This channel is hereby rechristened 'The Atomic Shrimp Channel For Kids (and Adults) Who Can't Cook Good And Who Wanna Learn To Do Other Stuff Good Too'.
Breakfast butty mate. There is no food like it for satisfaction value. I am currently on a diet and all I want in the world is a massive sausage bacon, mushroom and egg butty with loads of HP on it. But no, this vegetable soup with no bread is just as good...😒
Huh...went looking for opinions about white pudding being classed as part of an English Breakfast, did not expect to see hit sensation @theslowmoguys just randomly popping up in the comments. I guess once British always British, go'ed lads!
On our second date, my partner brought me a tiny cast iron pan. He'd gone to a vintage/antique shop the day before with the goal of finding "a small thing that shouldn't be so small". He gave me an even smaller one this Christmas, several years later. We watch your videos together every weekend, and the introduction of your tiny pan(s!) was such a delight. 🌈 Thanks for the videos, Mr. Shrimp!
There are deeper mini-skillets sold for campfire cooking, since smaller = lighter. These shallow skillets were designed specifically for baking, where there isn't much stirring or sloshing Dessert is probably going to remain your best bet. Individual apple crumbles with ice cream scooped with a melon-baller would be cute as heck, and dessert is the course most likely to be cute. Then again, mini-pizzas...
@@etaoinshrdlu927 I may have seen one on a school trip to our local newspaper print works in the sixties, but I think Gobfrey Shrdlu was the invention of writer Denys Parsons, who wrote books of misprints. Sadly even the Guardian is almost Shrdlu-free these days.
This kind of content makes insomnia so much easier to pass the time with. I was hoping you'd do this meal when I first saw that original pan, honestly.
@Lucius DeBeers try it out before complaining, together with some 50 push ups, i guarantee you sleep. Especially works good if you turn out the phone an hour before sleep
I worked in a mine in remote outback Australia for a while, and every morning at 4am it was 'Heavy Industrial' Size Full English Breakfast with every ingredient imaginable and a big strong coffee. It was the best Full English Breakfast I have had anywhere, ever. That mess hall really looked after us. and that's how I got fat.
You could try Menemen. It's a Turkish dish that's is basically scrambled eggs with tomatoes, peppers and onions. The seasoning is quite simple and often includes a dash of herbs and a touch of heat from some chopped chili. I sometimes use chopped sun-dried tomatoes for stronger flavour, though that's not traditional. In a Turkish breakfast you often get served several small portions of different dishes cooked in little skillets - eggs and pastrami, Suçuk Yumurta, Menemen, Çilbir,Turkish poached eggs and yogurt with paprika butter.
Your description of the "full English" sandwich being messy is exactly right. That was a creation during my university days, and was simply referred to as"fancy a big messy?"
the trick is to get a nice, well-risen roll and gut the bread from the middle, giving you a concave crusty container to cram with calorific comestibles .
@KingMushroomBoy That's because 'hash browns' are available, frozen, to the catering trade. Using last night's leftover boiled potatoes, in lumps rather than slices, are lovely crisped in bacon fat! Fried bread is traditional, but I prefer slices of floppy bread to mop up the juices from tomatoes, beans, eggs, etc.😋
I have four of these pans (a bargain bin lot a few years ago with the same muffin mix you had). I use them most weeks to fry eggs. A little bit of olive oil in the bottom, heat to a low/medium heat, then crack the eggs in. The trick is to let the whites settle a little before plonking the yolk dead centre. Perfect fried eggs and a perfect shape every time!
I used to have a small skillet (maybe 15cm) bought specially for me to fry eggs, when I was a teen. I could do a pair of eggs in it. I have no idea where it is now, lost in one of my parents movings?
My elderly mother has a sweet little one-egg frying pan that she uses whenever she wants a hot breakfast, as she doesn't really eat much meat these days and the pan is light and cleans up so easily.
I'm not much of a cook myself so maybe you have your reasons but I'll personally never fry an egg in olive oil as it adds a bitter flavour that I don't care for at all. Butter all the way or sunflower oil at a pinch.
@@demonstructie I never used to, but I was in Barcelona, and they were frying eggs in olive oil, and it tasted amazing. They said it was to do with the quality of the oil, so I brought some back and the difference is night and day. I had tried in the past with olive oil, and had the same result as you.
I love this so much, I think as part of the whole this really emphasises the spirit of creativity and fun that's emblematic of the channel "Sometimes he goes looking for fossils, sometimes he makes a miniature full English breakfast, and a while back he reviewed some phones"
Another point of disambiguation... or rather, the opposite: I've always been fascinated by what you made and called "eggy in a basket." An egg fried inside of a hole made in bread has a huge number of different names that all refer to it (in the US at least), including: - Bird's eye (what I call it) - Egg in [a/the] basket (most similar to what you called it) - Toad in [a/the] hole (interestingly also the same as the dish you mentioned in an earlier video of sausages cooked in batter) - Egg in [a/the] hole - Eggs in a nest - Bullseye eggs - Gasthaus eggs (meaning "bed and breakfast" or "inn" eggs) - Gashouse eggs (probably a mutation of the previous one) - Hole in one - Eyeball toast (which I heard for the first time from someone else in these comments!) Among many more versions of "[someone's] eye" or "[someone famous who made it] eggs". Apparently Roald Dahl was also very fond of these and called them "hothouse eggs."
As soon as you said you were making a full English sandwich I was instantly transported to my university days, when we were given brunch on Sundays at the canteen of my catered halls, and I used to take about half of my cooked breakfast and make it into a sandwich using two pieces of toast. Half brown always went on a corner, bacon on the rest of the surface sausage halved lengthways so it wouldn't roll around black pudding up a little and to the opposite corner from the hash brown, making a nice enclosed area for a few beans and some mushrooms, then egg on top of all that, and a load of whichever sauce took my fancy. Never a clean thing to eat but toast over bread offered some stability. It's been nearly 8 years but I can still remember the wonderful eating experience like I'd just newly had one.
Eggy in the Basket. Love how many different names one dish can have. Where I'm from its referred to as Eyeball Toast. Figured I'd share that as I find it thrilling to learn all the different names for foods!
I love Shrimp's cooking videos. They're just so wholesome. My food tastes are quite different from Mike's but his way of speaking and presenting things just makes me happy
My roommate bought me one of these tiny pans from a secondhand shop some time ago as a novelty. I mentioned if it was deeper, it might actually be useful... and this last Christmas she surprised me with a much better scaled version, deeper. It actually works pretty well! Although you still have the issue of scaling things down to fit it, but it's neat that I can actually use it if I want.
