My friend Sarah invited me to brunch at this waterfront place last spring, and when her crab cake eggs benedict arrived at the table, I couldn't stop staring. Two golden crab cake eggs benedict sitting on toasted English muffins, topped with eggs that oozed when she cut into them, all covered in this rich, buttery hollandaise sauce. She took one bite, closed her eyes, and said "This is why I drive 30 minutes for brunch here." I grabbed her arm: "You have to show me how to make this."

Why You'll Love This Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
Back serving this to family, friends, and Daniel's skeptical teenage cousins, I know exactly why it works. The crab cakes stay crispy on the outside even under all that sauce - took me four tries to figure out Sarah's trick for that. Daniel loves helping form the crab cakes, even though he picks out half the crab meat to eat while we cook. And here's the thing nobody tells you: you can make th crab cake eggs benedict the night before, which turns this from a stressful morning into something you actually enjoy making.
This crab cake eggs benedict takes about an hour if you're making everything from scratch, or 30 minutes if you prep the crab cakes ahead. The ingredients aren't cheap - good lump crab meat costs money - but it's still way less than paying $28 per person at a restaurant. You can make two servings or scale up for a crowd. I've done both, and the recipe holds up either way.
Jump to:
- Why You'll Love This Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
- Ingredients for Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
- How To Make Crab Cake Eggs Benedict Step By Step
- Smart Swaps for Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
- crab cake eggs benedict or Variations
- Equipment foe crab cake eggs benedict
- Storing Your Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
- Top Tip
- FAQ
- Time to Impress at Brunch!
- Related
- Pairing
- crab cake eggs benedict
Ingredients for Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
For the Crab Cakes:
- Lump crab meat
- Panko breadcrumbs
- Mayonnaise
- Dijon mustard
- Worcestershire sauce
- Old Bay seasoning
- Fresh parsley
- Lemon juice
- Egg
- Salt and black pepper
For the Poached Eggs:
- Fresh eggs
- White vinegar
- Salt

For the Hollandaise Sauce:
- Egg yolks
- Fresh lemon juice
- Unsalted butter
- Cayenne pepper
- Salt
For Assembly:
- Extra Old Bay for sprinkling
- English muffins
- Butter for toasting
- Fresh chives or parsley for garnish
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Crab Cake Eggs Benedict Step By Step
Make the Crab Cakes First:
- Pick through crab meat gently to remove any shell pieces
- Mix panko, mayo, Dijon, Worcestershire, Old Bay, parsley, and lemon juice in bowl
- Add egg and mix until just combined
- Fold in crab meat gently - don't break up the lumps too much
- Form into 4-6 patties about 1 inch thick
- Refrigerate 30 minutes to help them hold together
Cook the Crab Cakes:
- Heat butter and oil in large skillet over medium heat
- Place crab cakes in pan without crowding
- Cook 4-5 minutes per side until golden brown
- Don't flip too early or they'll fall apart
- Transfer to paper towels and keep warm

