The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Beyond the McMuffin

Make these breakfast sandwiches at home.

- By Daniel Neman St. Louis Post-Dispatch

When anthropolo­gists of the future look back at the last half of the 20th century, they may give credit to McDonald’s for one thing above all else: inventing the breakfast sandwich.

Searching for a way to get customers through the doors in the morning hours, someone at the fast-food giant came up with the perfect solution. They took an English muffin, placed a muffin-shaped egg on top of it along with a slice of Canadian bacon and American cheese, and in a stroke of marketing genius called it an Egg McMuffin.

I hadn’t even heard of Canadian bacon before the Egg McMuffin made it famous.

Not only did McDonald’s profits skyrocket with the new product, but that also forced its competitor­s to come up with breakfast items of their own.

And thus the breakfast sandwich became a uniquely American tradition.

But you don’t have to go through the drive-thru to get a breakfast sandwich. They are easy to make at home, and relatively fast.

Breakfast sandwiches require a bread product of some kind, an egg, a breakfast meat (or none at all, as you shall see) and a few complement­ary ingredient­s for added flavor.

The variations are endless; you are limited only by your imaginatio­n.

Unfortunat­ely, my imaginatio­n turns out to be rather limited. So I made six breakfast sandwiches, all based on familiar flavor combinatio­ns and ideas. Maybe I added a twist or two, but these recipes are meant to inspire you to create your own breakfast sandwiches.

Unless, like me, your imaginatio­n is running a little low. Then you might want to try some of these recipes, because they are all excellent. That’s what happens when you stick to familiar flavor combinatio­ns and ideas.

Perhaps the most familiar is the Sunday-morning standby, bagels and lox. It’s a straightfo­rward bagel-and-lox sandwich, with one of those twists: I added a scrambled egg.

Think of it as an Egg McLox Bagel Sandwich.

There is a trick to making it, though it is easy to master. Ordinary scrambled eggs would be too lumpy; when you pressed down on the top, they would squeeze out of the sides. The trick, then, is to make the egg flat.

It’s simple to do. Pour a beaten egg into a well-buttered, mediumhot skillet. Don’t let the egg spread too far. Cook without touching it until nearly all of the liquid on top is done. Use a spatula to fold the sides over toward the middle, and immediatel­y place this flat egg on your sandwich.

My next breakfast sandwich is an even simpler twist on an equally familiar idea: avocado toast. The twist? Bacon.

I fried a couple of strips until they were crispy, crumbled them for ease of eating and sprinkled them over a piece of multigrain toast that I had slathered with smashed fresh avocado. I added some chopped tomatoes and red onion, a healthy squeeze of lemon and lots of flaky salt and pepper.

Bacon (or sausage, which is what I used) plays a key role in my next variation too, a breakfast burrito. This southweste­rn classic is more than just bacon and eggs (or sausage and eggs) in a tortilla.

First of all, you need beans. And you also need potatoes. They add a satisfying depth to the flavor, an underlying foundation on which the other ingredient­s can be built.

Don’t forget the salsa. It provides the fresh bright top notes that play as a counterpoi­nt to the potatoes.

Next up was a simply wonderful sandwich that is more of a surprise: I made an omelet pita. Which is to say I made an omelet and placed it in a pita.

Into this pita paragon I placed what is probably my favorite omelet combinatio­n: mushroom, onion, asparagus and cheese. I loved this sandwich, which makes sense because it was, as I said, my favorite omelet. If you make your own favorite omelet, you will like it as much as I did.

Another vegetarian option was equally good. I’m calling it an Israeli Salad Sandwich, because the heart of it is an Israeli salad.

 ?? JASON GETZ/AJC FILE ?? Breakfast sandwiches require a bread product of some kind — like a bagel — an egg, a breakfast meat (or none at all, as you shall see) and a few complement­ary ingredient­s for added flavor.
JASON GETZ/AJC FILE Breakfast sandwiches require a bread product of some kind — like a bagel — an egg, a breakfast meat (or none at all, as you shall see) and a few complement­ary ingredient­s for added flavor.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Fresh avocado slathered on toast can be made better with bacon.
CONTRIBUTE­D Fresh avocado slathered on toast can be made better with bacon.
 ?? JASON GETZ/AJC FILE ?? Breakfast sandwiches require a bread product of some kind — like a bagel — an egg, a breakfast meat (or none at all, as you shall see) and a few complement­ary ingredient­s for added flavor.
JASON GETZ/AJC FILE Breakfast sandwiches require a bread product of some kind — like a bagel — an egg, a breakfast meat (or none at all, as you shall see) and a few complement­ary ingredient­s for added flavor.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Fresh avocado slathered on toast can be made better with bacon.
CONTRIBUTE­D Fresh avocado slathered on toast can be made better with bacon.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The better the pita, the better the omelet sandwich.
CONTRIBUTE­D The better the pita, the better the omelet sandwich.

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