I frequently get asked if I would ever open a restaurant. The answer has always (and will always be) no. I have no desire to do such craziness. If I did though, it would almost certainly be a breakfast joint of some sort. Breakfast is just my favorite thing to cook and many of my most successful recipes are breakfast recipes. Plus, I could put these Hash Brown Egg Nests on the menu and make literally dozens of dollars.

These are a slightly more advanced riff on the classic Egg in a hole which is cooked in toast. I guess I like that version fine, but toast is, well, a bit boring. Hash browns are better in pretty much every case, correct? Plus, they are easy to shape!

Seems like the solution is to make them with a hole in the middle and then fill ’em up with perfectly cooked over-easy eggs!

What can go wrong? Some things, but not much, honestly. It’ll be great. Just try it!

Hash Brown Egg Nests

3.93 from 27 votes
Author: Nick Evans
Servings: 4 Servings
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes
Who needs toast?! You can make these Hash Brown Egg Nests! This is your new favorite breakfast!

Equipment

Ingredients 

  • 2 large Russet potatoes, peeled and grated
  • 2 tablespoons canola oil
  • 1 teaspoon seasoned salt
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon chili powder
  • 4 large eggs
  • Fresh scallion, garnish

Instructions

  • Peel and grate potatoes and add them to a bowl with cold water. Rinse them a few times to wash off starch. Then try potatoes well with a few paper towels.
  • Add dried shredded potatoes to a bowl. Toss with 1 tablespoon of oil and seasonings.
  • Preheat a griddle or large skillet to medium heat. Add potatoes and spread out in an even layer. Cook for 5 minutes until potatoes start to brown. Then stir and continue to cook for about 5 more minutes until potatoes are cooked through, but crispy in some areas. Add more oil if the skillet seems dry at any point.
  • When hash browns are mostly cooked, divide into 4 even mounds. Use a metal mold to make a center well in each mound. Press the hash browns up against the mold so they hold a firm shape. You can use a plastic mold if that’s all you have but remove the hash browns from the skillet first.
  • When the hash browns are shaped with a well in the center, crack an egg into each one. Let cook for about 90 seconds until the eggs are mostly set.
  • Carefully flip hash browns and eggs and cook for 15 seconds on the second side just to set the eggs.
  • Remove hash browns and eggs and garnish with fresh scallions. Serve with bacon or fruit and/or toast!

Video

Nutrition

Serving: 1nest | Calories: 212kcal | Carbohydrates: 20g | Protein: 8g | Fat: 11g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 6g | Trans Fat: 0.04g | Cholesterol: 164mg | Sodium: 657mg | Potassium: 521mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 390IU | Vitamin C: 6mg | Calcium: 43mg | Iron: 2mg
Course: Breakfast & Brunch, Main Dishes
Cuisine: American

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What Potatoes to Use for Hash Brown Egg Nests

First, let’s chat hash browns. You can buy prepared hash browns that have been rinsed and are ready to cook, but it’s not terrible to do on your own. Some people make the mistake of just grating potatoes and tossing them in a skillet. This will make food. But it won’t make excellent food.

To make excellent hash browns, peel the potatoes and grate them but then rinse them really well in cold water. This will rinse off the starch on the potatoes which will make sure the potatoes don’t stick together in a big lump.

Prepping Potatoes - Hash Brown Egg Nests
Quick wash.

Most annoyingly, after you rinse them you need to dry them really well. I just use paper towels to get off as much liquid as possible from the surface of the potatoes.

Then add a drizzle of oil and the seasonings.

Seasoning Hash Browns - Hash Browns for egg nests
Simple seasoning.

These go on a hot griddle (or big skillet) for 4-5 minutes until they start to get crispy. Then you can start stirring them to cook evenly. Try not to mess with them too much though.

Cooking Hash Brown Egg Nests
Start ’em on the grill.

After 8-10 minutes of cooking, make a few mounds with your hash browns.

Making Hash Browns for Hash Brown Egg Nests
Get ’em crispy.

Making the Hash Brown Egg Nests

Assuming you have metal molds, you can make the wells in the hash browns right the griddle. If you are like me and have plastic ones, then don’t put the plastic on a hot griddle. Hopefully, this is obvious.

So I had to pull my hash browns off, shape them around the molds, and then gently slide them back on the griddle. It was a few extra minutes of work, but not terrible.

The hole! Hash Brown Egg Nests
Shape ’em.

When you’re shaping the hash browns, be sure to really pack the potatoes around the mold. You want a nice sturdy wall so the eggs can’t escape.

Once you have some nice wells in your hash browns, in goes the eggs!

Adding the egg - Hash Brown Egg Nests
BOOM.

Let them cook on the first side for 90 seconds or so until the eggs are mostly set. Then very gently flip them. Ideally they will stay together as a single thing.

Hopefully, your hash browns are crispy and wonderful and the eggs are just cooked.

Flipped eggs - Hash Brown Egg Nests
Flip gently!

Plate up these hash brown egg nests with some fresh scallions and salt and pepper. Could you serve them with ketchup? I suppose. I’d go for hot sauce first though.

Hash Brown Egg Nests

These are really fun to eat and weren’t as difficult to make as I thought they’d be.

Save the toast for the jam, people. Make Hash Brown Egg Nests!!!

Egg in a Hash Brown Hole: Who needs toast?! You can make an egg in a hole with hash browns! This is your new favorite breakfast! | macheesmo.com

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