forgive me if this is redundant... try a little some chili (with beans only) and some shredded cheese. yum!
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Plenty of flavor in the tomato.
. I live with my fiance and he dont like me wasting the yolk. Many people are against eating the yolk because that part has all the fat and calories and cholestreol. But in the country, with nothing but beans and taters, you have to eat the yolk with your eggs to meet satisifactory levels of daily calories to live. To get adequate nutrition. And Bantams, a breed/type of chicken I don't have, but want, and hopefully will get soon, make smaller eggs and then you use twice as many eggs to make the same looking omlette, and it should taste the same. I plan on both breeding chickens and eating some of their non-bloody eggs. I even had ducks before, but they ran away to a pond (all females died when they did that and I had 5 males, now one male still swims in their with one of their females, I used my same pan I use for 3 chicken eggs, but used 3 duck eggs and it worked well, tasted richer for it has more of the yolk.)
Some eggs I cracked had a little blood in them, a few times I still ate but it tasted funny so I vow I wont do that again, but it's a waste of egg and a life, but I can't candle yet at my home. I'm working on it. 
simple, simple, simple. this is MY no fail omelette way:
1 ziploc sandwich sized or bigger bag
1 or more eggs
cheese
vegetables as desired
Step 1. Crack egg(s) into ziploc bag. Mix around until the consistency of scrambled eggs.
Step 2. Put in cheese and vegetable toppings if desired, mix around a little bit.
Step 3. Put bag into a pot of boiling water and let sit for around 12-13 minutes.
Step 4. Roll omelette out of bag. Perfecto!
I learned this recipe from my friend's grandparent. It works every time and is really fun to make!