How do YOU make hard boiled eggs???
LeanerBeef
Posts: 1,432 Member
in Recipes
File this under the Dumb Question of the Day but yes, how do you make hard boiled eggs?
I know put it in a water, boil for 2 to 3 minutes. Done. Yes, I’ve accomplished that. However…..I’ve noticed that sometimes they come out better than others. And sometimes they are very annoying to peel.
Do you put them in the water before or after it is boiling?
How long do you leave them in?
How can I get them to peel easier? I find myself pulling off some egg with the shell sometimes and I need all of my egg. :bigsmile:
Feel free to mock me accordingly and thank you!
I know put it in a water, boil for 2 to 3 minutes. Done. Yes, I’ve accomplished that. However…..I’ve noticed that sometimes they come out better than others. And sometimes they are very annoying to peel.
Do you put them in the water before or after it is boiling?
How long do you leave them in?
How can I get them to peel easier? I find myself pulling off some egg with the shell sometimes and I need all of my egg. :bigsmile:
Feel free to mock me accordingly and thank you!
0
Replies
-
I put them in the pot, then put enough water in them to cover the eggs. Then Once it starts boilig, I set the timer for 15 minutes and they're done! Some people boil them a shorter amount of time then that but I don't like the yolk soft so it's perfect for me.0
-
Oh, and to get them to peel easier, soak them in the pot with cold water after. I usually leave them soaking for at least an hour before putting them in the fridge.0
-
Start with cold water, so your eggs do not crack. Bring to a boil and then turn off the water. Let the eggs sit for 12 minutes. Take out and put them in an ice bath--makes it easy to peel them. This yields perfect, non-rubbery eggs with no weird greenish brown color on the yolks.0
-
I boil mine in "salt" water (makes it easier to peel) but not too much salt. I boil for abt 10-15 minutes. I used the "spoon" test. If I lift the egg up and it dries IMMEDIATELY, my egg is "boiled completely"0
-
Put eggs in saucepan.
Cover eggs with water plus another 1/2'' of water.
Optional: add a splash of white vinegar to make egg shells turn their whitest.
Bring water to boil over medium high heat.
Boil 15 minutes. Do not reduce heat.
Drain water.
Put hot eggs in an ice water bath for 5-10 minutes. This is important! It stops cooking the eggs so the yolks don't turn green and makes the shells come off easier.
PERFECT HARD BOILED EGGS EVERY SINGLE TIME0 -
I usually put the eggs in after the water is boiling. Sometimes I put them in earlier.
I boil them for 10 minutes then turn off the heat and take them out when I can finally handle them. If I'm in a hurry, I dump them a bowl and run cold water over them until they are cool enough to handle.
The older the eggs are before you boil them, the easier they will be to peel. Fresh eggs are the hardest to peel neatly.0 -
If eggs are very fresh, meaning less than a week out of the chicken, they will be much harder to peel.
I put eggs in cold water. Bring to boil and remove from heat. Let stand in hot water for 14 minutes. Run cold water into pan and let eggs cool.
They turn out perfect every time.0 -
Boil... put them in before water boils. I let them boil for close to 10 minutes. To shell them I roll the egg back and forth on the counter to crack the shell... the shell will peel off in a few strands this way if you grab the membrane.0
-
I just bought a cuisinart egg maker yesterday.. it steams the eggs... used it last night and the eggs came out perfect! And steamed eggs are a ton easier to peel. I'm pretty excited about this unit.0
-
I let the eggs sit out on the counter for about 20 minutes before I boil them.
Bring the water to a boil, put the eggs in. Boil on high for 3 minutes and then turn the heat down to simmer and let them simmer for 10 minutes. Then I put the entire pot in the sink and let cold water run over them until the pot is cold to the touch.
I've never had a problem peeling them with this method, but I know there are many ways to hard boil an egg.0 -
I add a teaspoon of baking soda to cold water that is about 1 inch over the eggs
bring it to a boil
cut the heat and leave for 10 minutes
remove eggs, drain and rinse under cold water untill cool enough to touch
The shells should come right off, baking soda passes through the eggshell and helps the albumen to separate from the shell.
Eggs tend to cook best when the temprature is gradualy raised, low and slow all around for any egg dish should provide the best results.0 -
I bring water to boil, add eggs, boil 12 min, remove eggs0
-
Start with cold water, so your eggs do not crack. Bring to a boil and then turn off the water. Let the eggs sit for 12 minutes. Take out and put them in an ice bath--makes it easy to peel them. This yields perfect, non-rubbery eggs with no weird greenish brown color on the yolks.
