Edit: (Slice of bread with a hole cut in the middle and an egg fried in it.) I have always called them daddy-o eggs but I have recently been informed that is incorrect.-
Edit: (Slice of bread with a hole cut in the middle and an egg fried in it.) I have always called them daddy-o eggs but I have recently been informed that is incorrect.-
Toad-in-the-hole! Maybe. We only ever had them like once, scrambled eggs were far more common.
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Southeast US
Not GP, but I’ve always called this Toad in the hole. Western USA.
“Toad-in-the-hole” sounds British to me.
Edit: @fluke@lemmy.world said “toad-in-the-hole” refers to something else, some other breakfast food.
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Sausage in Yorkshire pudding! Unless that’s called bread in the US in which case we are several layers deep into this word inception.
It’s bloody delicious too.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/toadinthehole_3354
(Just say batter, the word “pudding” will make their heads explode.)
It’s batter pre-cook, pudding post-cook, and yes you’re damn right it’s bloody delicious.
Then what is a pancake? Same batter, but different cooking method.
Exactly! Fried instead of baked.
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AFAIA, The pudding part is because pudding referred to meat dishes long before it was used for sweet dishes, and yorkshire pudding used to be exclusively served with meat - which is likely tightly linked to the original meaning of toad in the hole!
New Jersey.
Vancouver checking in
Ontario Canada. Toad in the hole/egg in the hole. Piggy in a blanket is a sausage wrapped in a pancake.
Toad in the hole. Australia
I’m in Australia, we call this one with an egg “toad in a hole”, I’ve never seen the one with a sausage.
South Georgian here, we also call it this.
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