As one who loves a full English breakfast but has an appetite too small to accommodate, that pan looked absolutely perfect. Finally, one I could enjoy without becoming stuffed halfway in. 😍
In the US, and I LOVE black pudding. My dad said he hated it growing up, and his mom made "blood pudding" it all the time. Being from the US, I always imagined it like a red congealed mass of custard-like pudding, kinda like ketchup made of blood... Later in life once I experienced what it actually was... I wish I could find it easily over here. Only know of one restaurant in my entire city that serves it, with a single breakfast item only on weekends, and don't ever see it in stores. 😢
Due to US food laws, I don't believe black pudding can be imported into the US. Haggis can't be either. You'd have to find a producer over there or make your own, which I think might be difficult.
Hello Atomic Shrimp 👋🏻 I was wondering if you’ve ever tried dumpster diving? I know you do lots of foraging & budget shopping challenges, thought it could be a neat idea for a video! It’s legal & some of the things found are astonishing! Thanks for the cool content 💫
Hello Mr. Shrimp. I am enjoying your tiny pan journey. I used to have a real tiny cast iron with higher sides that I could fry 2 eggs in perfectly. We had a major flood and it was lost. In America we have an item called a pie iron that makes lovely toasted sandwiches. It is like 2 small skillets hinged together with very long handles so they can be held over a campfire, or your kitchen stove. A piece of buttered bread goes in, butter side down. Then an egg or sliced sausage or cheese, or all three. Another slice of buttered bread on top, then the pie iron is clamped shut. It is heated until the bread is golden brown. Instead, the bread could have sweet items sandwiched inside. So I thought maybe you could use your 2 little pans like a makeshift pie iron. You would put the buttered bread and fillings in the bottom pan, cover with the top piece of bread, and then the top pan. Once the bottom bread seems toasted, grab the handles together very tightly with your oven mit and flip them together. Does that sound reasonable? I hope that made sense.
I would love to try “tarte tatin” where you caramelise apples and cover with a pastry topping, then bake in the oven. It’s full sized version is amazing with ice cream. :-)
I think we're all here because we want to see whatever Shrimp gets up to. I would hate him to feel obligated to continue doing something he's not into purely because a request is frequent. Can't we just let him go about his business as usual rather than bellowing demands from the comment section?
@@DeliciousChives On the one hand, I agree with you. On the other, tiny dishes are just so adorable! And I liked seeing his creativity in making things little.
I use tiny pans for just doing a full sized egg that keep a round shape. Handy for toasting sesame seeds needed for a garnish, when other pans are in use too. Love the tiny dishes and full english sandwich. I've started making okonomiyaki (japanese pancake) as a savoury muffin, so you can have all the flavours on the go.
There’s a restaurant in the US called BJ’s Brewhouse that has a dessert called a Pizookie (I think it’s a made up word combo of pizza cookie). It’s a freshly baked cookie with a scoop of ice cream, and the mini version is baked in a similar pan to your mini cast iron. Choices are red velvet, chocolate chip, cookies and cream, peanut butter, strawberry shortcake, monkey bread, salted caramel, brownie.
Your comments about the very small pan are why I didn't buy the American version at a deep discount. I'm actually glad you came to the same conclusion. I would have felt like I missed out if I had skipped it and you liked the pan. I prefer one standard cast iron skillet for cooking breakfast, rather than having a "set" of skillets of various sizes. A lot of what I have learned about cooking has come from your channel. I had watched many cooking shows in the past and, unfortunately, most of the TV cooking shows represent people showing off how many ingredients they can use or how sophisticated they can be. It is good to see practical cooking in an impractical pan. Toasting spices or heating up a small amount of butter or fat to be used in a dish might be the only uses for such a small pan. You can use the second pan turned over as a lid for the first pan.
That breakfast muffin looked amazing with that black pudding patty ❤ I’ve often wondered what it’d be like to make and sell things like that with a little mobile stall and a griddle in the middle of a city centre, like they do in Japan; I think it’d give me great pleasure.
well the pans might not be very practical, but the dishes you made are really pretty and adorable :) maybe the mini-pans can just become cute wall decor for the kitchen once you've done the upgrades you have planned
I use mine to make an omelette from one egg, brocolli, and mushrooms. They will accommodate two eggs. For a single person, they're perfect for portion sizing as well. No way to make too much of anything LOL. Yes, they would also be cute wall decor, but I prefer kitchen items to be usable and not just dust catchers.
Genius. Skillets would look nice for "serving" (not cooking) side dishes when you do a curry for friends and family. A Balti is in fact the name of skillet used to cook the dish.
Thanks for another great video, your patience astounds me, do you do it just for us or your own entertainment ? I would hope you do things that spark joy in yourself and take us with you , the passion and enthusiasm you have for the eclectic array of topics you’re interested in is what I find fascinating about your channel and keeps me coming back for more. All the best Jules
Uncle shrimp! I absolutely love the idea of using these little pans for smaller breakfasts for the kids! You can freeze a raw egg, peel and slice it to make teeny fried eggs!
These are brilliant ideas. Thank you for your lovely content. How about doing something like a raclette? You could use your wood burner as a stove to gently melt cheeses and have them with crackers or bread and pickles, chutneys etc on a cold winters evening?
Wow, that was so absorbing. I watched it with all the relish of someone who intends to follow the recipes 😂 Seriously, though, Mike, I really appreciate your dedication to producing videos that will delight all our senses and be a compensation for ‘real life’, if we happen to be housebound. (Which I am) The little skillets have made a wonderful little memory for us all. And I’m really looking forward to whatever you do with your kitchen, because I know you won’t just throw away everything and put in a generic grey and stainless steel kitchen! I honestly don’t know how you’ve found time to continue with the videos while you’ve been moving, but a big thank you to you and the wonderful Jenny for keeping us all company while you persevere with settling in to ‘New Shrimp Cottage’. Thanks a billion 🎉
I thought those were quirkily brilliant ideas. They made me hungry. I've only had a full English breakfast one time, in 1986 in Harrogate, when I splurged on a nice room at a bed and breakfast. Seeing this took me right back there. I enjoyed that memory! The only thing I don't remember ever tasting is brown sauce. Where I live it gets unGodly hot. There's no air conditioning here, and we cook on well used inherited cast iron skillets. In Summer there are always times I've had to heat up even a small skillet for something small, and would rather have used a mini,. At the moment I just can't think of what small quantity of stuff I would be needing it for, besides toasting sesame seeds or spices. It'll come to me the next time I wish I didn't have to heat up a whole iron skillet.
Educational, as always. Especially the disambiguation 😅 Honestly, it really looks good, and now I'm really peckish. As does the muffin! I learned the egg in a basket method when camping in Australia. It's the only way to make a nice brekkie on the barbie. The gas fired ones you find everywhere slope towards a central hole to dispose of fat and residue.
My suggestion is to use these pans for cooking at the table, like a raclette grill. You need a grill on the table of course, together with a wide choice of ingredients (cheese, cooked meats, raw veg etc). Then you pick and choose what you want as a combo and cook it through. Once on the plate, you set yourself up another one, and eat the first one while the second one is cooking. Overall this is probably more fun with at least four of these pans. Oh, and next time, make some tea in a flask! keep up the good work!
