How do YOU make hard boiled eggs???
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My grocery store (Harris Teeter) sells them by the dozen already hard-boiled and peeled for only 25 cents more than a normal dozen! I put them in a ziplock bag with a couple of paper towels, and they're good for a week to ten days in the fridge.0
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We have our own Hens and our eggs are stored at room temp (no need for the fridge) - 20 mins in the steamer, then in to a bowl of cold water to stop the cooking process, then just peel.
Since we steam most of our veg and rice it makes sense to also use it for doing hard boiled(?) eggs :happy:0 -
bring water to boil.
Prick egg with egg pricky thingy on the big end, so air can escape (less egg cracking in pot!)
once water boils, put egg in.
boil for 14 minutes.
take egg out of water and put it under cold water - this will make the peeling much easier.
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I make mine totally different than anyone else on here! I put my eggs in cold water, bring to a boil, turn burner OFF cover pot with lid and let sit on burner for 12-15 minutes! Remover from burner and soak in ice cold water!0
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I put the eggs in a cold pan, fill with just enough water to cover the eggs. Cover and turn on high and bring to a boil. Once it hits boils, I turn the temp way down to low, leave covered for 15 minutes. Then I drain the water and replace it with cold tap water. I either add a few ice cubes or change out the water a few times to cool the eggs. Then I dry them and put them back in the carton and done!!!
To peel, I roll the egg on the counter to crack the shell, then peel under running cool water - the shell slips right off.0 -
I put cold water in a pot, toss my eggs in...put it on the stove on high.
I boil them for 30 minutes, put the pot in the sink, add cold water, dump water, add more cold water...let them sit for about a half hour.
I'll crack the flat end on the counter and peel the shell off. I boil the hell out of my eggs because anything less than 25 minutes has resulted in uncooked yolks. I make eggs on Sunday to last through the week, I don't want uncooked yolks. Blech.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.
I do this same thing but i just put cold tap water in till the waters not hot and the eggs cool only slightly. When they're cold i have a whole lot of trouble peeling them. They're easier when still warm and wet0 -
Boil water first. Then place eggs into pot with 2-3 inches of water, using tongs. Boil for 8 minutes.0
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I'm gonna go boil an egg now :laugh: this thread makes me crave one!0
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I have an actual egg timer. Growing up in Colorado, it takes water longer to boil so whatever time I might have learned up there, would be different now that I live in Chicago. Anyways, You put it in with the eggs and when it gets to your preferred temp (soft, medium or hard) you turn the heat off and soak in cold water.0
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I'm gonna go boil an egg now :laugh: this thread makes me crave one!
Try making egg salad with an avacado, a little salt, pepper, and paprika. Amazing.0 -
Place eggs in cold water + 1t baking soda. Turn on med-high until boiling. Remove from heat, cover, and let sit for 30 minutes. Soak in cold water to stop cooking process. No more pock marked deviled eggs for me.0
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The easiest method I've found for making hard "boiled" eggs is to set the oven, yes, the oven at 325-330. Place your eggs in a mini muffin tin. Bake the eggs for 30 minutes.Remove from the oven, place the eggs in an ice bath. Once cool, they are perfectly cooked and peel effortlessly.
You can bake several dozens of eggs at one time, which is what I do.0 -
I'm gonna go boil an egg now :laugh: this thread makes me crave one!
Try making egg salad with an avacado, a little salt, pepper, and paprika. Amazing.0 -
I'm spoiled.
My husband does them for me0 -
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.
I do a variation of this.
I put the eggs in tap water in the pot and wait about 20 minutes for the eggs to get up to temperature before putting them on to boil. Once they get to a rapid boil, I turn off the heat and walk away. When the eggs/water are at room temperature, I peel them.
I'm avoiding sudden changes in temperature, and its seems to produce easier to peel eggs.
Could be nonsense though...0 -
i boil them for like 10min.......take out then let sit for awhile until cool then peel, salt, and eat0
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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.
