How Legendary French Chef Jacques Pépin Makes A Perfect Omelette

    The secret ingredients are butter and charm.

    This is Jacques Pépin.

    Jacques Pépin is one of the most famous chefs in the world. He basically invented the job of TV chef, was BFFs with Julia Child, and has been cooking professionally longer than most of us have been alive.

    There is literally no one more qualified to demonstrate how to make the PERFECT OMELETTE. This one is the classic French variety, which means you'll need only eggs, butter, salt, pepper, and lots of fresh herbs.

    For the full recipe, jump to the bottom of this post.

    Unlike a "Western-style" omelette, this one will NOT be stuffed with cheese and ham, sorry.

    First, let's talk about the one tool you really need: the skillet. To make a perfect omelette, you need an 8-inch nonstick skillet. It's non-negotiable.

    1. To start, chop some herbs. Jacques uses a mix of "fines herbs," which includes chives, parsley, tarragon, and chervil.

    2. Next, crack 3 eggs into a bowl. Jacques stresses the importance of cracking them on a surface (like your counter or cutting board), rather than the edge of the bowl.

    3. Before you whisk the eggs, pierce the yolks with a fork; this makes it much easier to blend everything together.

    4. Season the eggs with salt and pepper and add the herbs. Whisk everything together super vigorously. "Don't go slowly here," Jacques says.

    5. The eggs need to be REALLY well-blended. You can tell they are REALLY well-blended when you lift the fork and then the eggs come streaming down, the yolks and whites together in sweet eggy harmony.

    6. Now it's time to cook the omelette. Like everything great in life, a perfect omelette has lots of butter.

    If you're Jacques Pépin, you might want to shave a little butter off the top and twirl it into a rose.

    7. Put the skillet over medium heat and add about 2 tablespoons of that butter. The butter should sizzle a little, but not furiously. It should melt quickly.

    8. Add the eggs to the skillet all at once, scraping out every last bit with the side of the fork.

    9. Now: Start whisking with the fork. The eggs will start to cook almost immediately, so you need to keep your fork moving AT ALL TIMES.

    10. You should also shake the skillet occasionally to help move the eggs around.

    11. After a few seconds the eggs should be mostly set, but still a little wet and custardy.

    12. REMOVE THE SKILLET FROM THE HEAT NOW!

    You want the eggs to stay creamy and you don't want them to brown on the bottom.

    13. Next, starting at the end closest to the handle, use the fork to start to rolling the omelette onto itself.

    14. OK, so now Jacques does something really next-level. In order to make the omelette perfectly fat (instead of flat), he hits the skillet handle with his palm while tilting the skillet up, so the omelette flips up onto itself, compacting it.

    15. Now, if you can't do the whole handle-flip thing, use your fork to fold the other side to meet the first side in the middle. This is a JUDGMENT-FREE ZONE.

    16. Tilt the plate to meet the skillet, so the omelette gently lands on the plate, SEAM-SIDE DOWN. (The seam is where the two edges meet.)

    17. Then go ahead and give it a little tuck-in on the edges, so it keeps its cute, tapered, torpedo shape. And see? No browning.

    18. It should still be *slightly* runny/creamy in the center, which means you might see some egg seep out, but don't be afraid, that's how it's supposed to be.

    THE PERECT OMELETTE.

    Jacques Pépin's Iconic French Omelette

    Recipe by Jacques Pépin

    Makes 1

    2 Tbsp. finely chopped chives

    1 Tbsp. finely chopped tarragon

    1 Tbsp. finely chopped parsley

    3 large eggs

    Kosher salt and pepper

    2 Tbsp. unsalted butter

    Using a fork, whisk the herbs and eggs together in a bowl until they're really (really) well-blended. This means there should be no strands of egg yolk or egg white, just homogenized egg. Season with salt and pepper.

    Heat an 8-inch nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add the butter; it should barely sizzle but melt immediately. (If the butter sizzles loudly and foams up, the skillet is too hot. Remove it from the heat for a second to let it cool down.)

    Add the eggs to the skillet, and using the flat side of the fork, immediately start whisking and stirring the eggs from the edges to the center, shaking the skillet occasionally. Do this for about 45 seconds. The eggs will start to look like a soft scramble. Once the eggs are mostly set but still look soft and slightly wet, remove the pan from the heat.

    Using the fork, start at the side closest to the handle and start rolling the omelette onto itself, like you're rolling a carpet.

    Once you're about halfway there, start rolling from the other side to meet in the middle. Because you're using a nonstick skillet, this should be pretty easy. If the egg sticks a little, add a little more butter to help it along.

    Flip the omelette onto a plate, seam-side down. If it doesn't come out in a perfect shape, NBD, just kinda tuck the sides in to keep a nice torpedo shape.

    Eat immediately!