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Hard Boiled Eggs.
#31
We get eggs from some people we know, when they are fresh, they are hard to peel when boiled.  If they sit in the fridge for a week or more they are much easier to peel.

With the shortage of eggs now, the eggs are fresher, so they will be harder to peel

I did find a trick that works somewhat.  We have always put the eggs into water, then brought it to a boil, then when it starts to boil pretty well, we turn the burner off, cover the pot and let them sit on the stove for between fifteen and twenty minutes, depending on the size of the eggs...large fifteen, extra large maybe eighteen, and jumbos around twenty.  Then dump the water out and put in cold water to cool them down and stop the reaction that deactivates the proteinases from solidifying the egg.  Heat destroys the protease enzymes that keeps it liquid....they are naturally found in eggs, these proteinases also destroy microbes that get through the shell for a while so eggs last for weeks even without refrigeration.

Ok, now I tried many things people told me and the salt trick someone told me works, it actually was not explained by the guys I know who had chickens, they did not properly listen to their wives who actually knew.

Here is what I learned, bring that water to a boil, then shut it up, and sprinkle a little salt into the pot and cover it.  The salt actually helps to break down the bond of the skin inside the shell so it comes loose from the white that way when peeled.  Then cover and let sit for that fifteen minutes + and do the cooling technique.

From working with an old time cement man who came here from Italy, I learned that salt on side the rode lessens the bond of the road gravel, something that county guys used to know, but lately, they did not listen to the old country drivers, so the shoulders are washing out.  Now my old cement guy I worked with told me to stabalize the shoulder by the mailbox with calcium....morter has calcium in it, so do old bags of cement or lime.  It works....After I found it worked I did research on it and if they wanted to stop some of the landslides in California, maybe just put some calcium carbonate on it to neutralize the salt from the air.  I used what I was told by an old mason to find all kinds of solutions to problems.  When enough animals sink in quicksand, the calcium from their bones could stop the quickening of the quicksand or quick clay....think that is called loda or something if I remember right.

So back to the eggs, if you put the salt in right away, the salt will penetrate the white through the film under the shell and it will blobs of the white come off when peeling, so that makes it problematic, only a sprinkle of salt is needed, too much will soften that white too much.

It will take you a couple of times to get it right, but it does work pretty well, I had to figure this out and evaluate what was happening on my own, at least I can tell you how to get it to work without screwing up many batches of eggs...but every area has different amounts of salt in the water supply, and of course, clorinated water also has an impact so adjusting the salt in our well water which does not have salt in it is different than using chlorinated water....remember, chloride is salt is part of this, it is not just the sodium in salt.
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#32
Boil as usual, let sit for 10 minutes until you can stand the temperature, crack the heck out of the shells and they just fall off.
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#33
(02-10-2025, 07:05 PM)DontTreadOnMe Wrote: Hard boiled eggs used to be so easy to do.
And they used to peel easily most of the time.

So what happened? 
Our water is weird? 
The eggs are different?

What's the secret? I'd sure appreciate it if you could share it.
Or at least a reasonable facsimile.

Use only the freshest of eggs.
Use older eggs.
Use cold water and bring eggs to a boil.
Salt the water.
Don't salt the water.
Boil for x minutes.
Turn off stove and let sit.
Run under cold water.
Use ice.
Don't use ice.

I saw one method recently that involved a lot of time and a lot of temperature changes....after all the yellow and white parts don't cook the same.


ARGHHHHH!!!!!!!!

