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Peeling Eggs

Peeling Eggs

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Old 07-14-2017, 05:57 AM
  #21  
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I recently read that peeling a boiled egg from the "pointy" end is more effective than peeling from the "round" end. I had always peeled from the "round" end. I thought it sounded foolish until I tried it. Dang if it doesn't work better!
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Old 07-14-2017, 12:19 PM
  #22  
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I have my egg cooker on my kitchen counter covered by a toaster cover I made that does not cover our toaster now. I keep hard boiled eggs in the refrigerator (carton marked "hard") as we like them for breakfast, and I have "instant" egg salad makings, deviled eggs, for potato salad, etc. And we really like the soft boiled eggs for breakfast! My husband even likes them refrigerated if I make an extra or 2. I am always careful to punch the end of the egg that was up in the carton as that is where the air bubble is. The secret is to get under the membrain between the egg and the shell when peeling! As she said "get an egg cooker!"
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Old 07-14-2017, 01:39 PM
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I read this on Pinterest and have tried it 2 or 3 times. We buy eggs from some Amish friends so they are VERY fresh. I read to bring the water to a boil with some vinegar in it. (I just pour some in....less than 1/4 cup in a 6 qt pan.) After the water comes to boil add the eggs. Cook for 14 minutes then put into ice water. I just put a bunch of ice in a large pan and add water then the eggs. I haven't had any trouble peeling the eggs since I've used this method. This is one of the FEW things I've read on Pinterest that actually worked! LOL
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Old 07-15-2017, 11:19 AM
  #24  
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Originally Posted by Sewgood View Post
I read this on Pinterest and have tried it 2 or 3 times. We buy eggs from some Amish friends so they are VERY fresh. I read to bring the water to a boil with some vinegar in it. (I just pour some in....less than 1/4 cup in a 6 qt pan.) After the water comes to boil add the eggs. Cook for 14 minutes then put into ice water. I just put a bunch of ice in a large pan and add water then the eggs. I haven't had any trouble peeling the eggs since I've used this method. This is one of the FEW things I've read on Pinterest that actually worked! LOL
Cooks Illustrated magazine says to use this method. I don't think they mentioned the vinegar, though. My trouble doing this is that the eggs tend to crack when you put them in the water. I started using a spoon to lower them so they land more gently!
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Old 07-15-2017, 05:24 PM
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The ladies here are right about not using fresh eggs. I ruined two dozen eggs that wouldn't peel for deviled eggs at Thanksgiving one year.
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Old 07-16-2017, 03:11 PM
  #26  
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Originally Posted by quiltingcandy View Post
I have an egg cooker - it only makes 7 eggs at a time, and you have to puncture each egg before you put it in the little machine but I never have trouble peeling them. My mother would say it is because you are making them for company. Her eggs came out perfect when she made them for the family or putting the eggs in a salad so it didn't matter what they look like. But make them to take somewhere or having company come over - then the little buggers hold on to those shells like crazy.
Yeah, my mothers eggs for company were perfect too. That's because she would double the amount she needed and then just put out the perfect ones. We ate imperfect eggs for days after.
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Old 07-17-2017, 03:30 AM
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I have chickens so I just age a dozen or so when I want boiled eggs. Put number desired in cold water, bring to a boil. Remove from heat, cover, and time for 20 minutes. Immediately drain and fill pan with cold water, add ice cubes to get really cold water. let sit a few minutes until eggs are cold. Peel immediately or refrigerate until needed. I like a boiled egg in my salad and this is the method I use. I also peel from the round end where the air pocket is. 99% of the time this works. but once in a while you get an egg that just won't peel nicely.
I have never tried them, but I have seen already boiled, peeled, and packaged eggs in the deli section of my grocery store. Pretty pricey but I guess some people like the convenience of not having to deal with boiling and peeling.
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Old 07-17-2017, 05:12 AM
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This is what I do.
Originally Posted by LavenderBlue View Post
Jane is right about using older eggs. I bring the eggs to a boil and turn off the heat, leaving the pot still on the burner. I wait about 30 minutes but they may be done sooner. Drain and cover with cold water and some ice. Works for me!
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Old 07-23-2017, 07:45 PM
  #29  
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Originally Posted by Gee Hope View Post
Try shaking egg(s) in small covered container that has some water in it.
This is exactly what I do (in a glass container with water)and have shared this method and everyone is amazed at how easy this is and really works extremely well! and I love my egg cooker that my sister raved about. So glad I bought one when it went on sale. best gadget I have purchased in a quite awhile.
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Old 07-24-2017, 01:00 AM
  #30  
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Cook them in an Instant Pot. They peel like a dream, and it only takes 5/6/7 minutes to cook, depending on how hard-boiled you want them.

I like mine HARD-boiled, so I cook them for 7 minutes, let the pressure release naturally for 7 minutes (then quick-release any remaining pressure), and soak them in ice water for 7 minutes. Perfect eggs every time, and you don't have to baby-sit a pot of boiling water!

Last edited by moonrise; 07-24-2017 at 01:02 AM.
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