Lovely breakfast ideas there, but I know how I would use that mini-pan… I’d just use it to fry my eggs which I like to do on a small, clean pan while all the other items go on my large pan in order of cooking time. Then everything is ready (and hot) all at once and I’ve just enough time to make my tea while my eggs are frying! I have to have a clean pan for fried eggs and in a small one they keep their shape beautifully! 😋
Those seem ideal for making some spiced oil that you can add to other things! Useful for stuff like chili ramen, indian lemon rice, or a dahl. Just toast up the spices in some oil and then add it to the larger pot of whatever you’re making
I got about the same sized skillet and use it a lot when camping in the minivan on my own. Fits nicely on the small gas stove I have. It has two hobs, and this pan is small enough to allow a pot to cook next to it at the same time. It also doesn't take up much space when stashed away. I only need to bake one thing in it at a time (one sausage, one steak, one burger, ...), so it's perfectly sized for that.
My dad has a set of 3 pans exactly like you described, about that size, but much deeper. They're meant for doing single servings of stuff and serving it in the pan. He also has a couple that are the same but square for when you want to serve something in a tiny skillet, but are tired of circles.
At the outset I just knew the fun would end at the idea, but it's still sort of fun to express a fun idea, no? Incidentally, I just did a custard and pudding tasting video on my channel and cited the standard Atomic Shrimp pudding disambiguation slide! 😂
I would be happy with any three of those meals of course. Fried and breakfast together just fills me with joy, fond memories of my mom making them, my dad attempting to make them, popping into a workmans cafe with my uncle while labouring, making them in a student house to excess after a heavy night on the sesh, traveling the world and indulging in hotel versions, and more recently cycling between a few cafes every weekend. If there was a meal I had to eat for the rest of my life, it would be fried breakfast.
My American friends point out that having beans is a weird addition to breakfast, the more I think about it the more think they have a point. I think this should turn into a series, looking at breakfast around the world.
Thank you for this inspiration and recipe. I have been very enjoying to try and making new recipes and this one is really amazing. The way you present it also has some unique and artistic approaches. So tank you for taking the time to create a video for us to watch and get inspired. All the best to you :)
That full English breakfast was very funny to watch! I also appreciate the bean recipe as I don't have the family recipe and I wanted to find something really simple, can't get much simpler than yours.
4:26 love how the salt content of the stock cube is always so thoroughly emphasized. Someone is all too fed up with the barrage of comments asking "what, no salt??"
You could try having a pancake battle! English pancake Vs Crepe Vs American buttermilk pancakes! Would be enjoyable seeing if you can do the traditional flip in those tiny pans
I got a 4-pack of these some years ago which came with a cookie dough mix. I later made my own dough and had issues with the cookies spreading over the edges during the baking process. You could try the same thing while being careful as to how much dough you put in the pan to allow for spreading.
We have one of those! It's great for frying up a single egg. I also like mine for putting a buffer between my cheapo ibrik and my burner to keep the Turkish coffee from boiling/burning.
I feel vindicated that frying bread in bacon fat is an actual thing. My friends and family act like I'm insane for frying bread in the fat after I make bacon.
Hi AtomicShrimp, I just watched your video and was struck by the peaceful and relaxing atmosphere you created in the kitchen despite the terrible weather outside that we're having. The sound of the howling wind infact only added to the cozy and inviting vibe of the video. Your passion for cooking and attention to detail shone through and made the video a joy to watch. Thank you for sharing your talent with us and I hope to see more of your videos in the future, from Martin Tucker
besides toasting spices/nuts/seeds, or using it for toasting a single muffin/little bit of bread/flatbread, i think you'll get the most use out of those tiny pans by using them around the wood stove. keeping things warm by the fire much like you did with drying mushrooms or when you're trying to cook things in the fire. unlike a ceramic plate, it's not gonna degrade with heat, and there's a handle for moving it when it's hot. oh! you can also use it for warming a small thing when you've got other things in the oven!
Hi Kitchen Shrimp! This is so weird, I just watched Post10’s latest video on his second channel - New England Wildlife and More - where he cooks breakfast on a miniature stove using teeny-tiny cast iron pans. What are the odds of watching two tiny breakfast videos in one day?! Ps. Post10 is also one my favourite UA-camrs. Here is said video: ua-cam.com/video/sb0M4jvRbUo/v-deo.html
i occasionally do a small hash brown quiche for one in mine, ill use a frozen hash brown patty, allow it to thaw, and ill press it into the hot pan, and blind bake it to get it brown and crispy, and then season up 2 eggs, or just one if im padding it with milk/fillings like meat/cheese, pour it in and bake till its done, instead of it taking like an hour to bake, this only takes a few minutes.
Damn. Checked in on the channel for the first time since the scammer boom and now you’re at almost a million subs. Congrats man you deserve it. The message of your channel should be do what makes you happy and let your curiosity run wild because that’s what I’ve learned from you :)
I got the same little pan for Christmas I'm in the USA. While the little pan is getting hot I put an English muffin in the toaster. then I cook an egg with the little pan it's the perfect size for an egg. I put a slice of cheddar cheese on the egg then slap that on the English muffin with a little bit of strawberry jam. The little pain is so easy to clean . I usually just wipe it off with a damp towel. I really like the little pan.
The pans might not have been a success, but as someone who is currently working on portion control it was neat to see these smaller versions of the food! The shakshuka in particular looked very good and something I may try if I ever get a pan of similar size. Thank you Mr Shrimp!
This is one of those channels I often forget I'm subscribed to for months on end, and then I happen upon another video of yours and find myself spending hours and hours rewatching your content. I love videos like these every bit as much as the scambaiting, too -- sometimes even more!
Sandwich is a great idea - here in Ireland we put a full Irish into a baguette and call it a breakfast roll. Pudding, sausage, and rashers are of course going to be there, but some opt for eggs, beans, hash browns, mushrooms, et al. Absolutely delicious.
Main reason I bought one of those mini pans was camping trips on my bike. These are really nice on a little portable gas cartridge.. cooker..thingy (whatever those are called in english), but also work on a small open fire, if you can safely make one wherever you are. And it's much less risky than a mini teflon coated pan which could easily get too hot (toxic) or have the coating physically damaged and bits of it end up in your food
That little pan may not have been fun for you to cook in, but I had great fun watching you give it a try. Thanks for the video. I'm not sure why little versions of big things are so much fun but I love that little pan.
First sight I thought making sauces, or popping on a lone brownie or cookie in to reheat. A local pizza place would offer to do this in their oven when you bought a dessert. So tasty. What I’d end up doing, I think, is onigirazu. I got full nori sheets but found I’m crap at folding gimbap as I’d planned to do. I’m better at the OG ones which end up building a stack of ingredients a little bigger around than your palm.