I feel your pain.  Having my own eggs doesn't help and I have literally tried EVERYTHING!  Baking soda, salt, no salt, vinegar, cold, hot, ice water, old, new, pressure cooking, poking holes in the pointy end, yada, YADA, Y A D A!  NOTHING works with my own eggs. For egg salad, I don't mind muddled eggs, they're going to get crushed anyway. But it's a pain in the ass so I rarely have it, a couple times a year maybe.  But if I were required to make deviled eggs for the public to consume,  I would A. -  buy eggs from the store as they seem to work much better.  B. - ask someone else to make them.   Needless to say, I haven't made deviled eggs for 15 or so years because I hate buying eggs and even store-bought have issues. I've learned the art of commandeering a friend who makes great deviled eggs.
Live by love, Live for love, Live in love, Live...Love
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#34
(04-13-2025, 01:42 PM)StoutBroux Wrote: I feel your pain.  Having my own eggs doesn't help and I have literally tried EVERYTHING!  Baking soda, salt, no salt, vinegar, cold, hot, ice water, old, new, pressure cooking, poking holes in the pointy end, yada, YADA, Y A D A!  NOTHING works with my own eggs. For egg salad, I don't mind muddled eggs, they're going to get crushed anyway. But it's a pain in the ass so I rarely have it, a couple times a year maybe.  But if I were required to make deviled eggs for the public to consume,  I would A. -  buy eggs from the store as they seem to work much better.  B. - ask someone else to make them.   Needless to say, I haven't made deviled eggs for 15 or so years because I hate buying eggs and even store-bought have issues. I've learned the art of commandeering a friend who makes great deviled eggs.

Have you tried this? I haven't, but someone upthread suggested it and I found a video:

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#35
(04-13-2025, 01:48 PM)UltraBudgie Wrote: Have you tried this? I haven't, but someone upthread suggested it and I found a video:

[Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7FcTsnk_vDA]

No, and I realized the 'hole poking' method I had tried in the past was the large end, not the small end....oh heck, whatever, maybe I tried both lol.  It's been a while.  But I went to YT and read the comments on the procedure of your linked video.  They look to be pretty positive and I will give it a try because I always love me some pickled eggs and gave up on those as well.  Thanks for the info.
Live by love, Live for love, Live in love, Live...Love
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#36
Put eggs in water in pot at room temp, cover then high temp for 13 minutes, it will come to a boil, then cool off in cold water til it is room temp again… I think it’s the cooling off part that shocks the shell, or something like that, to make it easier to peel.
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#37
(02-10-2025, 07:05 PM)DontTreadOnMe Wrote: Hard boiled eggs used to be so easy to do.
And they used to peel easily most of the time.

So what happened? 
Our water is weird? 
The eggs are different?

What's the secret? I'd sure appreciate it if you could share it.
Or at least a reasonable facsimile.

Use only the freshest of eggs.
Use older eggs.
Use cold water and bring eggs to a boil.
Salt the water.
Don't salt the water.
Boil for x minutes.
Turn off stove and let sit.
Run under cold water.
Use ice.
Don't use ice.

I saw one method recently that involved a lot of time and a lot of temperature changes....after all the yellow and white parts don't cook the same.


ARGHHHHH!!!!!!!!

I am going to cut through it all for you.   Add a tablespoon of vinegar to the water.   It will smell like Easter (at least for me!!)   Boil the eggs for ten minutes.   Drain.  Run cool water until they are cooled.   Put them in the fridge.   When you crack them, focus on rolling them and cracking the small end.   You will be able to get under the membrane and have a clean boiled egg.  wooooo hooooo! Cool
"Pseudoscience depending for its “truth” on consensus is deeply hostile to challenge." -- Rael Jean Isaac
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#38
I swear I don't think there is ANY tried and true method that works every time.

Currently I am using at least 2 week old eggs from my girls. 
Put them in the pot of water.  I don't add anything else.  No salt, nothing.
Bring to a boil, then cook 10 minutes.

Turn off the heat.
Then forget them on the stove for several hours.

Throw them in the fridge in a bowl.

It's been working fairly well.  Not losing big chunks when I peel them anymore.
(generally bring 2 a day to work with me for breakfast)
Mr. Poops: Read a book, it's like broccoli for your brain.  (Are you even still around?)

The earth provides everything we need.  We thought we could do better.  We were wrong.
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