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→‎Variations: corrected ungramatical use of the verb substitute and changed the description of Egg florentine to correspond to the norm as per European Chef training
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==Variations==
==Variations==
Many variations on the traditional Eggs Benedict are available in certain restaurants, or in certain geographic locations. With the exception of the Egg McMuffin, none of these are as widely known as Eggs Benedict.
Many variations on the traditional Eggs Benedict are available in certain restaurants, or in certain geographic locations. With the exception of the Egg McMuffin, none of these are as widely known as Eggs Benedict.
* Eggs Florentine replaces the bacon with a [[tomato]] slice and sauteed [[spinach]].
* Eggs Florentine replaces the bacon with a [[tomato]] slice and sauteed [[spinach]]. The dish is most often served in the ramiken it, and not just the egg, has been poached in. There is no muffin, instead you may get thin toast served on the side.


* Eggs Blackstone substitutes streaky bacon for back bacon and adds a tomato slice.
* Eggs Blackstone substitutes streaky bacon by back bacon and adds a tomato slice.


* Eggs Hussard is the standard Benedict dish topped with [[Marchand de Vin]] sauce, a New Orleans creation.
* Eggs Hussard is the standard Benedict dish topped with [[Marchand de Vin]] sauce, a New Orleans creation.
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* The [[McDonalds]] ''[[Egg McMuffin]]'' was inspired by Eggs Benedict. To launch their new breakfast service in the 1970s, they developed an "Eggs Benedict Sandwich". Since hollandaise sauce would be too runny in a sandwich, a slice of [[american cheese]] was substituted. To give the egg the appearance of being poached, it is cooked on the grill in a special ring contraption that steams the tops while frying the bottoms. Mainly due to the success of the Egg McMuffin, McDonalds had a monopoly on the fast-food breakfast market until the mid-1980s. (reference MCDONALD'S: BEHIND THE ARCHES by John F. Love - Bantam Books, 1986, 1995)
* The [[McDonalds]] ''[[Egg McMuffin]]'' was inspired by Eggs Benedict. To launch their new breakfast service in the 1970s, they developed an "Eggs Benedict Sandwich". Since hollandaise sauce would be too runny in a sandwich, a slice of [[american cheese]] was substituted. To give the egg the appearance of being poached, it is cooked on the grill in a special ring contraption that steams the tops while frying the bottoms. Mainly due to the success of the Egg McMuffin, McDonalds had a monopoly on the fast-food breakfast market until the mid-1980s. (reference MCDONALD'S: BEHIND THE ARCHES by John F. Love - Bantam Books, 1986, 1995)


* Artichokes Benedict has been created for the [[South Beach Diet]], substituting cooked fresh [[artichoke]]s for the muffins and using a mock hollandaise sauce to create a breakfast that is lower in [[carbohydrate]]s and cholesterol than the original.{{Fact|date=December 2006}}
* Artichokes Benedict has been created for the [[South Beach Diet]], substituting the muffins by cooked fresh [[artichoke]]s and using a mock hollandaise sauce to create a breakfast that is lower in [[carbohydrate]]s and cholesterol than the original.{{Fact|date=December 2006}}


* There is now an Eggs Benedict XVI, created to honor the [[Germany|German]] background of the recently elected [[pope]]. [[Sauerbraten]] or [[sausage]] and [[rye bread]] are the eggs' accompaniments.{{Fact|date=December 2006}}
* There is now an Eggs Benedict XVI, created to honor the [[Germany|German]] background of the recently elected [[pope]]. [[Sauerbraten]] or [[sausage]] and [[rye bread]] are the eggs' accompaniments.{{Fact|date=December 2006}}
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* Slices of [[toast]] may be used instead of the traditional [[English muffin]]s.
* Slices of [[toast]] may be used instead of the traditional [[English muffin]]s.


* American Southern Style is also another variation in which country gravy is substituted for hollandaise sauce, and biscuits are substituted for the English muffins. Canadian bacon, ham, or regular bacon is used along with eggs typically cooked sunny side up.{{Fact|date=December 2006}}
* American Southern Style is also another variation in which the hollandaise sauce is substituted by country gravey, and the Englihs muffins are substituted by biscuits. [[User:83.203.4.140|83.203.4.140]] 18:57, 9 February 2007 (UTC)Canadian bacon, ham, or regular bacon is used along with eggs typically cooked sunny side up.{{Fact|date=December 2006}}


==Trivia==
==Trivia==

Revision as of 18:57, 9 February 2007

Eggs Benedict

Eggs Benedict is a dish consisting of two halves of an English muffin, usually topped with smoked bacon or ham (sometimes known as back bacon, which in America is called Canadian bacon), poached eggs, and hollandaise sauce.

Origin

The origin of the dish is not known with certainty. Two different accounts seem to have some support in the historical record.

One account claims that the dish was created in the late 1880s for financier LeGrand Benedict or his wife, by Charles Ranhofer, the chef of Delmonico's restaurant in New York City after one of the Benedicts complained there was nothing new on the menu.

Other sources state it was the result of an order placed by stockbroker Lemuel Benedict one morning in 1894 at the Waldorf Hotel when he had a hangover. Benedict claimed in an interview in The New Yorker shortly before his death that his order of dry toast, crisp bacon, poached eggs and a side of hollandaise sauce had been noted, usurped and warped by Oscar Tschirky, maître d'hôtel there. Oscar substituted English muffins and Canadian bacon, and added truffles.

The dish is not named after Benedict Arnold, a general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, despite the coincidence of name and that he was "English underneath".

Variations

Many variations on the traditional Eggs Benedict are available in certain restaurants, or in certain geographic locations. With the exception of the Egg McMuffin, none of these are as widely known as Eggs Benedict.

  • Eggs Florentine replaces the bacon with a tomato slice and sauteed spinach. The dish is most often served in the ramiken it, and not just the egg, has been poached in. There is no muffin, instead you may get thin toast served on the side.
  • Eggs Blackstone substitutes streaky bacon by back bacon and adds a tomato slice.
  • Eggs Hussard is the standard Benedict dish topped with Marchand de Vin sauce, a New Orleans creation.
  • Seafood Benedict replaces the bacon with crab and/or shrimp.
  • The McDonalds Egg McMuffin was inspired by Eggs Benedict. To launch their new breakfast service in the 1970s, they developed an "Eggs Benedict Sandwich". Since hollandaise sauce would be too runny in a sandwich, a slice of american cheese was substituted. To give the egg the appearance of being poached, it is cooked on the grill in a special ring contraption that steams the tops while frying the bottoms. Mainly due to the success of the Egg McMuffin, McDonalds had a monopoly on the fast-food breakfast market until the mid-1980s. (reference MCDONALD'S: BEHIND THE ARCHES by John F. Love - Bantam Books, 1986, 1995)
  • American Southern Style is also another variation in which the hollandaise sauce is substituted by country gravey, and the Englihs muffins are substituted by biscuits. 83.203.4.140 18:57, 9 February 2007 (UTC)Canadian bacon, ham, or regular bacon is used along with eggs typically cooked sunny side up.[citation needed]

Trivia

The dish is the source of American actor Dirk Benedict's stage name, supposedly adopted on the suggestion of his agent whilst searching for something more suitable for Hollywood than 'Niewoehner', his family name.[citation needed]

See also

External links