Very entertaining, as always. Have you considered making tiny crepes? Or perhaps making a pair of individual pizzas, or servings of Coquille St. Jacques? Maybe two small baked bries? Your breakfasts remind me of one one trip to England back in 1990. I spent two weeks at a conference at a university in the North where I had my first and only experience with a full English breakfast, and while a university cafeteria is probably not the best place to judge a nation’s food, I had Wheatabix for the rest of my visit. I also encountered a delicious buffet of Scotch eggs, pork pie, and other traditional treats on a river trip one evening. A friend of mine from another school looked up thoughtfully from his plate while we were happily munching away and remarked, “You know, if they had cholesterol in this country I’d be very worried…” Stay healthy. - mike
Don't know if you've seen in Lidl they sell mini frying pans bought one the other day for a fiver. It has much higher edges and is absolutely perfect for 2 eggs for a sandwich.
Aldi occaisionally sell even tinier non stick frying pans for frying a single egg...Maybe the skillet would do for that if you just wanted one fried egg in a sandwich or similar...that's the only use I can think off. My daughter bought herself the Aldi pan to take to uni so she can have a fried egg " buttie " as we say up north - for her breakfast.
Thank you, that was so much fun to watch. Even though the idea was the best part for you the entire video was good for us. I was getting hungry watching you. I'm going to make a breakfast later and I'll take inspiration from this.
I'm so glad I was eating my dinner while watching this video. It all looked delicious? I wonder if making tiny crepes in the pan would work. Or, if you've got a fire extinguisher handy, crepe suzette.
Really, I should've expected this: when I saw the thumbnail I thought 'of course, we all knew this was going to happen eventually', but I was genuinely not thinking ahead of the game enough to expect three breakfasts in one video! Superb!
I think this would work wonderfully as a little mini two egg ham and cheese omelette pan. You could even use the other pan upside down on top of it to help cook it through.
yorkshire puddings benefit a ripping hot baking vessel, so oven heating the cast iron would be ideal- with the added depth of the pudding rising around the edges, could be a nice way to serve a meat stew like a mini portioned roast dinner.
After the first part i thought "ok next video tomorrow... nope. it was just the second part!AND THERE WAS ATHIRD PART! other creators would have made a mini series out of it, andd you just made good proper content out of it. love it! and full english breakfast too
Like Marcel Duchamp and the Dadaists, I find high art in the repurposing of the mundane and the everyday. And that includes cute little novelty-items like these tiny cast-iron pans which were clearly meant for some kind of cookie-presentation.
Brilliant. UA-cam cook, Barry Lewis, used to make miniscule meals, that had to fit on doll's crockery. He also, with a mate of his, used to create vast versions of things, too. A fun watch.
I guess it'd be perfect for making a single hamburger patty. I also have a tiny skillet that I use to fry garlic and red pepper flakes in, and I then I transfer the contents into a pot of pasta just shy of al dente with cheap kraft parmesan from the plastic shaker can (the real stuff doesn't emulsify) and reserved pasta water. I stir it over a medium heat until it's emulsified and top with whatever I have in the kitchen.
The last version you made with the tomato and eggs in the pan closely resembles Menemen, a turkish breakfast i love to eat, it is very much the turkish equivalent to shakshuka, but a little differently spiced, the eggs are half scrambled into the sauce, and it is usually a it spicy (using red chilli peppers, i recommend fresh ones). You should try cooking it! Its simple but very satisfying, eat it with some Pide-bread or Acma instead of a Spoon or Fork, and a side of Fasulye (white beans in a buttery tomato sauce)!
What is this? A breakfast for ants??
Thanks ants.
Thants
No, its just a really, really good looking breakfast.
This channel is hereby rechristened 'The Atomic Shrimp Channel For Kids (and Adults) Who Can't Cook Good And Who Wanna Learn To Do Other Stuff Good Too'.
@@vegancam you win the internet today!
A breakfast for shrimps? With atoms in all the elements.
"Luv, are you playing with your food again?"
Presumably Mrs Atomic Shrimp
Mr. Shrimp's dedication to the mini little cast iron skillet is unparalleled.
Lol
It was fun!
Next time we need a giant breakfast in a giant pan. The universe demands balance.
That sandwich looked phenomenal
Breakfast butty mate. There is no food like it for satisfaction value. I am currently on a diet and all I want in the world is a massive sausage bacon, mushroom and egg butty with loads of HP on it.
But no, this vegetable soup with no bread is just as good...😒
Huh...went looking for opinions about white pudding being classed as part of an English Breakfast, did not expect to see hit sensation @theslowmoguys just randomly popping up in the comments. I guess once British always British, go'ed lads!
@@bensmith1689 search the carnivore diet - eat as much as u want
@@anajaz9459 well yeah, until climate change kill you
@@bensmith1689 The breakfast butty is much healthier mate! if you're trying to loose weight just focus on minimizing sugar + fat meals.
On our second date, my partner brought me a tiny cast iron pan. He'd gone to a vintage/antique shop the day before with the goal of finding "a small thing that shouldn't be so small". He gave me an even smaller one this Christmas, several years later. We watch your videos together every weekend, and the introduction of your tiny pan(s!) was such a delight. 🌈
Thanks for the videos, Mr. Shrimp!
@@chaoticneutral6288 that's one we've been meaning to watch!
Those little pans are great for blueberry pancakes
There are deeper mini-skillets sold for campfire cooking, since smaller = lighter. These shallow skillets were designed specifically for baking, where there isn't much stirring or sloshing Dessert is probably going to remain your best bet. Individual apple crumbles with ice cream scooped with a melon-baller would be cute as heck, and dessert is the course most likely to be cute. Then again, mini-pizzas...
I actually do all my cooking in a smallish saucepan, frying included. It works really well.
Any relation to Gobfrey Shrdlu?
@@henryblunt8503 Must have seen the same linotype!
@@etaoinshrdlu927 I may have seen one on a school trip to our local newspaper print works in the sixties, but I think Gobfrey Shrdlu was the invention of writer Denys Parsons, who wrote books of misprints. Sadly even the Guardian is almost Shrdlu-free these days.
Mini Pizza's!! 🙌
This kind of content makes insomnia so much easier to pass the time with. I was hoping you'd do this meal when I first saw that original pan, honestly.
Same maybe not cook it, but serve it in the mini pans
get a few sticks of valerian, cook it into water for a few minutes and drink. Half hour later your insomnia is gone man
@Lucius DeBeers try it out before complaining, together with some 50 push ups, i guarantee you sleep. Especially works good if you turn out the phone an hour before sleep
@Lucius DeBeers have you ever tried out
the way you went out of your way to pick small food items is so cute. it's like the culinary equivalent of building a doll's house.