I do the same but I also add salt and vinegar to my water.0 -
-
Agreed with some of the other posts. The fresher the egg, the harder they are to peel. For Easter, I bought eggs a week ago (still plenty of use by date left) so they will peel easier when we are ready for them.0
-
1) Place eggs in pot (gently)
2) Fill with cold water until eggs covered + 1/2 in or so
3) Bring to a boil on high heat
4) Remove from heat, let stand for 25 mins
5) Remove from pot and plunge into ice bath until cool
6) Peel and enjoy0 -
Start with cold water, so your eggs do not crack. Bring to a boil and then turn off the water. Let the eggs sit for 12 minutes. Take out and put them in an ice bath--makes it easy to peel them. This yields perfect, non-rubbery eggs with no weird greenish brown color on the yolks.
^^^^This0 -
I bring water to boil, add eggs, boil 12 min, remove eggs
this is what I do, and run under cold water after for an easy peel.0 -
Rice steamer:
I put them in the steamer for 24 minutes or so. When they come out they go into cold water for 5 to 10 minutes. When I crack up the shell it comes off in basically 2 chunks without any problems. Don't wait too long to peel them (don't let them sit for 1/2 hr in water) or the membrane won't split easily and then it takes forever to get the shell off.0 -
I have a hard boiled egg cooker because I'm crap at making them on the stove...0
-
I put my eggs in the pot and then add cold water. Then I put it on the stove, heat it up, and let it boil for 15-20 minutes. To open, I tap it gently on a flat surface such as a counter so that the shell has little cracks in it and then I peel the shell off. Then I rinse the egg in cold water and eat! Yum!0
-
I add a teaspoon of baking soda to cold water that is about 1 inch over the eggs
bring it to a boil
cut the heat and leave for 10 minutes
remove eggs, drain and rinse under cold water until cool enough to touch
The shells should come right off, baking soda passes through the eggshell and helps the albumen to separate from the shell.
Eggs tend to cook best when the temperature is gradually raised, low and slow all around for any egg dish should provide the best results.
I have just recently heard about using baking soda to help the egg shells come off easily....I plan on trying this this week!0 -
Extensively discussed here a couple of weeks ago:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/topics/show/922976-please-help-perfect-hardboiled-eggs0 -
valerieschram got it down - thats the perfect way.0
-
2-3 minutes? I boil mine for 10 - 15 minutes, never have an issue peeling them and they are always perfect.
Running them under cool water as you peel them can make it easier to peel, if you are having problems though.0 -
I just bought a cuisinart egg maker yesterday.. it steams the eggs... used it last night and the eggs came out perfect! And steamed eggs are a ton easier to peel. I'm pretty excited about this unit.
This. If you eat alot of hard boiled eggs, I'd highly recommend one of these. Takes the guessing out of the timing and you can turn it on , walk away until it beeps. Also, the ones I've seen have a little cup that you can measure the amount of water that goes in depending on how soft/hard you like your eggs. And they're not terribly expensive.0 -
Put them in the pot and cover them with water and add salt. Once the water starts boiling set the timer for 12 minutes. After they are done put them in an ice bath and let them cool completely. The salt makes the water boil faster and helps them peel easier as does the ice bath. Good luck!0
-
I take eggs out of fridge 10-20 minutes before use, prick fat end with a pin, put in boiling water for 9-10 mins, run under cold water until just cold enough to peel, crack shell in worktop and hold in a bit of kitchen roll (because still a bit hot!)
I then slice in an egg slicer, chop with a little mayo, chopped tomato and spoon of parmesan (grated) and pile onto my sandwich. messy but yummy.0 -
Some of us were not wired to make hard boiled eggs right! I gave up and bought an egg cooker. Oh, yes, people laugh at me, but I love it!
As far as peeling, the fresher the egg, the tougher it will be to peel. I do find that really fresh eggs (mine come from the back yard) will peel if you start with the bottom (where the air pocket is) and go slow.0 -
I use a pin or a sharp knife tip to poke a small hole in the large end of each egg, put it in a saucepan and cover with cold water. Turn it on high until it boils, remove from heat, cover, and time it for 12min. Then I put them in an ice bath and leave them for 20min. I peel them all and put them in a tupperware covered with water. Change out the water each day or so and they should keep for a week.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 427 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions