Spherified Green Eggs and Ham

Give me spherified peas, I will eat them on my knees, in a cloud of angry bees.

By
Linda Miller Nicholson

Linda Miller Nicholson is an internationally-recognized pasta powerhouse who has been featured on The Today Show, O Magazine, The New Yorker, Saveur, Good Housekeeping, Buzzfeed, Elle, the BBC, and Business Insider, and more. She is the author of the cookbook, Pasta, Pretty Please

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Updated May 02, 2023
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Why It Works

  • The eggs are not really eggs at all, but are made from peas.
  • Sourdough slices are I coated them in maple syrup, egg, and cream and fried in the style of French toast.

Spherification has historically been the gateway drug for many an aspiring at-home modernist cook. It's got Wow factor. I mean, you're turning liquid into a semi-solid spherical state for goodness sakes, and it's edible. It's also not too hard to get your hands on the necessary chemicals, which are naturally-occurring and plant-derivative.

If you're not familiar with the term, "spherification" is essentially the process by which an edible liquid is shaped into a sphere. The end result can vary in size, from the smallest of caviar-like pearls to a golf ball-shaped raviolone. There are two types of spherification: standard and reverse.

These differ because in standard spherification, the liquid to be spherified is mixed with sodium alginate and cured in a bath of calcium chloride, whereas in reverse, calcium chloride is mixed with the liquid and it is cured in a bath of alginate. It is ideal to spherify liquids which have a pH between four and seven, however the addition of a third chemical, sodium citrate, can help regulate pH to make other liquids viable for spherification.

Certain juices lend themselves to spherification better than others and I've found this is not only a result of ideal pH, but also flavor. While the chemical additives that cause the reaction are virtually flavorless, there are still trace elements, so stronger-flavored juices tend to mask that faint, briny and metallic taste.

"Not only is it an homage to Dr. Seuss, it's also an ideal appetizer to serve to skeptical guests."

Good candidates for first-time spherifiers are pea juice, apricot puree, or liquefied blueberries. I'm going to share a recipe using standard spherification of pea puree along with the complete recipe for Green Eggs and Ham. Not only is it an homage to Dr. Seuss, it's also an ideal appetizer to serve to skeptical guests who may be reticent to embrace modernist trends because it incorporates ham and bread, both ultimate comfort foods in their own right.

If you are so inclined to try the recipe, pay careful attention to the amount of time you leave the spheres in the bath of calcium chloride. The longer you leave the spheres, the more solid they will become. While increased solidity is good for stability of the spheres, it has the unfortunate side effect of rendering their texture gummy and tough. The advanced practitioner of spherification will realize that there is a sweet spot of leaving the spheres in the bath for just long enough that an outer membrane forms which is stable enough to hold the juice in without becoming overly solid. On the same note, the longer the spheres sit out, the more solid they become. It is ideal to spherify a la minute so as not to experience unpleasantly-tough spheres.

Green eggs and ham is shockingly easy to make, easy on the eyes, and easy on the ol' pocketbook as well. I guess you could say green eggs and ham is just plain easy, but I wouldn't want you to mix it up with my cousin Suzy, so I'll stop just this side of Texas on that one. It comes together lickety split and the great part is wowing your guests with your mad science skillz in the kitchen.

You see, the eggs are not really eggs at all, but are made from peas. How Seussian! Give me spherified peas, I will eat them on my knees, in a cloud of angry bees. (Alright, I'm done lapsing into Seuss-speak, please forgive me.)

But bright green science spheres alone do not an appetizer make, so we've got to pair, and pair well. Peas are good with prosciutto, and prosciutto is ham, so there you have it. Green eggs and ham. But it's gotta be served on something otherwise it would be a goopy, pea-stained scientific mess. If you're so inclined, roll out with your boule out in the kitchen and get down with your bad, breadmaking self, but if not, any good quality bread you'd turn into French toast will do.

Sourdough slices fresh from my oven served as the perfect shingles for my spheres, but not before I coated them in maple syrup, egg, and cream then fried them to French perfection. Did I mention that I added some sweet and sour shallots to these bundles of brilliance? Yeah, it was a good call.

November 2011

Recipe Details

Spherified Green Eggs and Ham Recipe

Active 30 mins
Total 30 mins
Serves 8 servings
Cook Mode (Keep screen awake)

Ingredients

  • 300 grams frozen peas
  • 12 mint leaves
  • 375 grams water
  • 2.4 grams sodium alginate
  • 6.5 grams calcium chloride
  • 1 liter purified water
  • 4 slices bread, each cut into two triangles
  • 1 egg
  • 3 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 3 tablespoons heavy cream
  • 2 large slices of prosciutto cut into 8 smaller pieces
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 1 shallot, thinly sliced
  • 1 teaspoon sherry vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon dark brown sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

Directions

  1. For the spheres: put the peas and mint in a blender. Boil 375 grams of water and pour over peas. Blend until smooth. Pass through a mesh strainer, discard the solids, and measure out 500 grams of the remaining juice. Put one third of it in an immersion blender container and add the sodium alginate. Blend well, add remaining juice, and blend again. Let sit in fridge while you make the calcium chloride water bath. Add calcium chloride to liter of water in a shallow glass container. Stir with a fork until dissolved. In a separate shallow container, add an equivalent amount of cold water (for rinsing). Using measuring spoons of whatever size you want your spheres to be, spoon pea juice into calcium chloride bath in little spherical blobs. Using a slotted spoon, gently nudge the spheres around in the water. After two minutes, remove the pea spheres to the cold water. (You will have enough pea juice to make way more than eight spheres- roll with it. It’s fun.)

  2. For the toast: Mix the syrup, egg and cream until fully incorporated. Dredge the bread triangles in the mixture and pan fry in a nonstick skillet over medium heat on both sides until browned.

  3. For the shallots: while the toast is browning, caramelize the shallot in a small saucepan over low heat in the butter. After five minutes, add the remaining shallot ingredients and stir occasionally until browned and very soft, about 15 minutes.

  4. Assemble the green eggs and ham by arranging the toast triangles on a platter, placing a prosciutto square on them, a small dollop of caramelized shallot, and finally, very carefully, using a slotted spoon, top with the spherified peas. The peas are delicate, and don't last long, so make them just before you plan to serve them.

Special Equipment

slotted spoon, sodium alginate, calcium chloride, blender, grams scale

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