I worked in a mine in remote outback Australia for a while, and every morning at 4am it was 'Heavy Industrial' Size Full English Breakfast with every ingredient imaginable and a big strong coffee.
It was the best Full English Breakfast I have had anywhere, ever. That mess hall really looked after us.
and that's how I got fat.
a good mess hall is as good as any memory worth holdin on to
You was supposed to work hard and burn the calories
Sounds like when I joined the Army in the US. The food was heaven! And that's how I went from underweight to the low end of normal weight.
@@alexcarter8807and then they gave you the vomlette MRE and you went back to not eating that day 😂
You could try Menemen. It's a Turkish dish that's is basically scrambled eggs with tomatoes, peppers and onions. The seasoning is quite simple and often includes a dash of herbs and a touch of heat from some chopped chili. I sometimes use chopped sun-dried tomatoes for stronger flavour, though that's not traditional.
In a Turkish breakfast you often get served several small portions of different dishes cooked in little skillets - eggs and pastrami, Suçuk Yumurta, Menemen, Çilbir,Turkish poached eggs and yogurt with paprika butter.
That sounds very close to the Basque dish “piperade” -which is delicious.
Your description of the "full English" sandwich being messy is exactly right. That was a creation during my university days, and was simply referred to as"fancy a big messy?"
Thats why a baguette is better than sliced bread :D
A big messy was considered something very different for me... 😏
the trick is to get a nice, well-risen roll and gut the bread from the middle, giving you a concave crusty container to cram with calorific comestibles .
I think the optional ones are the black/white pudding, tea and potatoes ( I have never seen potatoes in an English breakfast before.)
@KingMushroomBoy That's because 'hash browns' are available, frozen, to the catering trade. Using last night's leftover boiled potatoes, in lumps rather than slices, are lovely crisped in bacon fat! Fried bread is traditional, but I prefer slices of floppy bread to mop up the juices from tomatoes, beans, eggs, etc.😋
I have four of these pans (a bargain bin lot a few years ago with the same muffin mix you had). I use them most weeks to fry eggs. A little bit of olive oil in the bottom, heat to a low/medium heat, then crack the eggs in. The trick is to let the whites settle a little before plonking the yolk dead centre. Perfect fried eggs and a perfect shape every time!
I used to have a small skillet (maybe 15cm) bought specially for me to fry eggs, when I was a teen. I could do a pair of eggs in it. I have no idea where it is now, lost in one of my parents movings?
I have a lovely little one-egg pan. It's useful in it's place.
My elderly mother has a sweet little one-egg frying pan that she uses whenever she wants a hot breakfast, as she doesn't really eat much meat these days and the pan is light and cleans up so easily.
I'm not much of a cook myself so maybe you have your reasons but I'll personally never fry an egg in olive oil as it adds a bitter flavour that I don't care for at all. Butter all the way or sunflower oil at a pinch.
@@demonstructie I never used to, but I was in Barcelona, and they were frying eggs in olive oil, and it tasted amazing. They said it was to do with the quality of the oil, so I brought some back and the difference is night and day. I had tried in the past with olive oil, and had the same result as you.
I love this so much, I think as part of the whole this really emphasises the spirit of creativity and fun that's emblematic of the channel
"Sometimes he goes looking for fossils, sometimes he makes a miniature full English breakfast, and a while back he reviewed some phones"
Another point of disambiguation... or rather, the opposite: I've always been fascinated by what you made and called "eggy in a basket." An egg fried inside of a hole made in bread has a huge number of different names that all refer to it (in the US at least), including:
- Bird's eye (what I call it)
- Egg in [a/the] basket (most similar to what you called it)
- Toad in [a/the] hole (interestingly also the same as the dish you mentioned in an earlier video of sausages cooked in batter)
- Egg in [a/the] hole
- Eggs in a nest
- Bullseye eggs
- Gasthaus eggs (meaning "bed and breakfast" or "inn" eggs)
- Gashouse eggs (probably a mutation of the previous one)
- Hole in one
- Eyeball toast (which I heard for the first time from someone else in these comments!)
Among many more versions of "[someone's] eye" or "[someone famous who made it] eggs". Apparently Roald Dahl was also very fond of these and called them "hothouse eggs."
I suppose the opposite of disambiguation would be "ambiguation", making more ambiguous.
As soon as you said you were making a full English sandwich I was instantly transported to my university days, when we were given brunch on Sundays at the canteen of my catered halls, and I used to take about half of my cooked breakfast and make it into a sandwich using two pieces of toast. Half brown always went on a corner, bacon on the rest of the surface sausage halved lengthways so it wouldn't roll around black pudding up a little and to the opposite corner from the hash brown, making a nice enclosed area for a few beans and some mushrooms, then egg on top of all that, and a load of whichever sauce took my fancy. Never a clean thing to eat but toast over bread offered some stability. It's been nearly 8 years but I can still remember the wonderful eating experience like I'd just newly had one.
'This sandwich is too tall to take a proper bite out of'
Then takes a bite for the history books, neatly cleaving each layer of the sandwich.
😂I thought the exact same!
Eggy in the Basket. Love how many different names one dish can have. Where I'm from its referred to as Eyeball Toast. Figured I'd share that as I find it thrilling to learn all the different names for foods!
I call it toad in the hole.
We call it "A fried egg cooked inside a hole cut in a piece of bread". Rolls off the tongue I think you'll agree.
@@dexterfitben you're no fun :
Egg in a hole for me
Just "egg in bread" here.
I love Shrimp's cooking videos. They're just so wholesome. My food tastes are quite different from Mike's but his way of speaking and presenting things just makes me happy
My roommate bought me one of these tiny pans from a secondhand shop some time ago as a novelty. I mentioned if it was deeper, it might actually be useful... and this last Christmas she surprised me with a much better scaled version, deeper. It actually works pretty well! Although you still have the issue of scaling things down to fit it, but it's neat that I can actually use it if I want.
As one who loves a full English breakfast but has an appetite too small to accommodate, that pan looked absolutely perfect. Finally, one I could enjoy without becoming stuffed halfway in. 😍
In the US, and I LOVE black pudding.
My dad said he hated it growing up, and his mom made "blood pudding" it all the time. Being from the US, I always imagined it like a red congealed mass of custard-like pudding, kinda like ketchup made of blood...
Later in life once I experienced what it actually was... I wish I could find it easily over here.
Only know of one restaurant in my entire city that serves it, with a single breakfast item only on weekends, and don't ever see it in stores. 😢
sounds like you gotta learn to make your own then! haha
Even Aldi sell it here, But farm shop versions are best.
Due to US food laws, I don't believe black pudding can be imported into the US. Haggis can't be either. You'd have to find a producer over there or make your own, which I think might be difficult.
maybe ask the resturant where they get it from?
@@ricos1497 It's not difficult at all, I make my countrys version of it quite often.
