^ ab“Talk of the Town”, The New Yorker, (December 19, 1942)Notes:This hasn't been verified at the source, but is instead taken from the letter to Karpf by Cutts Benedict and the page of J.J. Schnebel.
^Rombauer, Irma S.; Marion Rombauer Becker (1995) [1975]. “Egg Dishes”. The Joy of Cooking. Illustrated by Ginnie Hofmann and Ikki Matsumoto (1st Scribner Edition 1995 ed.). New York, NY: Scribner. pp. 222. ISBN0-02-604570-2Notes:Title of recipe is poached eggs Blackstone. Uses fried slice of flour dipped tomato, minced bacon, poached eggs, and hollandaise. No bread for base.
^“The Heritage House - Menu”. 2006年5月1日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年2月26日閲覧。 “Eggs Blackstone, poached eggs served with house made English muffin, apple smoked bacon, tomatoes and hollandaise.” Notes:Located in Mendocino, California.
^“Rulloff's - Sunday Brunch Menu”. 2005年11月9日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年2月26日閲覧。 “Eggs Blackstone poached eggs over crispy bacon and thin sliced tomatoes on a toasted english muffin, with hollandaise sauce” Notes:Located in Ithaca, New York.
^“Rich mix of patrons makes Moto's special”, The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution: pp. A/6, (December 18, 1986) “eggs Florentine ($3.95), eggs poached and topped with Hollandaise sauce, served on spinach and English muffin” Notes:Not directly verified. Viewed through Google News Archive snippet view.
^“Good Stuff Hermosa Beach - Menu”. Good Stuff Restaurants. 2006年4月18日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年3月8日閲覧。 “Eggs Florentine The same good stuff as the benedict, only with fresh spinach instead of ham” Notes:Located in Hermosa Beach, California.
^“The Buff Restaurant - Menu”. The Buff Restaurant. 2006年4月20日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年3月8日閲覧。 “EGGS FLORENTINE - SPINACH, CREAM CHEESE, TOMATO, AND MUSHROOMS TOPPED WITH HOLLANDAISE ON A MUFFIN” Notes:Located in Boulder, Colorado.
^ abDeMers, John (1998). Food of New Orleans: Authentic Recipes from the Big Easy. Food photography by John Hay (1st ed. ed.). Boston: Periplus Editions. pp. 44. ISBN9625932275
^“Recipes - Eggs Hussarde”. Brennan's Restaurant. 2006年2月6日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年2月26日閲覧。 Notes:Located in New Orleans, Louisiana.
^“Brunch & Lunch Menu”. Mara's Homemade Restaurant. 2006年1月7日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年2月26日閲覧。 “Eggs Hussarde Toasted English muffin, Canadian bacon, Marchand de Vin sauce, poached eggs and Mara’s Homemade hollandaise sauce” Notes:Located in New York, New York.
^Guste, Roy (2005). “Eggs and Omelettes”. Antoine's Restaurant Cookbook. New Orleans, Louisiana: Guste Publishing. pp. 88. ISBN978-0976592402. "This dish was created by Antoine on the occasion of a dinner he hosted for the French Playwright Victorien Sardou."Notes:Antoine Alciatore left the U.S. in 1874 so that he could die and be buried in France. If the quote be true and the recipe unchanged since inception, eggs Sardou predates eggs Benedict by a good twenty years. First reference returned by a search of the NYT archive for eggs-Sardou/oeufs-Sardou occurs in 1960. First reference returned by a search of Google Books occurs in 1927. First reference returned by a search of the Google News Archive occurs in 1958.
^“Sunday "Jazz" Brunch Menu”. Antoine's Restaurant. 2006年4月22日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年3月9日閲覧。 “Oeufs Sardou $17.25 Poached eggs over steamed artichoke bottoms with Hollandaise Sauce” Notes:Located in New Orleans, Louisiana. Page viewed differs from archived page in URL and price, but the description was unchanged.
^Claiborne, Craig; Franey, Pierre (November 3, 1985), “EGGS SARDOU”, The New York Times: pp. Section 6, p. 87, http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0D1FFC3F5C0C708CDDA80994DD484D81&showabstract=1 “It consists of poached eggs served in artichoke bottoms crossed with anchovy fillets. The eggs are then served with a bit of hollandaise sauce spooned on top, along with a garnish of truffles and/or finely chopped ham. Some recipes call for creamed spinach as a base on which to place the artichokes; a nice idea, but not, I believe, a part of the original.”
