TL;DR (The 90-Second Method You’ll Actually Use)
- Start with hot water. Bring a pot of water to a rolling boil (enough to cover eggs by ~3 cm).
- Lower in gently. Use a spoon or spider to add fridge-cold eggs. Start the timer as soon as they’re in.
- Cook to your minute mark (see chart below). Keep the boil at a lively gentle simmer (not violent).
- Ice bath, 10 minutes. Shock to stop cooking and make shells release.
- Crack + peel under water. Tap the wide end, roll to web-crack, then peel in the bowl.
Why it works: hot-start sets the outer albumen fast (clean shape), ice bath halts carryover heat and loosens the shell membrane.
Doneness Chart (Large eggs, straight from the fridge)
| Timer (mm:ss) | Yolk Texture | White Texture | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 06:00 | Jammy, custardy center | Tender set | Ramen, avocado toast |
| 07:00 | Very jammy, sliceable | Fully set | Salads, grain bowls |
| 08:00 | Creamy, just past jammy | Firm | Snack halves, pickling |
| 09:00 | Mostly set, moist | Firm | Egg sandwiches |
| 10:00 | Fully set, not chalky | Firm | Classic “hard-boiled” |
| 11:00–12:00 | Dry/crumbly | Very firm | Grating, long pickles |
Using medium eggs? Subtract ~30–45 sec. Extra-large? Add ~30–60 sec.
Stovetop: Two Reliable Methods
Method A — Hot-Start Boil (most consistent shapes)
- Boil water first.
- Lower eggs, start timer.
- Adjust heat to maintain an active simmer (big bubbles knock shells).
- Ice bath 10 min, peel.
Pros: Best shape, easy timing.
Cons: Needs care lowering eggs.
Method B — Steam (the peeling champion)
- Add 2.5 cm / 1 inch water to pot; insert steamer basket.
- Boil to create strong steam.
- Steam fridge-cold eggs 7–12 minutes to match the chart (same timings).
- Ice bath 10 min, peel.
Pros: Easiest peeling across egg ages.
Cons: Slightly softer whites at the very jammy end—still delicious.
Peeling: Make It Effortless
- Age beats freshness: 5–10-day-old eggs peel more easily than “laid yesterday.”
- Crack the fat end first: There’s an air cell—breaking it lets water slide under the membrane.
- Peel in water: A bowl of water gets under the shell and floats shards away.
- Shake method (for batches): After the ice bath, drain, add a little water back, cover the pot, shake gently 5–8 seconds to all-over crack—then peel.
Avoid: adding vinegar/salt to the cooking water for peeling (doesn’t beat age + ice bath), smashing violently (tears whites).
Why Rings Happen (and How to Prevent Them)
That gray-green ring on yolks is iron + sulfur reacting when eggs cook too long or cool too slowly.
Fix: Hit your minute mark and chill fast (full ice bath). If serving warm, chill 5–6 min first, then re-warm 30–60 sec in hot water.
Scaling for Meal Prep
- Cook up to a single snug layer at once; overcrowding drops the boil.
- Mark shells with a pencil for dates/doneness if cooking mixed batches.
- Storage: Unpeeled: 7 days refrigerated. Peeled: 3–4 days in a lidded container with a damp paper towel.
Seasoning Ideas (fast flavor)
- Crunchy salt + pepper + olive oil
- Everything spice + chili crisp
- Soy-marinated jammy eggs: ½ cup soy + ½ cup water + 1 tbsp sugar + 1 tbsp vinegar + garlic/ginger; marinate 4–12 h.
- Herb mayo (1:1 mayo:yogurt, lemon, chives)
Common Problems → Quick Fixes
- Shells crack while cooking: Lower eggs gently; keep the boil moderate; prick the wide end with a pin (optional) to release pressure.
- Hard to peel: Prefer the steam method, fully chill, peel under water.
- Chalky yolks: Reduce time by 30–60 sec; add a real ice bath.
- Undercooked centers: Add 30–45 sec next time; remember altitude and egg size.
Altitude & Starting Temp Adjustments
- High altitude (≥1,500 m): Water boils cooler; add ~30–60 sec to the chart or use the steam method which is less sensitive.
- Room-temp eggs: Subtract ~30 sec.
- Very cold eggs (back of fridge): Add ~30 sec.
Food Safety
- Keep eggs refrigerated at ≤4°C.
- For dishes that sit out (picnics/buffets), aim for firm yolks (≥10:00) and keep under 2 hours at room temp.
- Clean and chill quickly if you’ll store them.
Printable Mini-Chart
Large eggs, from fridge, hot-start or steam
6:00 jammy · 7:00 very jammy · 8:00 creamy set · 9:00 sandwich-set · 10:00 classic hard · 11–12:00 firm/dry.
Then ice bath 10 minutes. Peel under water.
FAQ
Q: Do I need vinegar or baking soda?
A: Not for doneness. For peeling, age + ice beats additives every time.
Q: Can I use an air fryer?
A: Yes, but timing varies by model and altitude. Stovetop/steam is more universal and repeatable.
Q: Can I cook a few and save the rest raw?
A: Sure—just keep raw eggs in their carton to limit moisture loss and odors.
