As a celebration of Julia Child, I decided to make a Thai rolled omelet!
I was recently asked to participate in JC100, a national campaign involving restaurants, chefs, bookstores, and bloggers, all celebrating Julia Child and her legacy. Each week from May 7th through August 15th (Julia’s 100th birthday), we’ll receive a recipe of Julia’s to cook (or adapt) and share. I couldn’t wait to participate. After all, Julia has been one of my culinary idols ever since I spied her on my parents’ grainy television screen three decades ago.
She fascinated me: A towering, warbly-voiced, grandmotherly figure who could quickly and casually whip up dishes that I’d never seen before in my mother’s Chinese kitchen. Julia was so relaxed in the kitchen – dropping food and picking it up, tasting dishes-in-progress with her fingers, adding butter when in doubt. She was so real (something I can’t say about most television chefs these days), and made even the most difficult recipes look effortless and goofily fun.
Julia inspires me to lighten up (not literally – fat rules!), chill out, and have a blast in the kitchen – regardless of the results. It’s just food, and if you make it with love, it’ll turn out wonderfully.
The inaugural JC100 recipe is Omelette Roulée or rolled omelet from Julia’s classic “Mastering the Art of French Cooking.” Because I’ve been crushing on Thai omelets (Kai Jeow) as of late, I thought this was a perfect opportunity to combine Julia’s omelet technique and my own Asian pantry ingredients – and ghee instead of butter to make it perfectly Whole30®-friendly. Win-win!
Time to make a Thai-style rolled omelet!
Serves 1
Ingredients:
- 2 large pastured eggs
- ½ teaspoon Red Boat Fish Sauce
-
1 tablespoon chopped cilantro
- 1 tablespoon chopped scallions
- ⅛ of a lime
- 1 tablespoon ghee
Here’s what to do:
Grab a couple of pastured eggs…
…and crack ‘em in a bowl.
Then, measure out the fish sauce…
…and add it to your eggs.
Chop the cilantro…
…scallions…
…and lime wedge. Look! There’s your mise en place!
Puncture the yolks with a pair of chopsticks (or a plain old fork if you’re not down with the Asian theme)…
…before whisking the eggs and fish sauce thoroughly.
Add the herbs…
…squeeze the juice from the lime wedge…
….and mix until blended.
Heat the ghee in a seasoned 8-inch cast iron skillet over high heat.
Swirl it around to cover the sides of the pan, and add the eggs.
Let the eggs sit undisturbed for a few seconds…
…and then start jerking the pan back towards you at a 20 degree angle so the omelet begins to roll over itself at the bottom of the pan.
Once it’s mostly cooked through, grab a plate…
…and tip the omelet out of the pan.
Garnish with additional cilantro and scallions, and dig in!
Thank you, Julia!
Looking for more recipe ideas? Head on over to my Recipe Index. You’ll also find exclusive recipes on my iPhone and iPad app, and in my cookbooks, Nom Nom Paleo: Food for Humans (Andrews McMeel Publishing 2013), Ready or Not! (Andrews McMeel Publishing 2017), and Nom Nom Paleo: Let’s Go! (Andrews McMeel Publishing 2021).
Julia Child's Rolled Omelet Thai-Style

Ingredients
- 2 large eggs
- ½ tsp Red Boat fish sauce
- 1 tbsp chopped cilantro
- 1 tbsp chopped scallions
- ⅛ lime
- 1 tbsp ghee
Instructions
- Grab your eggs and crack them in a bowl.
- Measure out your fish sauce and add it to the bowl with the eggs.
- Chop up your cilantro, scallions, and lime. Then, puncture the egg yolks (I like to use chopsticks!) and whisk to mix the eggs and fish sauce.
- Add the cilantro, scallions, and lime juice to the bowl with the whisked eggs. Mix again until blended.
- Heat the ghee in a seasoned 8-inch cast iron skillet over high heat. Swirl it around to cover the sides of the pan, and add the eggs.
- Let the eggs sit undisturbed for a few seconds and then start jerking the pan back towards you at a 20 degree angle so the omelet begins to roll over itself at the bottom of the pan.
- Once it’s mostly cooked through, grab a plate and tip the omelet out of the pan. Garnish with additional cilantro and scallions, and dig in!
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Very delicious. My initial thought it may need salt but no salt needed. I followed the instructions, I enjoyed the simplicity of the recipe and the combination of fish sauce and lime. Thank you.
This is my new favorite way to make eggs! I try to follow a paleo diet, but I actually don’t like meat. So I eat a fair amount of eggs. This is now my go-to! Thanks for amazing recipe.