The best baked eggs in the world – Shakshuka! A Middle Eastern and North African dish traditionally served up for breakfast or lunch, this can be made entirely on the stove or finished in the oven. However, bread for dunking/mopping is not optional!
Shakshuka
I’ll let you in on a trade secret – usually, the photos you see of so called baked eggs aren’t really baked at all.
When eggs are baked, the thin film of egg whites covering the yolks becomes opaque, fogging up the beautiful bright yellow yolks.
“This is a catastrophe!” said some food magazine editor, somewhere. “We cannot have foggy yolks! They must be bright yellow. This must be fixed!” (I hear this in my head with a French accent, but I don’t know why)
And so some food stylist scuttled off, and came back with a solution now adopted by food stylists everywhere: pan fry the eggs sunny side up then slide them into whatever sauce or vehicle they were supposedly baked in.
It’s always obvious when this is done because you don’t get the messy bleed of whites mixed in with the sauce, like you see in these photos.
So yes, I sacrificed glaringly yellow yolks to make this the way the recipe is written. I did cheat a bit though- I carefully wiped off as much of the egg whites from the yolks before baking them.
I assure you I do not do that in real life. 😂
Now that I’ve changed the way you’ll look at baked eggs photos forever, let’s talk about the world’s best baked eggs – Shakshuka.
WHAT IS SHAKSHUKA?
It’s basically eggs that are baked or poached in a fragrant tomato sauce, usually with capsicum (bell peppers), onion and spices like cumin and paprika, reflecting the Middle Eastern and North African roots of this dish. It’s actually quite similar to Huevos Ranchos – the Mexican version of Shakshuka!
Though traditionally thought of as a breakfast or brunch recipe, I’m forever on my “eggs anytime of the day” crusade and I’m sitting here at 5.18pm on Wednesday 25 July 2018, wondering what to have for dinner tonight and I just decided to make this (again).
BRILLIANT FOR CAMPING – AND MAKING IN BULK
Though I call Shakshuka a type of baked eggs, ironically my favourite way of making it is over campfire, poaching rather than baking. One of my best friends had a remote wild-river wedding and the outdoor caterers they hired made Shakshuka for 80 wedding guests over campfire.
It worked brilliantly because eggs take mere minutes to cook, so they made large pots of this fragrant tomato sauce then cooked dozens and dozens of eggs in them. Poach, serve, then repeat in the same pots.
I had all good intentions of helping. But I had a very sore head that morning… 🥂🤢 Hey! I was a bridesmaid – I had to do lots of toasts! …. – Nagi x
MY FAVOURITE BREKKI/BRUNCHY EGG RECIPES
-
Healthy Egg Muffins – grab ‘n go brekki!
-
Frittata – a classic everyone should know!
-
Quiche Lorraine (must try at least once!)
WATCH HOW TO MAKE IT
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Shakshuka (Middle Eastern Poached or Baked Eggs)
Ingredients
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 1 small red onion , peeled, halved and sliced
- 1 garlic clove , minced
- 1 small red capsicum (bell pepper) , halved lengthways and sliced into 0.5cm/1/4” strips
- 1 tomato , diced
- 400 g / 14 oz can crushed tomatoes
- 1 tbsp tomato paste
- 1/2 cup / 125 ml chicken or vegetable broth (or water)
- 1 tsp EACH paprika and cumin
- 1/4 tsp EACH black pepper and cayenne pepper (or other hot spice, adjust to taste)
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 4 eggs eggs (up to 6 eggs ok)
- 2 tbsp fresh parsley or coriander / cilantro , roughly chopped
- Pita or crusty bread, to serve
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 180C/350F (if intending to bake them).
- Heat oil in a medium size cast iron skillet over medium high heat. Add garlic and onion, cook for 2 minutes until onion is translucent.
- Add capsicum, cook for 1 minute. Add diced tomato, cook for 2 minutes until broken down and it becomes a bit pasty (see video).
- Add canned tomatoes, tomato paste, broth, paprika, cumin, salt and pepper. Mix to combine well.
- Lower stove to medium low and simmer for 5 minutes until just thickened enough to make indentations (don't want dry sludge, needs to still be saucy).
- Make indentations in the mixture and carefully crack the eggs in. Leave to cook for 1 minute until edges of whites are set (Note 1).
- Transfer to oven and bake for 7 to 12 minutes until whites are just set but yolks are still runny (or to your taste). OR cover with lid and steam on stove for 3 minutes (runny yolks), or just simmer them without a lid.
- Remove from oven/stove and serve immediately, scattered with the coriander or parsley. Serve with crusty bread, or pita bread.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
LIFE OF DOZER
And he’s back in the water!!! The vet tells me it’s excellent for rehab*. So I’m making him do laps back and forth along the beach – not allowed to run on the sand!
