Kev’s Daily Egg: Episode 1 — The Motherboard Benedict

Kev’s Daily Egg

Episode 1: The Motherboard Benedict

Inspired by the golden age of PC building — when you’d sit cross-legged on the floor, tweezers in hand, carefully routing ribbon cables through a beige tower while a single floppy disk held your entire world — this dish treats eggs the way a 1995 sysadmin treated components: with reverence, precision, and a bit of fear that if you touch anything wrong, the whole system crashes.

The Components

The Motherboard (Sourdough Base)

  • 2 thick slices of sourdough, toasted until golden and rigid — this is your PCB, and it must hold everything
  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, spread hot, to create a moisture barrier layer between board and components

The RAM Modules (Smoked Bacon)

  • 4 rashers back bacon, fried until crispy-edged but still pliable — your volatile memory, fast and full of character
  • Seasoned with smoked paprika and a pinch of cayenne (the overclocking spice)

The CPU Cores (Poached Eggs)

  • 4 eggs — dual-core on each board for maximum throughput
  • Poached in vinegar-splashed water at exactly 80°C — the thermal sweet spot
  • The whites should be set but tender; the yolks runny like a clock speed that’s been pushed just past spec

The Cooling Solution (Hollandaise)

  • 3 egg yolks
  • 150g unsalted butter, clarified and warm (not hot — we’re not running liquid nitrogen here)
  • 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar reduction
  • Grated lemon zest, sea salt, white pepper
  • A whisper of Sriracha — the performance boost no one asked for but everyone loves
  • Whisk until the emulsion is glossy and pours like liquid gold. If it splits, you’ve overheated. Start again.

The RGB Lighting (Garnish)

  • Micro chives and chive blossoms — the equivalent of RGB fans on a budget
  • A dusting of everything bagel seasoning across the top
  • One crack of freshly ground black pepper at the table, served tableside for dramatic effect

Assembly Instructions

  1. Boot the motherboard: Lay each slice of sourdough flat. Butter-side up, place two rashers of bacon across each slice in a criss-cross — your data bus traces.
  2. Install the CPU: Gently poach your eggs using a spider strainer. Lower them into the water with a gentle spiral motion — same as installing a socketed CPU: firm but don’t force it. Poach for exactly 3 minutes and 45 seconds. Any less and the whites are unbound; any more and you’ve lost the clock cycle on that yolk.
  3. Mount the cores: Lift each egg and place two per board. The yolks should sit proud and wobbly — like a heatsink that’s doing its job but asking for more airflow.
  4. Apply the cooling solution: Spoon the hollandaise generously over everything. It should cascade over the bacon, pool around the eggs, and glisten. This is not a time to be economical. The motherboard must be submerged in luxury.
  5. RGB it up: Scatter the chives, everything seasoning, and serve immediately while the system is still warm.

Serving Suggestions

  • Sidecar: A proper pint of craft IPA — the hops cut through the richness like a good defrag cuts through a cluttered C: drive.
  • Peripheral: A side of hash browns, pressed in a ring mould for uniformity. Stack them like a hard drive tower.
  • Background process: A pot of strong filter coffee running all morning on the stove. Don’t let it burn — that’s just like forgetting to close a running script at 2am.

Run time: 25 minutes. Difficulty: Overclocking your first PC. Success rate: 95%, unless you split the hollandaise and forget why.