I like to think that I'm a pretty good cook. I cook or bake
almost every day of the week, making simple dinner recipes as well as complex baked
goods. I've had few problems making recipes that quickly bring most experienced
cooks great pain… soufflés, French macaroons, roasts, turkeys, whole fish, etc. While I've
had a few flops (for example: doubling the amount of butter in a cookie
recipe), there are few recipes that trip me up more than once.
Except for hard-boiled eggs.
Dear lord, what happened to those eggs? |
I grew up eating hard-boiled eggs quite a bit. I love egg
salad sandwiches, deviled eggs, potato salad (with egg), and eating hard-boiled
eggs straight up with salt or soy sauce (try it, it's amazing!). Now, sometimes
when my parents made hard-boiled eggs, the egg's shell would slide right off
the egg in one piece. Other times, the shell would stick to the egg's white and
would only come off with chunks of the white, destroying the look of the egg
(not to mention wasting it). We would chalk up the differences in peeling
ability to the eggs' freshness or lack thereof.
As for myself, I've had terrible luck making hard-boiled
eggs down here in Florida. I make sure that I buy eggs a few weeks in advance
before attempting to hard-boil them and I use my mother's method for cooking
them:
Put eggs in pan with
cold water (covering them by an inch or so of water)
Bring to a boil
Turn off burner, cover, and let sit for 12 minutes
Shock in an ice bath until cool
Peel and eat
Theoretically, the eggs should turn out perfectly cooked,
with bright yolks (no green circle) and tender (not rubbery) whites.
This method, however, never seems to work for me. While my
yolks are bright and my whites are tender, the peel sticks. Badly. My eggs come
out looking like they've been peeled by someone with sporks for fingers. For
pretty deviled eggs in my house, I've resorted to buying the eggs pre-cooked
and peeled (such a waste of money).
So I did what anyone my age would do… I turned to Facebook.
I implored my friends to help me out by telling me how they cook their eggs so
that the shells come off. As it turns out, there are a lot of ways to cook eggs
that "come out perfectly."
After many comments and suggestions, I boiled down (har har)
the techniques into 6 variations of cooking time and peeling temps.
1. Boil the water, add the eggs, boil for 7-10
minutes, then peel hot
2.
My normal method: Add eggs to cold water, bring
to a boil, sit covered for 12 minutes, shock in ice bath, peel cold
3. Add eggs to cold water, boil for 5 minutes, shock in ice bath, peel cold
4. Pampered Chef Method: Add eggs to cold water, bring to boil, simmer for 12 minutes, add ice & cold water, peel cold
5. My normal method but peeled hot
6. Bring eggs to room temp (about 1 hr), then boil in my normal method.
3. Add eggs to cold water, boil for 5 minutes, shock in ice bath, peel cold
4. Pampered Chef Method: Add eggs to cold water, bring to boil, simmer for 12 minutes, add ice & cold water, peel cold
5. My normal method but peeled hot
6. Bring eggs to room temp (about 1 hr), then boil in my normal method.
So, doing what any good scientist would do, I set out to
perform an experiment (I am a researcher after all).
I bought 18 eggs, waited about 2 weeks, separated the eggs
into groups of 3 (for 6 groups total… see, Math!) and cook the eggs in all six
methods. I even used a Sharpie to label the eggs and took pictures of the
results (see below).
After cooking, I peeled the eggs to test for difficulty of
peel, and cut one open to see how they were cooked inside.
Results: None of the methods worked well.
Please, follow along as I discuss my results:
Here is the sell-by date. I purchased the eggs about 2 weeks prior to my attempt (11.10.13). |
Here is one of the eggs from group 1, unpeeled. Note the cracked shell from the heavy boiling for 8 minutes (sorry its blurry... cell phone camera wouldn't focus) |
Here are the peeled eggs from group 1. Pretty bad on two of them, third isn't terrible, but not unscathed. |
Results from group 2, not pretty |
Results from group three... pretty bad |
Inside of individual from group 1. Not completely cooked. |
Inside of one egg from group 3 (only 5 minute boil). Very under cooked |
Don't worry, they didn't go to waste. They given a proper send off with flur de sel and white truffle oil |
Results from Group 2 (my normal method). Center is fully cooked (just a tiny spot in the middle) with bright yellow yolk and tender white |
Here are the results from group 4 (Pampered Chef Method). Cooked inside, but peel was pretty tough to get off. Better, but not good. |
Group 5: My normal method, but peeled hot. Not only was this potentially very painful, the results were poor |
Again, group 5, not completely cooked inside. I think it needed to rest in the cold water to finish cooking a bit inside |
Group 6 - The room temp eggs, cooked normally. Fully cooked inside, peels came off with a bit of a struggle, but better than the rest.
What did I do with all those eggs? Deviled them, of course. Made with Sraracha mayo. Yum! The rest will go in my lunch this week. |
Any hints, tips, suggestions, or voodoo curses I could use? Please, help me out... I want pretty eggs!
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