* For those playing catch up: Dozer busted his knee a couple of months ago and had to undergo surgery. We’re 8 weeks into a 12 – 16 week post op recovery period. He’s doing fantastic! A little too well – if he had his way, he’d be bolting after rabbits in the backyard, then he’d end up back on the operating table… 🙄
Wynn says
Dozer looks so happy to be in the water again. Nice to have one restriction lifted, at least!
Those eggs look wonderful! Great recipe to have for a quick and satisfying meal, since the ingredients for those are things I virtually always have handy, too.
How is it exactly that Aussie breakfast beans differ from American beans? Very curious about that and about “Poms?”
Wendy says
I was wondering the same thing about the baked beans, coming from Canada and living in Oz for 30 yrs. I know both the dk brown beans and the more tomatoey ones in both countries. I like both and learned to eat beans on toast in Oz which is a nutritious breakfast, lunch or dinner! Yum.
Wynn says
I like both kinds, too! Which kind had you usually had on toast? My dad had actually been a good cook, but when we’d been very small he’d sometimes given us brown sugar baked beans tucked into buttered sliced of folded white bread as a weekend lunch, and had called those bean sandwiches. We’d thought he was absolutely brilliant, and wonderfully funny too, because he’d chanted “beans, bean, a wonderful fruit, the more you eat the more you toot…” While serving them. He’d been like the king of pre-schoolers in the neighborhood too, with 5 generations of little kids knocking at my parents’ door asking if he could come out to play.
Hazel says
Your dad sounds wonderful. Thank you for sharing your story.
Wynn says
He really was, thanks!
Nagi says
HI Wynn! We have baked beans that is served for breakfast on toast, it’s basically a dialled down version of yours. No bacon, the sauce is not as strong. It’s a very popular canned product over here!!
Wynn says
Ok, Thanks. The-beans-on toast beans! The beans with a more pale, tomato-y base? We have those sorts of beans in the US too, as well as the darker brown sugar Boston baked beans or brown sugar baked salt pork & beans type. Barbeque sauced beans are somewhat popular too.
I did a search for Poms, btw…and think I got the right answer! LOL!!!
Linda Lassman says
Could you make large quantities of the sauce, freeze it, then thaw what you needed, add the eggs, and bake then?
Nagi says
GENIUS idea 🙌🏻
Gary in Arizona says
Oh! This is good! Easier than my Southwestern baked eggs. Instead of bell pepper, I use Hatch, or Anaheim green chili. Also add potato and chorizo, and leave out the paprika. I pined this one. 🙂
Nagi says
Oooh YES to chorizo and potato!!!
Val Frasher says
Once while staying at the Dead Sea, the buffet included a green sauce, I’m guessing it was spinach. Have you ever had Shakshuka that way? Would you happen to have a recipe?
Nagi says
Gosh I haven’t! Did it taste Indian? I wonder if it was like paneer sauce??
Val Frasher says
I didn’t detect Indian flavors. I’d have to research it a bit more. Most of the hotels are Russian owned, so I thought maybe it was a variation they brought with them.
Val Frasher says
Also, there were no tomatoes, no harissa, just greens and super creamy! Probably with Jalapeño to give it a little kick. I love shakshuka, but loved this green version even more!
LESLEY JACKSCH says
Hello Nagi. I have never ever seen a site like yours!!! Astounding to say the least. Your recipes are better than any other’s. You work so hard to make it easy to follow and the video’s help so much. You are so much better than a five star. Thank you so much and I look forward to so many more of your recipe’s.
Nagi says
Gosh Lesley, you are making my head REALLY BIG! 😂 But thank you very much for the compliment 🙂 N x
LESLEY JACKSCH says
Your so welcome. I have always believed you have to give credit where it is due. Your recipes are simply put over the top and I just love them. Thank you again. I get so excited every time I open my e-mail and I see Nagi knowing it will be another hit for me to make!!!
Ron says
Good for you for revealing the trade secrets of those who take such tainted images. I think we should all go “au naturel” when shooting food. Now, I was not referring to what the photographer is wearing, but the food they’re shooting. “Shoot them how they lie”, is my motto (with a little wipe up here and there). No Elmer’s glue, WD-40 or hair products in my images. If It can’t be eaten after, I don’t shoot it. Now, about that Shakshuka. Your video made it look brilliantly simple. Something we must try up this way.
So glad Dozer boy is getting back to his lovable self.
Nagi says
I hear you! Staples in lettuces aside, I eat everything I shoot – usually within seconds of the last shot….
Gillian DidierSerre says
First off love shakshuka tks for recipe I laughed my head off when you said you had a headache and could not help at the wedding. .probably tooo much BUBBLY THE night before😂😂.
Good news DOZER happy to see you are back in the water.best wishes for recovery from your Canadian buddy Luca..BTW luca’s conjuctivitis has cleared so he can see stealing food off counters much better😈
Nagi says
I’m so glad to hear Luca has a clear line of sight for food attacks again!! N xx