Best To Hard Boil And Peel Eggs Recipes

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EASY-PEEL HARD-"BOILED" EGGS



Easy-Peel Hard-

Hard-boiled is a misnomer, because the perfect hard-boiled egg is not boiled at all but rather steamed! This secret was leaked by a chef, and it is the best way I've found for easy peeling and no green yolks.

Provided by cerberus

Categories     100+ Breakfast and Brunch Recipes     Eggs

Time 25m

Yield 12

Number Of Ingredients 1

12 extra large eggs

Steps:

  • Fill a stainless steel steamer pot with about 1 inch water and bring to a boil.
  • Add eggs to the steamer tray, carefully lower into the pot, cover, and reduce heat. Cook for 10 minutes for medium yolks or 15 minutes for fully-cooked yolks.
  • Remove the steamer tray and rattle eggs around to crack the shells. Transfer eggs to a cold water bath and let sit for 3 to 5 minutes. Remove from water bath.
  • Gently crack each egg, roll on a cutting board, then peel the shell off from the fat end towards the point.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 82.9 calories, Carbohydrate 0.4 g, Cholesterol 215.8 mg, Fat 5.8 g, Protein 7.3 g, SaturatedFat 1.8 g, Sodium 81.2 mg, Sugar 0.4 g

TO HARD-BOIL AND PEEL EGGS



To Hard-Boil and Peel Eggs image

Provided by Food Network

Number Of Ingredients 0

Steps:

  • Manufacturing Notes:
  • Pricking: There is a bubble of air in the large end of the egg, which expands when the egg is heated and can crack the shell. To let that air escape, always prick the large end with an egg pricker or a pin, going in a good 1/4 inch.
  • How much water? That depends on how many eggs you have. The water should cover the eggs by 1 inch, so use a tall pan, and I would hesitate, under home conditions, to do more than 2 dozen eggs at once.
  • For 1 to 4 eggs...2 quarts of water For 12 eggs.......3 1/2 quarts of water For 24 eggs.......6 quarts of water
  • Special Equipment Suggested: An egg pricker or drafting pin; a high rather than wide saucepan with cover; a bowl of sufficient size with ice cubes and water to cover eggs.
  • The cooking: Lay the eggs in the pan and add the amount of cold water specified. Set over high heat and bring just to the boil; remove from heat, cover the pan, and let sit exactly 17 minutes.
  • The 2-minute chill: When the time is up, transfer the eggs to the bowl of ice cubes and water. Chill for 2 minutes while bringing the cooking water to the boil again. The 2-minute chilling shrinks the body of the egg from the shell.
  • The 10-second boil: Transfer the eggs (6 at a time only) to the boiling water, bring to the boil again, and boil for 10 seconds--which in turn expands the shell from the egg. Return the eggs to the ice water, cracking the shells gently in several places.
  • Preventing that dark line around the yolk: Chilling the eggs promptly prevents that dark line from forming, and if you have time, leave the egg in the ice water (adding more ice if needed) for 15 to 20 minutes before peeling. Chilled eggs are easier to peel, too. Or peel them, as described in the next paragraph, and ice them at once.
  • Peeling: Crack an egg all over by gently tapping it against the sink. Then, starting at the large end, and holding the egg either under a thin stream of cold water or in the bowl of ice water, start peeling. As soon as you have peeled it, return the egg to the ice water so that it will continue to chill.
  • Storing the HB eggs: They will keep perfectly in the refrigerator, submerged in water in an uncovered container, for 2 to 3 days.

HARD BOILED EGGS (EASY TO PEEL)



Hard Boiled Eggs (Easy to Peel) image

I have had a few problems with trying to hard boil organic fresh chicken eggs. They were usually hard to peel and it would take about half of the egg white with the shell. I ran across this recipe from my sister, of all people...yes, I was skeptical at first...lol! :P Anyway, after you use this simple recipe your eggs will no longer be hard to peel. It works even on store bought/farm eggs. I just prefer fresh eggs because they taste so much better. I wish I could have chickens in the city! I never knew what I was missing till my daughters great grandmother got 8 chickens. They eat poms, strawberries, melons, tomatoes, bugs, worms... spoiled little hens. lol! They have the best eggs though.

Provided by birdie 3 andrea

Categories     Lunch/Snacks

Time 22m

Yield 6-12 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 3

6 -12 eggs
8 cups water
1 dash salt (optional)

Steps:

  • Put the eggs in pot.
  • Fill the pot with water just enough to cover the eggs.
  • Add salt (optional).
  • On high temperature, bring to a rapid boil.
  • Cover pot.
  • Turn off burner.
  • Let sit for 20 minutes on the warm burner.
  • Drain water, put eggs back in carton or bowl and put in refrigerator.
  • Eat them once they cool.

HARD BOILED EGGS



Hard Boiled Eggs image

Provided by Food Network Kitchen

Categories     appetizer

Time 10m

Yield 1 dozen eggs

Number Of Ingredients 1

1 dozen eggs

Steps:

  • Place your eggs in a pot and cover with cold water by 1 inch. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, then cover, remove from the heat and set aside 8 to 10 minutes. Drain, cool in ice water and peel.
  • Bring a pot of water to a boil over high heat. Reduce the heat to low, then add your eggs and cook 4 to 5 minutes. Drain, cool in ice water and peel.
  • Bring a pot of water to a boil over high heat. Reduce the heat to low, then add your eggs and cook 7 to 8 minutes. Drain, cool in ice water and peel.

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