2-Eyed Toad-in-a-Hole Sandwich
Long ago, someone very smart invented a truly brilliant breakfast trick. Instead of
putting her egg on toast, this person chose to put the egg in it.
The reason this move is so profound is because it cooks the egg and the bread
simultaneously. It also shapes the egg, meaning the whites won't have the chance to run
directionless all over the pan, resulting in a wonky breakfast. Even more, the cut-out
section of the bread can be repurposed as a type of dipper. If you like to sop up runny
eggs with toast, this second piece will perfect the sopping process.
What's most controversial about this egg-inside-a-piece-of-toast is not its deliciousness
(objectively tasty) or its cooking technique (do what you want), but its terminology. On
Google Trends, toad in a hole defeats other popular names like egg in a basket and
egg in a hole”, which is somewhat surprising, considering the egg has nothing to do
with an amphibian.
An in-depth internet search revealed that there are actually over 65 different names for
egg-in-a-hole, and they run the gamut from expected to weird to even sort of offensive.
The folks at Eater did a deep-dive into the origins of this simple breakfast and found
that it first appeared in print in Fannie Farmer's Boston Cooking School Cookbook and
was called egg with a hat”, calling for the bread's center cut-out to be served on top of
the egg, as its ‘hat’.
It has also popped up again and again in popular culture: in the movie Moonstruck its
called uova nel cestino, or egg in a trashcan; in the film Moon Over Miami, its called
gashouse eggs(which may come from the German gasthaus, or guesthouse and in
the movie V for Vendetta, they called it egg-in-the-basket.
For anyone keeping score, that's seven different names already, and wee just getting
started. After scouring the internet for all the different names people have for the dish,
including going through nearly 350 comments on a SeriousEats thread, 171 comments
on a New York Times Cooking recipe, and the already compiled lists by HuffingtonPost
and Chicago Foodies, the names on this list are the only ones that had more than one
nod. Are you ready?
Toad in a hole
Egg in a hole
Egg in a nest
Egg in the middle
Egg in a basket
Egg in a frame
Frog in a hole
Holy eggs
Baby in a buggy
Morning hole in one
Bregg
Hole in the head
One-eyed Pete
The lazy-eyed pirate
Cat in a hat
Bulls eye
Toast tits
