Tomato Basil Egg Bake
Tomato basil egg bake with a simple skillet sauce, soft eggs, and herbs, useful for a fast dinner, brunch, or pantry-based meal.
This egg bake turns basic tomatoes and eggs into a warm meal with very little planning. The sauce cooks quickly, the eggs finish in the oven, and basil adds freshness right before serving.
This recipe lives in Quick Recipes and is written for home cooking, with clear steps and realistic ingredient guidance.
Why this recipe works
This recipe is written for ordinary home kitchens, with clear steps and enough context to help readers understand the timing, texture, and small decisions that shape the final result.
The goal is repeatability. Readers should be able to cook it once, learn what matters, and come back later with confidence instead of guessing their way through the process.
Quick snapshot
Ingredients
- 5 eggs
- 1 tbsp olive oil
- 1 small onion, sliced
- 2 garlic cloves, minced
- 400 g crushed tomatoes
- 1 tsp dried oregano
- 1 small handful basil
- 40 g feta or grated cheese
- pinch of chili flakes
- salt and black pepper
Method
- Heat the oven to 190 C.
- Cook onion in olive oil until soft, then add garlic and chili flakes for 30 seconds.
- Add crushed tomatoes, oregano, salt, and pepper, then simmer for 8 minutes.
- Make small wells in the sauce and crack in the eggs.
- Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, until the whites are set and the yolks are still slightly soft.
- Finish with basil and cheese before serving.
Key ingredients and adjustments
The key ingredients are the ones that give the dish structure, flavor, and rhythm. Preparing them in advance usually makes the cooking process smoother and the final texture more reliable.
If you want to adapt the recipe, change one variable at a time. That keeps it clear whether a new fat, protein, garnish, or seasoning actually improved the result.
Before you start
Read the recipe once before you start and prep the ingredients in advance so you can cook without unnecessary pauses between the important steps.
Adjust heat and seasoning gradually. In home cooking, small corrections made at the right time are usually more useful than one large correction at the end.
Success notes
The eggs keep cooking after the pan leaves the oven, so remove the bake when the centers still look slightly glossy. Serve with bread, rice, or a green salad.
Use the notes in the recipe as checkpoints, then adjust heat, liquid, or seasoning in small steps. Small corrections usually do more for the final result than one dramatic change.
Common mistakes
- Not leaving enough moisture or space for rice to expand can make the center feel tight and undercooked.
- Leaving garlic over high heat for too long can turn it bitter and shift the whole flavor profile.
- Seasoning only at the very end often leads to a dish that is technically finished but flatter than it should be.
Serving ideas
Serve the dish at the moment its texture is at its best and pair it with something simple that keeps the meal balanced. The suggested related recipes and guides are there to help readers turn one page into a fuller menu.
Storage
Cool the dish promptly, store it in a clean sealed container, and adapt the storage temperature to the main ingredients. When in doubt, chill faster and use it sooner rather than stretching the timeline.
Frequently asked questions
Can I make part of this recipe ahead of time?
Usually yes. Ingredient prep, partial cooking, or a controlled rest can often be done in advance, as long as the final texture-sensitive steps are saved for the right moment.
How do I keep the texture from going wrong?
Watch heat, moisture, and timing more closely than the clock alone. Most texture problems come from rushing, using too much dry ingredient too early, or skipping small adjustments during cooking.
How should I store leftovers?
Cool the food safely, store it in a sealed container, and reheat only what you plan to eat. The exact storage window depends on the ingredients and how the dish was handled after cooking.
Note: always check allergens and adapt the recipe to your ingredients and needs.