^^^^ THIS ^^^^^0 -
I put them in the pot..cover with COLD water, just enough to cover the eggs. Set to boil. Once I get a rolling boil, I cover and turn off the heat - timer on for 20 minutes. They are never greenish in the middle or under cooked. Only problem I have is sometimes they don't want to peel but I've read something about adding baking soda? to help that..but I've not tried it...0
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The easiest method I've found for making hard "boiled" eggs is to set the oven, yes, the oven at 325-330. Place your eggs in a mini muffin tin. Bake the eggs for 30 minutes.Remove from the oven, place the eggs in an ice bath. Once cool, they are perfectly cooked and peel effortlessly.
You can bake several dozens of eggs at one time, which is what I do.
I just heard this on the radio the other day. It had never occurred to me to bake them. Haven't tried it yet.0 -
the oven method is the easiest no fail way- put them in a muffin tin at 325 for 30 minutes and then put them in ice water for 10 minute, perfect everytime0
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The easiest method I've found for making hard "boiled" eggs is to set the oven, yes, the oven at 325-330. Place your eggs in a mini muffin tin. Bake the eggs for 30 minutes.Remove from the oven, place the eggs in an ice bath. Once cool, they are perfectly cooked and peel effortlessly.
You can bake several dozens of eggs at one time, which is what I do.
I'm going to try this method today. Seen it mentioned several times lately by different people on different sites.0 -
File this under the Dumb Question of the Day but yes, how do you make hard boiled eggs?
This is not a dumb question at all because despite popular belief it actually takes the right timing and temps to make the perfect boiled egg.
This is how I get perfectly hard boiled easy to peel eggs with perfect yellow fluffy yolks:
1. My eggs come out of the fridge so they take a bit longer to cook.
2. Place eggs in bottom of pan fill with cold water to just cover the tops. (little fyi: eggs that sink are fresh, eggs that float up a bit but bottom still remains on the pan are OK to eat, eggs that float are spoiled)
3. Turn the burner to a medium-low flame and cover.
4. Watch those eggs the minute the water starts to boil turn off the flame and let them sit for 12-15 minutes depending on how hard you like the yolk (I like mine hard so they sit for 15minutes)
6. As soon as your timer goes off get those bad boys under some cold running water and get them cooled off (this helps to make them easier to peel)
7. I usually leave the water running for a bit to cool them off. You can also put ice in it, but I found that they were still a bit hard to peel.
8. Once they are cool pop them in the fridge or your mouth and enjoy!
Eggs wonderful things they are.0 -
Wow, I never knew there could be so many different ways to cook an egg and some are complicated!0
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Wow, I never knew there could be so many different ways to cook an egg and some are complicated!
I know, right??? Now I have 50 more different ways to screw up my eggs.....lol.
Seriously, thanks for all the responses!0 -
Seems to be lots of ways to cook them...and I have tried a few. BUT, the biggest help for me is the ice bath OR even just peeling them under running cold water. Slides right off.0
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My grocery store (Harris Teeter) sells them by the dozen already hard-boiled and peeled for only 25 cents more than a normal dozen! I put them in a ziplock bag with a couple of paper towels, and they're good for a week to ten days in the fridge.
this
i usually prefer to always cook things from scratch whenever possible... BUT.. life it too short (and i have too many other things to do), so i refuse to feel guilty about buying pre-cooked, pre-peeled, hardboiled eggs when having them all ready in the fridge often makes the difference between a good and a bad 'I'm starving, what can I grab to eat fast?' kinda choice0 -
bake them in the oven at 325 for 25 mins then put them right in cold water, taste better and you can do more0
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put eggs in sauce pan with water covering the top of all, put on burner (on high). once water is at a rapid boil, turn heat off (leave on hot burner) and cover for 15 minutes. Then rinse and soak eggs (in shells) in cold water
Easy to make and Easy to peel!0
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