Discover the Secret to Perfect Egg Frying: Why Leek and Olive Oil Are Game Changers!
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Fried eggs are a go-to in Korean home cooking. Pop one on your morning bowl of rice and you’ll feel satisfied, or tuck it into ramen or fried rice for an instant upgrade. It’s so easy to make that it shows up on the menu for solo diners and family meals alike.
These days, social media and home-cooking forums are obsessed with a simple trick that elevates flavor far beyond frying in plain oil. It’s the scallion fried-egg method, which uses olive oil and chopped scallions to build deep, savory notes.

Sautéing the scallions first amps up the scallion-oil aroma
The buzziest idea in recent home-cooking threads is scallion oil. Heat a splash of olive oil in the pan, then sauté chopped scallions until they release a fragrant, slightly sweet, toasty scent. That scent naturally infuses the oil and becomes the backbone of the dish.
When you crack the eggs into that flavored oil, the result tastes nothing like a plain fried egg. People compare the aroma to restaurant-style fried rice and say it adds a rich umami punch even without meat.

Many also say olive oil keeps the dish feeling lighter
Most people default to neutral cooking oil for fried eggs. But more home cooks are reaching for olive oil these days.
Its distinctive aroma and silky flavor pair beautifully with scallions. Because it leaves a cleaner finish, it’s often recommended as a bright, breakfast-friendly twist.

Salt and pepper alone can do a surprisingly good job of balancing the flavor
Part of this method’s appeal is how low-effort the seasoning is. With the scallion oil doing the heavy lifting, a light sprinkle of salt and pepper is often all you need.
A final grind of pepper especially makes the egg’s nutty notes and the scallion-infused oil pop. Many say a once-basic fried egg suddenly tastes like a restaurant side dish.

People say it’s versatile—from a rice topper to toast
The scallion fried egg isn’t just for rice. Home cooks put it on toast, fold it into rice bowls, or use it as a quick brunch pick.
Just a drop of soy sauce stirred in makes for a simple, satisfying meal. Others turn it into a kid-friendly side or a no-fuss brunch staple.

Scallion fried-egg recipes have actually gone viral in Korea
Recipe communities and social media in Korea have repeatedly buzzed about scallion-oil fried eggs. In one case, a home-cooking YouTuber shared a “restaurant-style fried egg” trick using scallions and olive oil, and the clip racked up huge views.
Comments included: “The aroma really is different,” “One egg can top two bowls of rice,” and “One scallion makes it taste like it came from a restaurant.” It shows how a tiny ingredient swap can transform a familiar home dish into something unexpectedly delicious—and why these tweaks keep catching on.











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