Marc Meyer cooks a New Year's brunch
If you've had a little too much New Year's Eve, Marc Meyer has the solution. His is a simple-to-make all-American brunch heavy on the comfort food. And, if you're ready to start celebrating all over again, he even tells you how to make the prettiest pomegranate-flavored cocktails you've ever seen. Or tasted.
Serves 4
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 clove garlic, minced
2 bunches spinach (about 1 ½ pounds), washed and stemmed
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 tablespoons unsalted butter for baking dish(es)
8 slices brioche, ½-inch thick each
12 large eggs
¼ cup crème fraiche
1 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano (about ¼ pound)
1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Heat the olive oil in a skillet over medium heat and, when it shimmers, add the garlic. Cook the garlic until fragrant and golden, about 3 minutes, and add the spinach. (Don't worry about a little water clinging to the leaves; it will help steam the greens.) Reduce the heat to medium, add a pinch of salt and a few turns of freshly ground black pepper, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the spinach is just wilted, about 3 minutes more. Transfer the spinach to a bowl to cool (it need not cool completely before you proceed, but you don't want it so hot it will start cooking the eggs before they get into the oven.)
2. Lightly butter the brioche slices on both sides. Lay them on a sheet pan and bake in the oven, turning them mid-toast, until lightly browned and crisped, 3 to 5 minutes total. (Or toast the slices in a toaster in batches, and butter them as they are done.)
3. Lightly butter four ramekins or baking dishes large enough to hold the brioche in one layer. Arrange the brioche on the bottom of the dish (es) and evenly scatter the wilted spinach over the bread, making rough little nests to hold the eggs in place. Crack the eggs into the spinach nests and season them with salt and pepper. Drizzle crème fraiche over the dish (es), sprinkle with grated Parmesan, and set on the lowest shelf of the oven. Cook until the whites are just set but the yolks are still runny, about 12 to 15 minutes. Serve immediately.
*You can substitute other greens, such as sorrel or escarole, if they're better looking at the market or more readily available.
Entertainment Extras
Photos from American Idol's summer tour
- David Archuleta & David Cook
- Where are they now?
- Season 7 Finale | - David Cook at Shea
Search Classifieds
| JOBS | SHOP | CARS | HOMES | |||||||||
Listings, directories and deals
|
||||||||||||
Popular stories
- Lindsay Lohan and Sam Ronson cause near-riot at Fashion Week
- Hanna soaks Long Island
- Oprah: Palin won't be on my show
- Sarah Palin who? Hillary Clinton brushes aside questions at parade
- Obama, McCain to mark 9/11 at Ground Zero together
MetroMix
Recent Multimedia
Celebrities at Fashion Week
John McCain: Early years
NFL Kickoff Show in NYC
Tennis hotties
Hangin' in the Hamptons
Guess the celeb from the high school photo
Sarah Palin: The early years
Sarah Palin, north star
Tiger Woods, Elin and baby Sam
Venus and Serena Williams through the years and at the U.S. Open
Michael Phelps hangs out, swims in New York
U.S. Open celebrities and tennis stars around New York
Sarah Palin and her family
Annual Tomatina food fight in Spain
Michael Jackson through the years
Olympian Shawn Johnson, Jennifer Hudson, other celebrities at Democratic convention
Barack Obama through the years
At the DNC: Day 3
American Idol judges Kara DioGuardi, Simon Cowell, Paula Abdul and Randy Jackson in New York
Olympic goddesses