Hello Atomic Shrimp 👋🏻 I was wondering if you’ve ever tried dumpster diving? I know you do lots of foraging & budget shopping challenges, thought it could be a neat idea for a video! It’s legal & some of the things found are astonishing! Thanks for the cool content 💫
Hello Mr. Shrimp. I am enjoying your tiny pan journey. I used to have a real tiny cast iron with higher sides that I could fry 2 eggs in perfectly. We had a major flood and it was lost.
In America we have an item called a pie iron that makes lovely toasted sandwiches. It is like 2 small skillets hinged together with very long handles so they can be held over a campfire, or your kitchen stove. A piece of buttered bread goes in, butter side down. Then an egg or sliced sausage or cheese, or all three.
Another slice of buttered bread on top, then the pie iron is clamped shut. It is heated until the bread is golden brown. Instead, the bread could have sweet items sandwiched inside.
So I thought maybe you could use your 2 little pans like a makeshift pie iron. You would put the buttered bread and fillings in the bottom pan, cover with the top piece of bread, and then the top pan. Once the bottom bread seems toasted, grab the handles together very tightly with your oven mit and flip them together.
Does that sound reasonable? I hope that made sense.
I would love to try “tarte tatin” where you caramelise apples and cover with a pastry topping, then bake in the oven.
It’s full sized version is amazing with ice cream. :-)
Better still with crème chantilly to offset the sweetness of the tarte Tatin.
I think that's an amazing suggestion!
More tiny pan cooking videos please!
Mini roast dinner 🤣
I think we're all here because we want to see whatever Shrimp gets up to. I would hate him to feel obligated to continue doing something he's not into purely because a request is frequent. Can't we just let him go about his business as usual rather than bellowing demands from the comment section?
@@DeliciousChives On the one hand, I agree with you. On the other, tiny dishes are just so adorable! And I liked seeing his creativity in making things little.
Mini food limited budget challenge 😋🙃😮💨
@@kingmushroomboy824 great idea!
Your voice is so soothing and your videos are a class of their own !
I use tiny pans for just doing a full sized egg that keep a round shape. Handy for toasting sesame seeds needed for a garnish, when other pans are in use too.
Love the tiny dishes and full english sandwich. I've started making okonomiyaki (japanese pancake) as a savoury muffin, so you can have all the flavours on the go.
I was thinking the same thing. Those pans would make the perfect sized fried egg to use on an English muffin for a fried egg sandwich!
Nothing is more satisfying than a perfectly round fried egg from a tiny saucepan
Now thinking of martial art okonomiyaki-making from Ranma 1/2...
There’s a restaurant in the US called BJ’s Brewhouse that has a dessert called a Pizookie (I think it’s a made up word combo of pizza cookie). It’s a freshly baked cookie with a scoop of ice cream, and the mini version is baked in a similar pan to your mini cast iron. Choices are red velvet, chocolate chip, cookies and cream, peanut butter, strawberry shortcake, monkey bread, salted caramel, brownie.
Your comments about the very small pan are why I didn't buy the American version at a deep discount. I'm actually glad you came to the same conclusion. I would have felt like I missed out if I had skipped it and you liked the pan. I prefer one standard cast iron skillet for cooking breakfast, rather than having a "set" of skillets of various sizes. A lot of what I have learned about cooking has come from your channel. I had watched many cooking shows in the past and, unfortunately, most of the TV cooking shows represent people showing off how many ingredients they can use or how sophisticated they can be. It is good to see practical cooking in an impractical pan. Toasting spices or heating up a small amount of butter or fat to be used in a dish might be the only uses for such a small pan. You can use the second pan turned over as a lid for the first pan.
That breakfast muffin looked amazing with that black pudding patty ❤ I’ve often wondered what it’d be like to make and sell things like that with a little mobile stall and a griddle in the middle of a city centre, like they do in Japan; I think it’d give me great pleasure.
well the pans might not be very practical, but the dishes you made are really pretty and adorable :) maybe the mini-pans can just become cute wall decor for the kitchen once you've done the upgrades you have planned
I use mine to make an omelette from one egg, brocolli, and mushrooms. They will accommodate two eggs. For a single person, they're perfect for portion sizing as well. No way to make too much of anything LOL. Yes, they would also be cute wall decor, but I prefer kitchen items to be usable and not just dust catchers.
Genius. Skillets would look nice for "serving" (not cooking) side dishes when you do a curry for friends and family. A Balti is in fact the name of skillet used to cook the dish.
Thanks for another great video, your patience astounds me, do you do it just for us or your own entertainment ? I would hope you do things that spark joy in yourself and take us with you , the passion and enthusiasm you have for the eclectic array of topics you’re interested in is what I find fascinating about your channel and keeps me coming back for more.
All the best Jules
I’ve got a tiny pan. Only use it to fry a single egg when I fancy one. Feels better for washing up
Thank you for explaining what a chipolata sausage is. It's what we call a "breakfast sausage" here in Canada.
Uncle shrimp! I absolutely love the idea of using these little pans for smaller breakfasts for the kids! You can freeze a raw egg, peel and slice it to make teeny fried eggs!
@StevenTuke6983, Freezing an egg is an intriguing idea. When does the shell come off, before or after freezing?
@@fredericapanon207 After, that way the egg can be sliced into small round fried eggs
@@steventuke6983 All right. Does the shell come off fairly easily when the egg is frozen? Or is some special technique needed?
These are brilliant ideas. Thank you for your lovely content. How about doing something like a raclette? You could use your wood burner as a stove to gently melt cheeses and have them with crackers or bread and pickles, chutneys etc on a cold winters evening?
Absolutely love the tiny pan. As a child, I loved cooking tiny meals over a bunsen burner. :)
Wow, that was so absorbing. I watched it with all the relish of someone who intends to follow the recipes 😂
Seriously, though, Mike, I really appreciate your dedication to producing videos that will delight all our senses and be a compensation for ‘real life’, if we happen to be housebound. (Which I am)
The little skillets have made a wonderful little memory for us all. And I’m really looking forward to whatever you do with your kitchen, because I know you won’t just throw away everything and put in a generic grey and stainless steel kitchen!
I honestly don’t know how you’ve found time to continue with the videos while you’ve been moving, but a big thank you to you and the wonderful Jenny for keeping us all company while you persevere with settling in to ‘New Shrimp Cottage’.
Thanks a billion 🎉
I thought those were quirkily brilliant ideas. They made me hungry. I've only had a full English breakfast one time, in 1986 in Harrogate, when I splurged on a nice room at a bed and breakfast. Seeing this took me right back there. I enjoyed that memory! The only thing I don't remember ever tasting is brown sauce. Where I live it gets unGodly hot. There's no air conditioning here, and we cook on well used inherited cast iron skillets. In Summer there are always times I've had to heat up even a small skillet for something small, and would rather have used a mini,. At the moment I just can't think of what small quantity of stuff I would be needing it for, besides toasting sesame seeds or spices. It'll come to me the next time I wish I didn't have to heat up a whole iron skillet.
