In this video I explore the different methods of boiling an egg to determine which method peels the best. I will take three eggs. The first egg will be at room temperature and placed into room temperature water. The second will come right out of the fridge and go into the same room temp water. The third will come right out of the fridge and go into boiling water. All the eggs are jumbo from the same batch.
Do not worry, none of these baby chickens are giving there life in vain. I will eat them all.
Boiled eggs make for a delicious snack and can be used in a variety of healthy recipes, such as potato salad, deviled eggs, cobb salad, nicoise salad, egg salad sandwich and eggs on toast. Cooking eggs is easy (promise) and I'll show you how long to boil eggs to suit your personal preference.
NGREDIENTS
3 eggs
Water, to cover
Ice, for ice bath
PREPARATION
Place eggs in a pot. Cover with cold water until the eggs are covered by about 1 inch of water.
Bring to a boil, uncovered. Once boiling, take off the heat.
Cover and cook for 4-16 minutes, depending on preference (4-6 minutes for soft-boiled, 8-10 minutes for medium-boiled, 12-16 minutes for hard-boiled). In the meantime, fill a large bowl with ice and cold water, creating an ice bath.
Once eggs reach desired cook-time, immediately remove the eggs from pot and place in the ice bath. Allow eggs to cool for 10-15 minutes.
To peel, lightly tap the eggs on a flat surface, then gently roll back and forth (taking extra care with soft-boiled eggs).
Pull away the loosened shell and peel any remaining pieces.
Serve as is or incorporate into your favorite recipe that requires hard-boiled eggs.
Enjoy!
If you have read this far, please realize that you will never get that time back. It is gone, and I stole it. (enter maniacal laugh here.) Oh, how we waste time watching hours of YOUTUBE instead of spending time with friends, family, and loved ones. No wonder that a poll of 1,254 adults aged 18 and older found that 27 percent of millennials have no close friends, 25 percent have no “acquaintances” and 22 percent — or 1 in 5 — have no buddies at all. This compares with only 9 percent of Baby Boomers and 15 percent of Gen Xers who reported having zero chums.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syt7G06JFh4