Eggs with avocado (5 eggs)
Soft eggs + creamy avocado is a reliable trade-off: high satiety, minimal prep, and easy flavor control. Treat it like a bowl—season the eggs well, then let avocado smooth the edges.
*Egg-only baseline. Avocado adds calories and fiber (and makes the meal feel bigger).
Overview
Goal: soft, small-curd eggs with avocado on top. Constraint: eggs go from perfect to dry fast—pull them early and plate immediately.
What makes it work
Quick takeaway
Cook eggs until they look slightly underdone, then top with sliced avocado, salt, pepper, and a squeeze of lemon. The carryover heat finishes the eggs without drying them.
Validation: if the eggs stay creamy after 2 minutes on the plate, you nailed timing.
Ingredients
Keep the ingredient list short. Most improvements come from seasoning and heat control.
Base (1 serving)
Optional add-ons
Constraint: too many wet add-ons can dilute flavor—salt and acid fix most of it.
Steps
This uses a soft-scramble approach: small curds, minimal browning, fast finish.
Step by step
- Whisk eggs until fully uniform. Set aside.
- Heat a nonstick pan on low-medium. Add butter and swirl.
- Pour eggs in. Stir slowly for 45–60 seconds to form small curds.
- When eggs are mostly set but still glossy, remove from heat and plate.
- Top with sliced avocado, salt, pepper, and lemon/lime.
- Optional: add chili flakes and herbs. Serve immediately.
Troubleshooting
Wrap up: pull eggs early, season late, finish with acid.
Nutrition notes
Use eggs as the baseline, then decide how much extra energy you want from avocado and toast.
Baseline (5 eggs)
Practical guidance
Quick takeaway: avocado is the lever—small amount for creaminess, larger amount for calories.
Tips & variations
One variable at a time. That’s how you learn what your kitchen “wants”.
Recommended tweaks
- Finish with lemon or hot sauce for clarity
- Add chopped herbs for aroma
- Serve on toast if you need carbs
- Add cucumber or tomatoes for crunch
Watchouts
- High heat browns and dries eggs fast
- Over-mashing avocado can turn watery
- Skipping acid makes it taste heavy
- Too much salt early can thin eggs
Quick takeaway: texture first, then seasoning, then acid.
FAQ
Fast answers that prevent the common failure modes.
Wrap up: keep the eggs soft and the seasoning sharp.