Prep your spinach and tomato before you start the egg cooking process. Chop your spinach in fine pieces that can be easily sprinkled.
Cut the sides off of your tomato and removes seeds.
Cut each tomato piece into quarter inch slices.
Cut the tomatoes crosswise so that you have a small piles of quarter inch pieces.
Crack you your seven eggs into a bowl and stir well with a whisk or fork until it's a consistent yellow color. Egg whites cook at a slightly different temperature than the yokes so if it's not mixed well you'll end up with white chunks in your omelet instead of the smooth finish we're looking for.
Heat one tablespoon of butter in a twelve inch non-stick pan at medium heat. Depending on your stovetop you might even want to start at medium low. Take your time with this. We don't want the pan so hot that we get instant large curds when we add our eggs.
Once your butter just starts to bubble pour your eggs into the center of the pan.
Immediately start stirring you eggs, and scraping down the sides. It's important that you don't stop stirring. We want small curds and a smooth texture.
Once about 90% of the "wetness" is gone from your eggs, scrape down the sides one more time and use your spatula to smooth out the surface and form it into a round shape.
Add salt and pepper and sprinkle surface with feta and spinach. Take the pan off the heat and cover for one minute.
Remove lid and remaining butter to the sides of your eggs that you'll be folding from. Carefully begin to roll and fold the eggs starting from one side using your spatula to push the butter along the edge as you go.
When you're about two thirds folded stop and fold the other side over.
You should have a seam that runs down the middle. We want the seam here so that when we flip it over it's hidden and we're left with that beautifully smooth surface.
push the omelet to one side of the pan and flip it onto a plate carefully. You can shape the ends carefully for better plating if desired.
Garnish with tomatoes or anything else you'd like.
Time to enjoy! This recipe makes a good amount to be shared with someone else and presents well when cut in two.