Olive oil can make fried eggs healthier and taste better

  • Olive oil contains plenty of antioxidants and produces fewer harmful aldehydes
  • It has a low smoke point and heats up quickly in the pan
  • This means whites are crispy but the yolk is still runny in the middle 

With about seven grams of protein, eggs are one of the healthiest ways to start your day – unless you fry them in too much oil, that is.

But changing the type of oil you use to cook this breakfast staple could make them a lot healthier, and even taste better too.

Using olive oil instead of vegetable or sunflower oils could ensure you have the perfect runny yolk every time, and also provide you with essential antioxidants.

Olive oil could be the best oil to use to fry with as it heats up quickly meaning you’ll get crispy whites but a runny yolk

Is this the best way to make fried eggs?

1. Start with room temperature eggs. Heat up olive oil in a pan for 30 seconds.

2. Crack eggs into oil. Watch carefully until the whites are crispy but the yolk is still runny. 

Studies had previously suggests that using vegetable oils to fry food may be bad for your health due to the production of toxic chemicals called aldehydes during the heating process.  

But though olive oil is classed as a vegetable oil, research has shown that heating monounsaturated olive oil creates fewer aldehydes than other vegetable oils.

It can also help to create the perfect fried egg as olive oil has a low smoke point, and heats up much more quickly, according to Brit+Co.

Olive oil has plenty of health benefits as it contains lots of antioxidants 

Olive oil has plenty of health benefits as it contains lots of antioxidants 

The egg will become crispy more quickly, while leaving the yolk perfectly runny in the middle – making it the ideal oil choice. 

However some people avoid using olive oil as the oil has a savoury flavour that can absorb into the eggs.

But Bri+Co experts state that the mellow taste of olive oil can actually be the perfect canvas for other flavours if you are having it as part of a larger breakfast.

Butter often leaves a salty and creamy taste behind but the lighter taste of olive oil will make your breakfast less rich and healthier for you, it’s said. 



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