That muffin looks amazing. Nice work. Love your channel.
Educational, as always. Especially the disambiguation 😅
Honestly, it really looks good, and now I'm really peckish. As does the muffin! I learned the egg in a basket method when camping in Australia. It's the only way to make a nice brekkie on the barbie. The gas fired ones you find everywhere slope towards a central hole to dispose of fat and residue.
This has been absolutely, the fun-est sized episode :3 Thank you for sharing your time!
Edit: that one sexy muffin! made me so hungry.
My suggestion is to use these pans for cooking at the table, like a raclette grill. You need a grill on the table of course, together with a wide choice of ingredients (cheese, cooked meats, raw veg etc). Then you pick and choose what you want as a combo and cook it through. Once on the plate, you set yourself up another one, and eat the first one while the second one is cooking. Overall this is probably more fun with at least four of these pans.
Oh, and next time, make some tea in a flask! keep up the good work!
This was fantastic and thank you for sharing this with us ❤
Lovely breakfast ideas there, but I know how I would use that mini-pan… I’d just use it to fry my eggs which I like to do on a small, clean pan while all the other items go on my large pan in order of cooking time. Then everything is ready (and hot) all at once and I’ve just enough time to make my tea while my eggs are frying! I have to have a clean pan for fried eggs and in a small one they keep their shape beautifully! 😋
Those seem ideal for making some spiced oil that you can add to other things! Useful for stuff like chili ramen, indian lemon rice, or a dahl.
Just toast up the spices in some oil and then add it to the larger pot of whatever you’re making
I got about the same sized skillet and use it a lot when camping in the minivan on my own. Fits nicely on the small gas stove I have. It has two hobs, and this pan is small enough to allow a pot to cook next to it at the same time. It also doesn't take up much space when stashed away. I only need to bake one thing in it at a time (one sausage, one steak, one burger, ...), so it's perfectly sized for that.
The Full-English muffin is a culinary masterpiece 😗👌🏻 thanks for another brilliant video Mike!
in the US we have always had a No 3 Cast Iron pan which is 6.5" across and 1.25" deep. it is much nicer than those wee things
Brown beans is the most common beans in Nigeria
Beans are awesome! But then again, so are you!
My dad has a set of 3 pans exactly like you described, about that size, but much deeper. They're meant for doing single servings of stuff and serving it in the pan. He also has a couple that are the same but square for when you want to serve something in a tiny skillet, but are tired of circles.
I was just today wondering what I could do in my tiny square skillet and now you've given me the answer - anything, once I get tired of circles :-)
At the outset I just knew the fun would end at the idea, but it's still sort of fun to express a fun idea, no? Incidentally, I just did a custard and pudding tasting video on my channel and cited the standard Atomic Shrimp pudding disambiguation slide! 😂
I would be happy with any three of those meals of course. Fried and breakfast together just fills me with joy, fond memories of my mom making them, my dad attempting to make them, popping into a workmans cafe with my uncle while labouring, making them in a student house to excess after a heavy night on the sesh, traveling the world and indulging in hotel versions, and more recently cycling between a few cafes every weekend. If there was a meal I had to eat for the rest of my life, it would be fried breakfast.
My American friends point out that having beans is a weird addition to breakfast, the more I think about it the more think they have a point. I think this should turn into a series, looking at breakfast around the world.
They go very well with bacon eggs and toast
They are confused at the idea of beans on toast, too....until they try it 🤔😍
They’re mostly used to either sweet things or plain porridge for breakfast arent they
In Canada adding beans to bacon, eggs, hash browns makes it a Cowboy Breakfast.
Thank you for this inspiration and recipe. I have been very enjoying to try and making new recipes and this one is really amazing. The way you present it also has some unique and artistic approaches. So tank you for taking the time to create a video for us to watch and get inspired. All the best to you :)
Would this be considered a half full English breakfast!! 😂
More like quarter-full English.
A mere fraction of a full breakfast XD Barely enough for a mouse lmao
That full English breakfast was very funny to watch! I also appreciate the bean recipe as I don't have the family recipe and I wanted to find something really simple, can't get much simpler than yours.
Did you see the recent Adam Ragusea video on the origin of the word pudding, really interesting.
4:26 love how the salt content of the stock cube is always so thoroughly emphasized. Someone is all too fed up with the barrage of comments asking "what, no salt??"
The salt enforcement police are a funny bunch.
@@AtomicShrimp ah yes the PC PC's
You could try having a pancake battle! English pancake Vs Crepe Vs American buttermilk pancakes! Would be enjoyable seeing if you can do the traditional flip in those tiny pans
I got a 4-pack of these some years ago which came with a cookie dough mix. I later made my own dough and had issues with the cookies spreading over the edges during the baking process. You could try the same thing while being careful as to how much dough you put in the pan to allow for spreading.
I'd love to try mushrooms someday
That's really interesting Babatunde, do you not get mushrooms in Nigeria?
We have one of those! It's great for frying up a single egg. I also like mine for putting a buffer between my cheapo ibrik and my burner to keep the Turkish coffee from boiling/burning.
I feel vindicated that frying bread in bacon fat is an actual thing. My friends and family act like I'm insane for frying bread in the fat after I make bacon.
Hi AtomicShrimp, I just watched your video and was struck by the peaceful and relaxing atmosphere you created in the kitchen despite the terrible weather outside that we're having. The sound of the howling wind infact only added to the cozy and inviting vibe of the video. Your passion for cooking and attention to detail shone through and made the video a joy to watch. Thank you for sharing your talent with us and I hope to see more of your videos in the future, from Martin Tucker
This is one of the most idiotic yet wonderful thing's you've done. Excellent!
That said I could cook a solo breakfast for myself on it. I am a light eater.
I see it as fun rather than idiotic
@@AlissaSss23 I mean idiotic in the best sense. Some of the funnest things in life are completely idiotic.
besides toasting spices/nuts/seeds, or using it for toasting a single muffin/little bit of bread/flatbread, i think you'll get the most use out of those tiny pans by using them around the wood stove. keeping things warm by the fire much like you did with drying mushrooms or when you're trying to cook things in the fire. unlike a ceramic plate, it's not gonna degrade with heat, and there's a handle for moving it when it's hot. oh! you can also use it for warming a small thing when you've got other things in the oven!
