 2020 at 5:18 pm

    Nagi, I’m at work and this has made me SO hungry…..looong time before I get home though!

    To those at home enjoying making this dish, spare a thought for me too please!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 10, 2020 at 8:20 am

      Something to look forward to when you get home Deepa!! N x

      Reply
  13. HoneyC says

    July 9, 2020 at 11:09 am

    Nagi, what can I say?! I discovered you a month ago and now I’m only looking to you for recipes. Everything I’ve tried have turned out well and family of 6 are happy campers!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 11, 2020 at 7:03 pm

      Thanks so much HoneyC, that’s so great to hear! N x

      Reply
  14. Sylvie says

    July 9, 2020 at 6:57 am

    Make them extra tasty by adding some grated cheese at the last moment, simply stir in

    Reply
  15. Don says

    July 9, 2020 at 6:36 am

    5 stars
    Nagi, you hit the nail on the head with this recipe for creamy, custardy scrambled eggs. The latest craze on the cooking shows is β€œfluffy” scrambled eggs. The Merriam Webster dictionary defines β€œfluffy” as light, airy, puffed up. That describes cotton, a pillow or a nerf ball and I prefer not to eat any if those nor do I want my eggs to resemble them.

    One responder recommended water in lieu of milk since the water will boil and steam the eggs. Since milk is 87.7 percent water it will boil just the same as pure water so it seems to be a moot point.

    Nagi, thanks for all the help and inspiration you’ve provided those of us in the world wide cooking community. Love ya kid and that nutty, Dozer too.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 9, 2020 at 8:51 am

      Yes good point Don! Never thought of it that way – I prefer milk (or cream) anyway, seems to make it slightly more rich! N x

      Reply
  16. Wesley Bielinski says

    July 9, 2020 at 6:08 am

    5 stars
    This is how I learned to cook eggs in my Home Economics class in 8th grade. I am now 54. I do the same for omelets, just stop mixing sooner add fillings and fold. My daughter says Dozer is spoiled rotten, just like our dogs. Ran out of wet food once made them each a scrambled egg to add to the dry food. So spoiled. πŸ™‚

    Reply
  17. Angie from the U.S. says

    July 9, 2020 at 2:47 am

    5 stars
    You are so nice, Nagi! Even though I have my scrambled eggs down to a science, not everyone knows how to make them well. I think it’s just terrific how you cover the basics on even the most, shall I say, basic of foods?? πŸ˜‰πŸ‘πŸΌπŸ˜ Thank you!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 9, 2020 at 9:01 am

      Thanks so much Angie πŸ™‚ N x

      Reply
  18. Nancy says

    July 9, 2020 at 1:44 am

    The advice from two home-economics teachers and a few TV chefs was to use water and never use milk as milk makes your eggs tough and water steams the eggs to make them fluffier. This is just going to be another “which way to mount your toilet paper roll” dilemma. πŸ™‚

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 9, 2020 at 9:03 am

      Hi Nancy, milk is made up of almost 90% water πŸ€·πŸ»β€β™€οΈ something to think about! N x

      Reply
  19. Carol says

    July 9, 2020 at 1:02 am

    So for the last 100 yearsI have been making what I thought was scrambled ages all wrong. Who knew? I thought if I added more milk it would be creamier. Wrong! Your email came at breakfast time so that was my delicious creamy soft scrambled egg breakfast today. Yum. Thank you.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 9, 2020 at 9:05 am

      I love hearing this Carol! N x

      Reply
  20. SaraB says

    July 9, 2020 at 12:22 am

    These eggs look lovely…. Like Shifa I would like to know some of the brands you like – especially the skillets you use, and what would be the most useful size? Thanks again for your lovely well researched recipes πŸ‘

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      July 9, 2020 at 9:07 am

      Hi Sara, sounds like I need to to a post on this!! Thanks for the idea! N x

      Reply
      • SaraB says

        July 9, 2020 at 6:51 pm

        Great, look forward to it! I know you’ve put links to equipment in answers to questions – but I can’t find them now! 🀣 I think a 10 inch skillet would be a good all rounder…. πŸ€”

        Reply
Older Comments
Newer Comments

Primary Sidebar

Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

Free Recipe eBooks

Join my free email list to receive THREE free cookbooks!

Meet Dozer

Official taste tester of RecipeTin Eats! Meet Dozer
As Featured On

What's for Dinner?

Close up of beef enchiladas in a baking dish, fresh out of the oven

Beef Enchiladas

Butter Chicken served over basmati rice in a bowl, ready to be served

Butter Chicken

Overhead photo of 2 black bowls with Chinese Chicken Salad with Asian Dressing, ready to be eaten

Chinese Chicken Salad

Salisbury Steak recipe in skillet.

Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy

Vietnamese Coconut Caramel Chicken - 7 ingredient magic. The coconut fragrance is heavenly! recipetineats.com

Vietnamese Coconut Caramel Chicken

Fast prep. Big flavours!

Never miss a recipe

Back to Top
  • Related
  • RecipeTin Japan
  • Food Bloggers Center
  • Help
  • Contact Us
  • Image Use
  • Privacy Policy & Terms
Site Credits Maintained by Zao Designed by Melissa Rose Design Developed by Once Coupled © RecipeTin Eats 2023 · All Rights Reserved Back to Top