Easy Hard Boiled Eggs
on 11/6/15 11:13 am
I read the earlier post about pre-cooked hard boiled eggs. I have hens and we use fresh eggs -- I love them! However, like other posters, I had issues when I hard-boiled with the shell not coming off. Too fresh -- or whatever, it was a crap shoot. I dreaded making hard boiled eggs for egg salad, deviled eggs, etc. In fact, I would buy the pre-cooked and overpriced eggs, too!
Then I found this:Krups Egg Cooker. Here's the best solution and it makes hard boiling eggs a piece of cake and fool proof. Best of all? Eggs peek so easily it's crazy!! It also makes soft and medium eggs as well as poached. I am not usually for gadgets, but I love this thing. I swear -- it is actually easier than buying them pre-cooked and WAY less expensive.
"What you eat in private, you wear in public." --- Kat
on 11/6/15 11:46 am
If you are currently getting pullet eggs -- it would depend on their size, but I'd say generally yes, they would fit. We raise Rhode Island Reds because they are hearty and withstand our cold winters. Their eggs are quite large -- but as pullets lays, they start small. You also get a lot of double yolks when they first begin to lay.
I am not a huge egg eater to begin with -- but I do bake all my family's breads/etc and make my own mayo. My husband and son love egg salad, deviled eggs and diced eggs on salads. That is what I use hard-boiled for. I also make a lot of omlets and quiches -- and of course, I freeze eggs for baking when I have too many.
My family and friends love our fresh eggs -- so sometimes, especially in the winter (I don't believe in forced laying with lights) when my girls don't lay as often, I don't have a ton of extra. But, during peak laying seasons, I like to share the abundance.
"What you eat in private, you wear in public." --- Kat
on 11/6/15 2:16 pm
Yes, I freeze them buy cracking the eggs into a bowl, beating them and then putting the mixture into ice cube trays. Once frozen, I pop them out and store in a large ziplock bag. Each cube is about one egg. I use them for baking and such. They are actually very handy. I do this with extra yolks and eggs whites, too.
"What you eat in private, you wear in public." --- Kat
on 11/6/15 11:42 am
Unfortunately, this doesn't work for very fresh eggs.
"What you eat in private, you wear in public." --- Kat
on 11/6/15 11:57 am
I am telling you -- beautiful eggs EVERY. SINGLE. TIME.
Seriously. Only caveat? It only cooks 7 at a time. Hey, but that's 14 deviled eggs...
"What you eat in private, you wear in public." --- Kat