Hi Kitchen Shrimp! This is so weird, I just watched Post10’s latest video on his second channel - New England Wildlife and More - where he cooks breakfast on a miniature stove using teeny-tiny cast iron pans. What are the odds of watching two tiny breakfast videos in one day?! Ps. Post10 is also one my favourite UA-camrs. Here is said video: ua-cam.com/video/sb0M4jvRbUo/v-deo.html
This is one of my favorite videos you have ever done. Simply fascinating and enjoyable :).
i occasionally do a small hash brown quiche for one in mine, ill use a frozen hash brown patty, allow it to thaw, and ill press it into the hot pan, and blind bake it to get it brown and crispy, and then season up 2 eggs, or just one if im padding it with milk/fillings like meat/cheese, pour it in and bake till its done, instead of it taking like an hour to bake, this only takes a few minutes.
Damn. Checked in on the channel for the first time since the scammer boom and now you’re at almost a million subs. Congrats man you deserve it. The message of your channel should be do what makes you happy and let your curiosity run wild because that’s what I’ve learned from you :)
I got the same little pan for Christmas I'm in the USA. While the little pan is getting hot I put an English muffin in the toaster. then I cook an egg with the little pan it's the perfect size for an egg. I put a slice of cheddar cheese on the egg then slap that on the English muffin with a little bit of strawberry jam. The little pain is so easy to clean . I usually just wipe it off with a damp towel. I really like the little pan.
I think the video was more "fun" than the breakfast. Thank you for indulging a little silliness and making me hungry on a Sunday morning!
The pans might not have been a success, but as someone who is currently working on portion control it was neat to see these smaller versions of the food! The shakshuka in particular looked very good and something I may try if I ever get a pan of similar size. Thank you Mr Shrimp!
This is one of those channels I often forget I'm subscribed to for months on end, and then I happen upon another video of yours and find myself spending hours and hours rewatching your content. I love videos like these every bit as much as the scambaiting, too -- sometimes even more!
Sandwich is a great idea - here in Ireland we put a full Irish into a baguette and call it a breakfast roll. Pudding, sausage, and rashers are of course going to be there, but some opt for eggs, beans, hash browns, mushrooms, et al. Absolutely delicious.
Main reason I bought one of those mini pans was camping trips on my bike. These are really nice on a little portable gas cartridge.. cooker..thingy (whatever those are called in english), but also work on a small open fire, if you can safely make one wherever you are. And it's much less risky than a mini teflon coated pan which could easily get too hot (toxic) or have the coating physically damaged and bits of it end up in your food
That little pan may not have been fun for you to cook in, but I had great fun watching you give it a try. Thanks for the video. I'm not sure why little versions of big things are so much fun but I love that little pan.
First sight I thought making sauces, or popping on a lone brownie or cookie in to reheat. A local pizza place would offer to do this in their oven when you bought a dessert. So tasty.
What I’d end up doing, I think, is onigirazu. I got full nori sheets but found I’m crap at folding gimbap as I’d planned to do. I’m better at the OG ones which end up building a stack of ingredients a little bigger around than your palm.
Very entertaining, as always. Have you considered making tiny crepes? Or perhaps making a pair of individual pizzas, or servings of Coquille St. Jacques? Maybe two small baked bries?
Your breakfasts remind me of one one trip to England back in 1990. I spent two weeks at a conference at a university in the North where I had my first and only experience with a full English breakfast, and while a university cafeteria is probably not the best place to judge a nation’s food, I had Wheatabix for the rest of my visit.
I also encountered a delicious buffet of Scotch eggs, pork pie, and other traditional treats on a river trip one evening. A friend of mine from another school looked up thoughtfully from his plate while we were happily munching away and remarked, “You know, if they had cholesterol in this country I’d be very worried…”
Stay healthy.
- mike
Don't know if you've seen in Lidl they sell mini frying pans bought one the other day for a fiver. It has much higher edges and is absolutely perfect for 2 eggs for a sandwich.
Excellent. I was seriously waiting for this episode since the brownie.... I kind of thought it would be useless, but it certainly looked cool!!
Aldi occaisionally sell even tinier non stick frying pans for frying a single egg...Maybe the skillet would do for that if you just wanted one fried egg in a sandwich or similar...that's the only use I can think off. My daughter bought herself the Aldi pan to take to uni so she can have a fried egg " buttie " as we say up north - for her breakfast.
Thank you, that was so much fun to watch. Even though the idea was the best part for you the entire video was good for us. I was getting hungry watching you. I'm going to make a breakfast later and I'll take inspiration from this.
Love it Atomic Shrimp, great content. Been watching for years. Good stuff!
I'm so glad I was eating my dinner while watching this video. It all looked delicious?
I wonder if making tiny crepes in the pan would work. Or, if you've got a fire extinguisher handy, crepe suzette.
Really, I should've expected this: when I saw the thumbnail I thought 'of course, we all knew this was going to happen eventually', but I was genuinely not thinking ahead of the game enough to expect three breakfasts in one video! Superb!
I think this would work wonderfully as a little mini two egg ham and cheese omelette pan. You could even use the other pan upside down on top of it to help cook it through.
Posted just as I sat down for a morning coffee. Perfection. Thank you 🙂
yorkshire puddings benefit a ripping hot baking vessel, so oven heating the cast iron would be ideal- with the added depth of the pudding rising around the edges, could be a nice way to serve a meat stew like a mini portioned roast dinner.
After the first part i thought "ok next video tomorrow... nope. it was just the second part!AND THERE WAS ATHIRD PART!
other creators would have made a mini series out of it, andd you just made good proper content out of it. love it!
and full english breakfast too
Like Marcel Duchamp and the Dadaists, I find high art in the repurposing of the mundane and the everyday. And that includes cute little novelty-items like these tiny cast-iron pans which were clearly meant for some kind of cookie-presentation.
@4:54 and I was so looking forward to seeing how you were going to brew a cup of tea on a tiny cast iron skillet... tisk.
Brilliant. UA-cam cook, Barry Lewis, used to make miniscule meals, that had to fit on doll's crockery. He also, with a mate of his, used to create vast versions of things, too. A fun watch.
Something very cosy and nice about this video, much appreciated. Big fan for a while
I guess it'd be perfect for making a single hamburger patty. I also have a tiny skillet that I use to fry garlic and red pepper flakes in, and I then I transfer the contents into a pot of pasta just shy of al dente with cheap kraft parmesan from the plastic shaker can (the real stuff doesn't emulsify) and reserved pasta water. I stir it over a medium heat until it's emulsified and top with whatever I have in the kitchen.
Absolutely Fantastic.
Your creativity and inventive are always inspiring and Fun.
Thanks AS.
The last version you made with the tomato and eggs in the pan closely resembles Menemen, a turkish breakfast i love to eat, it is very much the turkish equivalent to shakshuka, but a little differently spiced, the eggs are half scrambled into the sauce, and it is usually a it spicy (using red chilli peppers, i recommend fresh ones).
You should try cooking it! Its simple but very satisfying, eat it with some Pide-bread or Acma instead of a Spoon or Fork, and a side of Fasulye (white beans in a buttery tomato sauce)!