A Summer Sunday Brunch from the Farmers' Market
By Wolfgang Puck, Tribune Media Services

Going to the local farmers' market with my children is one of my favorite 
things to do on a Sunday morning, especially in the early days of summer, which
begins this Sunday. With springtime's harvest still providing its own treats 
and warm-season produce beginning to fill the stalls, there are so many 
wonderful
things to see, cook and eat.

One organic farmer I know always has beautiful tomatoes, onions and fresh 
herbs. Another offers baby mesclun, the classic French mixture of all kinds of
little salad greens. I always stop to chat with the "egg lady," as we call her, 
who has delicious fresh organic eggs as well as organic goat cheese.

You can probably see what those purchases add up to: brunch! And since I find 
that farmers' markets are always best to visit in the morning, before big
crowds fill the aisles and before all the most beautiful produce at their peak 
of ripeness has been sold, that's the perfect meal to cook when we get home.

Unlike my sons, I didn't grow up eating brunch. In Austria, the big Sunday 
institution was lunch, our biggest meal of the week. When the weather was cool,
the main dish was usually boiled beef or roast pork, while warmer weather 
usually featured fried chicken or Wiener schnitzel -- the classic Vienna-style
cutlets, usually pork rather than veal. They were delicious but after a meal 
like that, you really didn't feel like doing much else for the rest of the
day!

That's one of the reasons I loved brunch the first time I encountered it in the 
U.S. three and a half decades ago. Lighter than lunch but more robust than
breakfast, it's the perfect meal for enjoying the weekend, whether you're 
entertaining friends or just relaxing with your family. And my brunch purchases
from the farmers' market repeatedly prove to me one of the most important keys 
to good cooking: If you start with great ingredients, it is really easy
to prepare a great meal.

Scrambled eggs, wonderfully rich but mild in flavor, are a perfect background 
for the vivid taste of quickly sauteed fresh tomatoes. I like to cook the
eggs in more of a European style than some Americans are used to, continuously 
stirring them over low heat so they form soft, creamy curds. Melting some
fresh goat cheese into the eggs adds still more flavor.

The results are simple and spectacular. All you need to complete the meal are, 
maybe, a few strips of applewood-smoked bacon and some freshly toasted rustic
bread -- both of which, of course, you can also pick up at the farmers' market 
along with those other great ingredients.

SCRAMBLED EGGS WITH TOMATOES AND GOAT CHEESE

Serves 6

Water

6 medium tomatoes, peeled, seeded, diced, and drained

1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil

1 garlic clove, minced

1 small yellow onion, finely chopped

12 large eggs, preferably organic

Salt

Freshly ground black pepper

2 tablespoons unsalted butter

3 tablespoons heavy cream

6 ounces fresh creamy goat cheese, crumbled

4 tablespoons finely shredded fresh basil leaves

Bring a saucepan of water to a boil. Fill a mixing bowl with ice and water and 
set it on the counter nearby. Meanwhile, with a small, sharp knife, core
the tomatoes and, on their undersides, cut a shallow X in their skins. With a 
wire skimmer or slotted spoon, carefully lower the tomatoes into the boiling
water and boil just until their skins begin to wrinkle, about 30 seconds. 
Immediately remove them with the skimmer or spoon and transfer to the ice water
to cool.

Starting at the X, peel the skins from the tomatoes, using your fingertips or, 
if necessary, the knife. Cut the tomatoes horizontally in half and use a
finger or the handle of a teaspoon to scoop out and discard their watery seeds. 
Cut the tomatoes into 1/2-inch dice.

In a saute pan, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the garlic and onion 
and saute until they just start to turn golden, about 3 minutes. Add the diced
tomatoes, reduce the heat slightly, and cook, stirring frequently, until they 
form a thick but still juicy sauce, 7 to 10 minutes.

Meanwhile, prepare the scrambled eggs. Break the eggs into a large mixing bowl. 
Season lightly with salt and pepper and whisk until smooth.

In a heavy saute pan over medium-low heat, melt the butter. Add the eggs and 
cook, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon, until creamy and slightly 
thickened,
3 to 5 minutes. Stir in the cream and all but about 4 tablespoons of the 
crumbled goat cheese. Remove the pan from the heat while continuing to stir 
constantly.
The heat in the pan will melt the cheese and continue to cook the eggs, which 
should be creamy with very soft curds.

Season the tomato mixture to taste with salt and pepper and stir in half of the 
basil. Spoon all but about 4 tablespoons of the tomato mixture onto 6 heated
serving plates, spreading it evenly into circles that cover most of the plates. 
Mound the eggs on top, leaving a rim of tomato around them. Top the eggs
with the remaining tomato sauce, sprinkle with the remaining goat cheese and 
scatter the remaining basil on top. Serve immediately.


"God, grant me the serenity to accept the people I cannot change
the courage to change the person I can
and the wisdom to know I am that person."
~Sylvia

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