^“Brunch Menu”. Louisiana Express Company. 2006年5月4日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年3月9日閲覧。 “Poached Eggs ‘Sardou’ Two poached eggs on artichoke bottoms, creamed spinach, sauce hollandaise” Notes:Located in Bethesda, Maryland.
^“Artichoke Recipes”. California Artichoke Advisory Board. 2006年5月23日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年2月28日閲覧。
^California Artichoke Advisory Board (1998). “Brunch, Lunch and Dinner, Too”. The California Artichoke Cookbook. edited and compiled by Mary Comfort, Noreen Griffee, Charlene Walker. Berkeley, California: Celestial Arts. pp. 70. ISBN0890878552
^“Recipes”. Custom Culinary. 2007年2月28日閲覧。 Notes:Archive.org doesn't have a copy of the page. The recipe is a near copy of the one provided by the California Artichoke Advisory Board, but scaled up by a factor of twelve and substitutes the company's hollandaise sauce base.
^“All-Star Southern Breakfasts”, The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution: pp. M/10, (February 16, 1986) "There is Country Benedict, which is two fried eggs with country sausage on biscuits topped with hollandaise sauce." Notes:This was viewed through a Google News Archive keyhole, rather than directly verified with its source.
^“Courtyard Cafe Menu”. The Orleans Hotel and Casino. 2005年12月23日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年2月27日閲覧。 “Country Benedict Buttermilk biscuit and sausage patty, topped with poached eggs and country gravy” Notes:Located in Las Vegas, Nevada. Archived page doesn't match current one. The archived menu item is "Country Biscuit Benedict" and the description is slightly different.
^“Breakfast Menu”. The Big Biscuit Restaurant. 2006年4月30日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年2月27日閲覧。 “Country Benedict scrambled eggs on a biscuit and sausage patty covered with sausage gravy, served with potatoes” Notes:Both Big Biscuit restaurants are located in Missouri.
^Townsend, Elisabeth (July 24, 2005), “Dining Out”, The Boston Globe “Irish Benedict ($7.50): two poached Eggs and corned beef hash on an English muffin covered with hollandaise sauce” Notes:Not directly verified. Viewed through Google News Archive snippet view.
^“Breakfast Menu”. The Field Irish Pub. 2007年3月30日閲覧。 “Toasted muffin topped with Irish bacon & poached eggs finished with Hollandaise sauce.” Notes:Located in San Diego, California.
^“Breakfast Menu”. Strafford Farms Restaurant. 2006年5月12日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2007年3月30日閲覧。 “IRISH BENEDICT 3.95 two poached eggs on an English muffin with corn beef hash topped with a hollandaise sauce” Notes:Located in Dover, New Hampshire.
^Meyer, Adolphe (1898). Eggs, and how to use them. New York: Published by Author. pp. 43Notes:This reference hasn't been directly verified, but instead comes by way of the online edition of the Oxford English Dictionary, accessed February 19, 2007. There were multiple printings of Meyer's book; the Cornell University library catalog lists one copy they have as published by Caterer Publishing, 3rd edition. Many cookbooks are modified when reprinted, some adding recipes. It is possible that the OED references a reprint and that the recipe isn't in the original.
^Felch, William Farrand; Atwell, George C.; Arms, H. Phelps et al., eds. (1900), “Unknown article title”, The Connecticut Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly (The Connecticut Magazine Co.) VI: 204Notes:This reference hasn't been directly verified, but was accessed through the snippet view of Google Books' digitized copy.
^Rorer, Sarah Tyson (c1907). Many Ways for Cooking Eggs. Philadelphia: Arnold & Company. pp. 46. http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64292007年2月19日閲覧。Notes:This is a troublesome reference in that the date and page reference comes from an online OED reference, accessed February 19, 2007. The Project Gutenberg copy of the book does contain a recipe for eggs Benedict, but doesn't list which printing was the source for their copy. Rorer's book had its first printing in 1907, a second in 1912 — both by Arnold and Company — and third by Kessinger Publishing in 2004.
^“Advertisement for Haill Hayden's Hollandaise”, The New York Times: pp. 24, (October 26, 1938)
^Ranhofer, Charles (2004). The Epicurean Part Two. Whitefish, Montana: Kessinger Publishing. pp. 858. ISBN1432625497. "Eggs à la Benedick — Cut some muffins in halves crosswise, … Cover the whole with Hollandaise sauce (No. 591)."
“Was He the Eggman?” An account in The New York Times about Lemuel Benedict and the efforts of Jack Benedict, the son of Lemuel's first cousin, to promote Lemuel's story. Article includes link to an audio slide show.(英語)