The Ultimate Cooking Oil Tip for the Perfect Omelette

When I was a teenager, my friends would be amazed at my ability to produce the perfect omelette to order. And I always told them the secret was in the cooking oil.

They would go home and try it out for themselves. Their way was to pour a good portion of their mother's most expensive cooking oil into a frying pan, crack a couple of eggs into a bowl which they'd briefly whisk before tipping the lot onto the luke warm oil in the pan. What ensued might be an interestingly textured scrambled egg ensemble. But not an omelette by any stretch of the imagination.

Sorrel omelet

Sorrel omelet

This story contains many lessons, as a kung fu guru might say. Don't make assumptions might be one. Another could be wait until you have all the details before you rush off. But I think it's more about this: ask the right question, and you'll get the right answer.

Sure, cooking oil is important to making an omelette. There are two reasons. Firstly, you need to use cooking oil to make a decent omelette. You can't pour the egg mixture directly onto the frying pan - it'll stick. Secondly, you need to let the cooking oil get hot. Extremely hot. Your Omelette certainly won't stick to the pan if the cooking oil is smoking hot - although it doesn't need to be that hot. And that means you'll end up with a well-formed omelette, not a pan of scrambled egg.

But the right question wasn't 'What's the secret to making a good omelette?' Firstly, that assumes there's one secret. Secondly, it assumes there's a secret. There's no secret to making an omelette, or in the cooking oil. Ask that question and you get: 'the secret's in the cooking oil'. So my friends thought that using special/expensive/fancy/organic cooking oil would transform their omelettes. They focused on the object itself like good little consumers.

The right question could have been, 'How do you make the perfect omelette every time?' - to which the answer would be a list of ingredients plus instructions to guide you through every step of the way.

Another right question would have been, 'Can you show me how to make an omelette?' - and I would have been happy to. There was no secret after all.

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