I usually start with the eggs in the water and bring it to a boil and 
experienced the same problems mentioned. Tried the putting them directly in to 
boiling water for 12 minutes the other night, then poured off the boiling water 
and ran cold water over them and let them sit. They peel nicely using that 
method.

 

Thank You,

Brian Webster

www.wirelessmapping.com

www.Broadband-Mapping.com

 

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Adam Moffett
Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2017 10:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Fw: OT Eggxactly

 

It also depends whether you start with eggs in the water while it's heating up 
vs adding the eggs to already boiling water.

10 minutes might be just enough if you start with the eggs already in the water 
and start the timer after you have a rolling boil.

 

 

------ Original Message ------

From: "Chuck McCown" <[email protected]>

To: [email protected]

Sent: 8/23/2017 10:46:18 AM

Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Fw: OT Eggxactly

 

To me, hard boiled means the yolks have a slight green tint.  

 

From: Gino A. Villarini 

Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2017 8:32 AM

To: [email protected] 

Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Fw: OT Eggxactly

 

17 min? I do 7min for soft boiled, 10 for hard boiled … and these are the 
organic large eggs costco sells 

 

From: Af <[email protected]> on behalf of Steve Jones 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, August 17, 2017 at 7:42 PM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Fw: OT Eggxactly

 

I start the water heating up, once itbubbles up i drop the eggs in for 17 
minutes. Pull them out and run them under cold tap water. Perfect yellow yolk, 
easy peel. We also have really hard city water, maybe that mineralizes the 
shells so they break into bigger better peelable. If you stop them about 12 
minutes, its a good softboiled egg... yum 

 

 

Our chickens are making eggs now, theyre pretty small, so im not sure how thise 
will fair

 


 

Gino A. Villarini


President


Metro Office Park #18 Suite 304 Guaynabo, Puerto Rico 00968



On Aug 17, 2017 8:39 AM, "Bill Prince" <[email protected]> wrote:

It also helps (a lot) if they aren't the "freshest" eggs. Our neighbors have a 
couple dozen chickens that produce way more eggs than they can use, so we get 
to share the bounty. The really fresh eggs that are only a few days old or less 
will not peel worth a hoot if you boil them. They will peel much easier if they 
are a couple weeks old. It has to do with the membrane between the shell and 
the egg. white.

bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

On 8/17/2017 6:17 AM, Chuck McCown wrote:

Made some more eggs last night.  Very hard to peel.
Had to go back to find this bit of research to see what I did wrong.

So, drop them in boiling water with vinegar and salt helps them to be easy to 
peel.

Last night I put them in cold water and brought it to a boil.
So I did the worst method.

Maybe I need to make myself a note about this and paste it in the fridge.

-----Original Message----- From: Chuck McCown
Sent: Thursday, November 24, 2016 10:29 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AFMUG] OT Eggxactly

5 saucepans and 1 pot.
6 burner Comstock Castle restaurant stove.
24,000 BTU per burner.

1 quart of water in each.
A bit of variability in pan sizes.
All eggs from same carton.  Cold refrigerator temp.

4 Variables
C/H    Cold Start/Hot Start
W    Plain Water
V    Vinegar only added
VS    Vinegar & Salt added

V = 1/2 cup distilled
S = 1.5 TB

Count starting with top left burner CCW around cook top.

1 CW
2 CV
3 CVS
4 HW
5 HV
6 HVS

In the photo of the cut eggs the order from left to right is 123654

Salt and Vinegar boiled first which seems backwards to me. Freezing point
depression, boiling point elevation of solutions.
I suspect it had to do with nucleation sites.

Water boils at 204 at this altitude.
HVS boiled at 206
W boiled at 202
HV boiled at 208

Took a full 9 minutes to hit a full rolling boil.
Cooked the Cold start eggs 18 minutes total.  Heat off at 9 minutes.
Cooked the Hot start eggs about 14 minutes boiling and another 2-3 with heat
off.

Single blind study.  Wife peeled and rated.
Rated ease of peeling on 1-10, with first egg arbitrarily assigned a 5.

1    CW    5    Peeling came off in large pieces, egg broke during peeling
2    CV     5    Broke egg
3    CVS    5  Broke egg
4    HW    6  Peeling came off in sheets
5    HV     6  Peeling came off in sheets
6    HVS   7  Peeling came off in sheets

1 & 4 were cooked enough for me.  All the others had a dark yellow slightly
wet interior to the yolk.

So, it appears that placing them into a rolling boil kept the egg more
structurally sound, helped the peeling come off in sheets.
Vinegar and Salt appears to help the peel detach.

I think I would up the cook time to at least 15 minutes rolling boil with a
few minutes to soak after the heat is off.







 

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