I first tasted this dish in the mid ‘90s at Middle Eastern restaurant Fez in Darlinghurst, and it became my go-to breakfast dish. Years later I discovered that it’s the long slow cooking that gives hamin eggs their creamy texture and brown onion skins that add the beautiful colour. Find an obliging greengrocer to save the onion skins for you (you could cook a dozen eggs with 20-30g of skins). In Israel these eggs are called haminados as they’re cooked over the Shabbat stew (chamin) and I gather that’s where the name comes from. Hamin eggs are popular throughout the wider Middle East however, including Tunisia where tea leaves or coffee grounds are also used to colour them. They’re best eaten warm, spread onto bread and also make a delicious topping for ful medames (see video below); I love a glass of Persian saffron tea with them.
Serves 6 as a starter or breakfast
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