A great eggs benedict is absolutely one of my favorite brunch dishes ever. There’s a few issues with it though. (If you are looking for a good benedict, this Burrata Benedict is next level.)
For starters, they require a small amount of skill. The hollandaise sauce can break. The eggs might not be cooked perfectly. Either of these things can pretty much ruin the dish for me.
So I came up with this starter Benedict which I’m calling a “stack”. The hollandaise sauce isn’t really needed because of the over-easy egg and the fact that the dry English muffin is replaced with a creamy polenta circle.
Loyal Eggs Benedict fans might scoff, but I thought this worked out just fine.
Polenta Stack
Equipment
Ingredients
Polenta:
- 1¾ Cups corn polenta
- 6 Cups water
- 2 Teaspoons salt
- 1 Teaspoon pepper
- 3 Tablespoons butter
Other stuff:
- Bacon, 1 strip per stack
- Tomato, 1 slice per stack
- Eggs, 1 per stack
Instructions
- Bring water to a boil in a medium pot. While simmering, whisk in polenta along with salt.
- Stir until thick, about 10 minutes. Add pepper and butter.
- Pour polenta onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Chill for thirty minutes.
- Cut circles out of the polenta (or any shape).
- Cook bacon until crispy. Slice tomatoes.
- Fry polenta circles over medium-high heat for about 4 minutes per side or until they are lightly golden browned.
- Top polenta circle with slice of cheese. Broil for 20 seconds to melt cheese.
- Top with tomato, bacon, and an over-easy egg.
Nutrition
Did you make this recipe?
Making Polenta
Now some people might say that I’ve made benedicts harder by subbing the english muffin for a polenta piece, but polenta is dumb simple to make.
I mean it’s just corn people!
Start by bringing your water to a boil in a medium pot with a good pinch of salt. When it’s simmering, just pour in your polenta in a steady stream while whisking.
Turn the heat down to medium-low and continue to stir it for about 10 minutes until it’s nice and thick. Then add in some butter and pepper.
Done deal!
Now you could eat it just like this (grits), but if you pour it out onto a sheet pan lined with parchment paper and let it cool for about 30 minutes in the fridge, it’ll become a firm block.
Then you can cut shapes out with it!
Once you remove the extra, you’ll have these perfect little polenta circles.
People will be really impressed, but seriously these are pretty fail proof.
Other Ingredients
Now you could use traditional Benedict ingredients like ham, spinach, or even crab for this, but I went with some fresh tomato, sliced pretty thick.
And some good bacon that I fried up until crispy.
Finishing the Dish
The key to serving these little polenta guys is to lightly sear them on each side before building your stack. This will make them a bit crunchy on the outside, but still nice and soft on the inside.
I used the same pan I used for my bacon and even left some of the bacon grease to give them some flavor.
About 4-5 minutes per side over medium-high heat should do the trick.
Once they came out of the pan, I topped them with a slice of Provolone cheese that I cut to the same size.
These went under the broiler for about 20 seconds just to melt the cheese.
Then add the tomato, bacon, and a lightly fried egg.
Over-easy is really the only way to go on the egg since we don’t have a sauce.
When you cut into the egg, it kinds of spills all over the place and mixes with the polenta. The bacon and tomato go well together as always.
This was a really delicious brunch and I found that I didn’t even miss the heavy hollandaise sauce really.
Ok. Maybe a little bit.
But the polenta was kind of the star of the show actually which I liked. And you could easily make this for a good amount of people for brunch without too much fuss.
If you like the idea of stacking things and topping them with eggs (who doesn’t?), give this a shot.
Mireya Merritt
Hi Nick, I think this sounds absoutely delicious! I've never been a fan of Holandaise sauce and the runny egg provides enough of its own sauce. Using polenta instead of a muffin is a brilliant idea.
My recent post Recipe- Sizzling Summer Fruit Salad
Anne
This might make a great Father's Day breakfast. My husband would love these!
CGCouture
I'm with Anne, I think this could be a fabulous Father's Day idea. :-) Thanks!
James
I'm a massive Eggs Benedict fan, however this does sound like an interesting interpretation of the dish. Looks good, especially that bacon frying!
My recent post The River Cottage Bread Journey…
Nick
Yea I just had it again because I had some leftover polenta (minus bacon plus some sauteed spinach). Really good.
Olga @ MangoTomato
love this! I was just planning on writing a post about how everything is better with a poached or fried egg on top!
Nick
I can't think of a savory dish that that isn't true for. ;)
Kevin
Well I’m going to follow Anne’s suggestion and put in my request to the family right now. Great combo Nick thanks
Joe Girard
Great post.
My recent post Tomato and Bread Soup
K
Love the idea of using polenta BUT travesty not to have a poached egg! They are very easy to do… Get your water boiling nice and quickly, turn the heat right down so there aren’t many bubbles to disturb the eggs, crack the eggs in very gently, put the lid on the pan and time for 2 mins to get cooked whites and lovely runny yolks. Lift out carefully with a slotted spoon.
Nick
Hey K, yea… I pretty alternate between poached and over-easy. I like them both. For those interested, I did a walk-through on how I poach eggs which is basically what K wrote.
https://www.crunchtimekitchen.com/2012/04/an-eggsperiment/
K
Oh I hadn’t seen that – you have so many lovely breakfast / brunch recipes! G I’ve never got on with the vortex method but most people do swear by it.
Daktari
Geez Louise. How did I miss this one. These look awesome. Must try.
ERP Perú
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