Prepare the Hollandaise:
- Melt butter in small pot until hot but not smoking
- Blend egg yolks and lemon juice in blender for 30 seconds
- With blender running, slowly drizzle in hot melted butter
- Blend until thick and creamy
- Season with cayenne and salt
- Keep warm in bowl over warm water
Poach the Eggs:
- Fill large saucepan with 3 inches of water and add splash of vinegar
- Bring to gentle simmer - not a rolling boil
- Crack each egg into small bowl first
- Swirl water gently and slide egg into center
- Cook 3-4 minutes until whites are set but yolks still runny
- Remove with slotted spoon and drain on paper towel
Assemble Your Benedict:
- Serve immediately while everything's hot
- Toast English muffin halves in butter until golden
- Place one crab cake on each muffin half
- Top with poached egg
- Spoon hollandaise sauce generously over egg
- Sprinkle with Old Bay and fresh herbs
Smart Swaps for Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
I've tested these when supplies ran low or budgets got tight:
Crab Meat Options:
- Lump crab → Jumbo lump (more expensive but worth it)
- Fresh crab → Pasteurized refrigerated crab
- All crab → Half crab, half shrimp (budget-friendly)
- Real crab → Skip imitation - it just doesn't work
Breadcrumb Choices:
- Panko → Regular breadcrumbs (less crispy)
- Store-bought → Homemade from stale bread
- Plain → Seasoned breadcrumbs (reduce Old Bay)
Hollandaise Alternatives:
- Homemade → Store-bought (in a pinch)
- Butter → Clarified butter (more stable)
- Lemon juice → White wine vinegar
- Traditional → Blender method (easier)
English Muffin Swaps:
- Regular → Sourdough English muffins
- White → Whole wheat
- Muffins → Toasted bread slices
- Standard → Croissants (fancy version)
Egg Substitutes:
- Fresh → Don't use old eggs for poaching
- Poached → Fried eggs (easier but not traditional)
Chicken eggs → Duck eggs (richer yolks)
crab cake eggs benedict or Variations
Lobster Benedict Luxury:
- Replace crab cakes with chunks of cooked lobster tail
- Use same hollandaise but add touch of tarragon
- Creates an even more indulgent brunch experience
- Perfect for anniversaries or really special occasions when you want to splurge
Shrimp and Crab Combo:
- Mix chopped cooked shrimp into the crab cake mixture
- Reduces cost while keeping great seafood flavor
- The shrimp adds sweetness that complements the crab
- Great option when lump crab meat prices are too high
Spicy Cajun Style:
- Add extra cayenne and paprika to crab cake mixture
- Mix hot sauce into the hollandaise for kick
- Top with pickled jalapeños before serving
- Sarah makes this version for her husband who loves heat
Chesapeake Bay Classic:
- Double the Old Bay seasoning in the crab cakes
- Add touch of dry mustard to hollandaise
- Garnish with extra Old Bay and lemon wedges
- Tastes like you're eating on the Maryland waterfront
Avocado Benedict Twist:
- Add sliced avocado on top of the crab cake before the egg
- Use lime juice instead of lemon in hollandaise
- Sprinkle with cilantro instead of parsley
- Daniel surprisingly loves this version even though he usually hates avocado
Equipment foe crab cake eggs benedict
- Large skillet for crab cakes
- Medium saucepan for poaching eggs
- Blender or whisk for hollandaise
- Slotted spoon
- Paper towels
- Small bowls for cracking eggs
Storing Your Crab Cake Eggs Benedict
Based on Sarah's advice and my own mistakes, here's what works:
Best Fresh: This dish is meant to be eaten right away. Hot crab cakes, runny eggs, warm hollandaise - that's the whole point. Don't try to make it ahead and reheat everything.
What You Can Prep Ahead:
- Form crab cakes the night before and refrigerate
- Make hollandaise up to 2 hours ahead, keep warm over hot water
- Toast English muffins and keep wrapped in foil
- Poach eggs last minute - no way around this
Leftover Crab Cakes (2 days):
- Store in airtight container in fridge
- Reheat in oven at 350°F for 10 minutes
- Don't microwave - they'll get rubbery
- Eat plain or make into crab cake sandwiches
Leftover Hollandaise:
- Doesn't store well - it splits when reheated
- Use within 2 hours of making
- Keep warm, don't refrigerate and reheat
- If it breaks, toss it and make fresh
What Doesn't Work:
- Don't assemble and then try to keep warm
- Don't freeze crab cakes - texture gets weird
- Don't try to reheat poached eggs
- Don't make hollandaise more than 2 hours ahead
Top Tip
- Remember how I said Sarah walked me through this recipe? Well, she left something out. After I'd been making this crab cake eggs benedict for about two months, I went to another brunch at her place. Her crab cake eggs benedict tasted different - richer, better. The hollandaise had this depth I couldn't figure out. I cornered her in the kitchen.
- She laughed and finally told me her real trick. While the recipe calls for mayo in th crab cake eggs benedict , she mixes half mayo and half crème fraîche. "The tang cuts through the richness," she explained. "Regular mayo makes them heavy." That little swap changed everything.
- Daniel and I have our own addition too. We started adding a tiny pinch of smoked paprika to the hollandaise along with the cayenne. Just enough to give it a subtle smoky flavor that works with the crab. Sarah tried ours last month and texted me later: "The smoked paprika thing works. Don't tell my neighbor I said that."
FAQ
What does a crab cake eggs benedict contain?
Crab cake eggs benedict consists of toasted English muffins topped with pan-fried crab cakes, poached eggs, and hollandaise sauce. The crab cakes are made with lump crab cake eggs benedict meat, breadcrumbs, mayo, and Old Bay seasoning. It's a coastal twist on traditional eggs benedict that replaces Canadian bacon with seafood.
What is the secret to a good crab cake?
The secret is using quality lump crab meat and not overworking it. Sarah taught me to fold the crab gently into the binding mixture so the lumps stay intact. Also, refrigerating the formed cakes for 30 minutes before cooking helps them hold together in the pan without falling apart.
How do you keep poached eggs from falling apart?
Use the freshest eggs possible and add a splash of vinegar to the poaching water. Crack each egg into a small bowl first, then gently slide it into simmering (not boiling) water. Don't overcrowd the pan, and cook for 3-4 minutes until whites are set but yolks stay runny.
Can you make hollandaise sauce ahead of time?
Hollandaise is best made fresh, but you can make it up to 2 hours ahead and keep it warm over a bowl of hot water. Don't refrigerate and reheat - it will split and break. If it does break, you'll need to start over with fresh egg yolks.
Time to Impress at Brunch!
Now you have all the secrets to making restaurant-quality crab cake eggs benedict at home - from Sarah's crème fraîche trick to our smoked paprika addition, and that timing thing that makes or breaks this dish. This recipe proves that fancy brunch dishes aren't just for expensive restaurants. With good ingredients, careful technique, and a little practice, you can make the kind of meal that has people canceling their restaurant reservations.
Looking for more recipes that make your friends ask for details? Our Easy Garlic Butter Bacon Cheeseburger Rollups take comfort food and make it company-worthy - great for game day or casual dinners when you want something fun. Craving dessert that looks harder than it is? Try our Best Boston Cream Pie Cupcakes that deliver all the flavors of the classic without the fussy cake assembly. Or switch things up with The Best Philly Cheese Steak Tortellini that combines two beloved classics into one creamy, satisfying pasta dish the whole family will eat!
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crab cake eggs benedict
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Combine breadcrumbs, seasonings, and crab meat gently to form the base.
- Shape into patties and refrigerate for 30 minutes to firm up.
- Pan-fry crab cakes until golden brown and crispy on both sides.
- Blend egg yolks, lemon juice, and butter into a creamy sauce.
- Gently poach eggs until whites are set and yolks remain runny.













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