fried egg
See also: fried-egg
English
Noun
fried egg (plural fried eggs)
- An egg that has been shallow-fried on one or both sides.
- 1997 March 20, Kristin Eddy, “EGGS a dozen ways”, in Atlanta Journal Constitution:
- It's difficult to have a perfectly cooked, cooked-through fried egg because, by the time the yolk has coagulated, or set, the white is overcooked. You'll usually have to settle for either a runny yolk or a tough white.
- 1997 April 16, JANET FLETCHER, “FLEETING PLEASURES; The first blush of spring's harvest”, in San Francisco Chronicle:
- Carefully break the egg into a bowl, […] Cook until the egg white is set, then turn and cook briefly. The yolk should still be runny. […] Top with the fried egg.
- 2004 Autumn, Julie Keith, “Pneumonia”, in The Hudson Review, volume 57, Iss. 3, page 440:
- "Your dad said you should have a fried egg. He's gone to work awhile back. You want one or two?" I hesitated, and she must have caught a look of distaste on my face, for she added amiably, "Or you like scrambled better?"
-
- (golf, slang) A golf ball half-buried in sand in a bunker.
- (slang, usually in the plural) A small female breast.
- 1999 May 11, Sean Gallagher, “Zoe Ball's page 3”, in uk.media.radio.bbc-r1, Usenet, message-ID <7ha8hh$5qo$1@news4.svr.pol.co.uk>:
- Not only is she keeping Moyles out of the Breakfast slot. We now have to look at her Fried eggs in the newspaper (well The Sun!!!!).
- 2006, Sinead Moriarty, The Right Fit, →ISBN, page 18:
- Placing his hands on her fried eggs he asked, “Any chance of some action?”
- 2009, Fred Broussard, South Carolin: Island in the Sea of States, volume 2, →ISBN, page 8:
- She pats her breast, not so much to draw attention to her fried eggs, but to force her breaths to become rhythmic.
-
Usage notes
- Commonly referred to in parts of the US as "egg, sunny side up" or "egg, over easy".
Synonyms
- (small breast): bee sting
Translations
egg that has been shallow fried
|
|
See also
- over easy
- sunny side up
fried egg on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Category:fried eggs on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
Anagrams
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.