DIY Food

How to Peel Hard Boiled Eggs Perfectly, Every Single Time

No cracks, no dents—deviled eggs never looked better.

January 19, 2022
Photo by Mark Weinberg

The best kitchen tips are usually passed along from friends, or parents, or—if you work in an office with an always-bustling test kitchen—from colleagues.

And such is the case with perfectly cooked hard-boiled eggs. We all learned to cook them from someone, somewhere; they're personal, they're nostalgic, and also pretty genius. But make no mistakes—they can be finicky, and, when hard-boiled, a real pain to peel.

Enter one of our own, Blake, with his trick for the perfect way to peel perfect hard boiled egg, gleaned from the kitchen of Blue Hill where he used to work. We tried his method immediately, and tested it a whole bunch of times, and we've never looked back. What followed was a whole new world—and some massively upgraded deviled eggs, egg salad, and protein-packed snacks.

So, here, without delay, is the absolute cleanest, most pain-free way to peel a hard boiled egg, no blowing or wooden cane required.


How to peel hard boiled eggs

Peeling the perfect hard boiled egg starts with cooking eggs, of course. Cook your eggs however you like—in a pot of boiling water with a splash of vinegar, a squeeze of lemon juice, a teaspoon of baking soda, or a pinch of salt. All of these additions help make it easier to peel boiled eggs. Slightly older eggs will make it easier to peel, but using them is not necessary. After all, we have to work with what we have. Another pro tip? Start with water that’s already boiling. I know it seems treacherous, but it will make it much easier to peel hard-boiled eggs. “I have noticed the egg white sticks to the shell when I start from cold [water]," says Jason Hua, executive chef at The Dutch. J. Kenji López-Alt explains this phenomenon on Serious Eats: "Slow-cooked egg whites bond more strongly with the membrane on the inside of an eggshell."

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Once the eggs are fully cooked (set a time for 10 to 12 minutes), the next step is to cool the eggs down in an ice bath or a bowl of very chilly water, where they should stay for a full five minutes or so. Set a timer. Do not disturb. I know you’re hungry and anxious, but the eggs will be better off if you just leave them alone.

Once they are cool enough to handle, fill another clean bowl with room temperature water, and submerge the eggs, one at a time. Using the edge of the bowl to knock them, you can now start cracking the shell. Do this gently, so as to not break the freshly boiled egg entirely in half.

Once cracked, the water helps to gently separate both the membrane—that attaches itself with a vice-like grip to the egg—and the shell from the egg white, making it so much easier to peel.

From here, discard the eggshells or, better yet, compost them—they’ll turn into fantastic fertilizer. Then slice the boiled eggs and add a sprinkle of flaky salt for a sneaky snack, dice them for potato salad, or slice them for a Niçoise salad.

Presto! The world's shiniest, smoothest, pearliest eggs to impress your friends with. Just don't forget to pass on the tip to the next generation.

This post originally ran in 2014. We've refreshed it now because this skill will never go out of style.

Have another way to perfectly peel an egg? Let us in on your secret in the comments below!
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Kenzi Wilbur

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I have a thing for most foods topped with a fried egg, a strange disdain for overly soupy tomato sauce, and I can never make it home without ripping off the end of a newly-bought baguette. I like spoons very much.

267 Comments

Cookie April 5, 2023
This method would never work with very soft-boiled eggs (approx 7 minutes), such as those for your popular Momofuku soy sauce eggs, which I make constantly (https://food52.com/recipes/35930-momofuku-s-soy-sauce-eggs). Smacking them first in the middle is fatal. If you try cracking a jammy egg in the middle, it will break in half. For soft boiled, after cooling in ice water, they need to be gently tapped on each end (where an air bubble leaves space), and then rolled lightly on the counter to crinkle the ENTIRE surface of the egg. Start peeling at the pointed end, and the entire shell comes off together with the membrane. Peeling under water helps.
 
Helen G. April 3, 2023
Food 52 should carry this product, Negg, a 4" x 3" plastic cylinder with a tight lid you put a boiled egg in, add ¼ cup water, and shake a few times. The shell slides right off. It put boiled eggs back in my life after years of frustration with peeling.
 
Sadie April 3, 2023
Eliminate this time-consuming, multi-step process and steam eggs for 15 minutes instead of boiling them. Crack all over and peel under cold running water. Works every time!
 
Anne K. April 3, 2023
This method seems to take quite a few time-consuming steps for an easy to peel egg. I simply steam the eggs--12-14 minutes for hard cooked, 8-9 minutes for a softer yolk. Only on rare occasions does the shell stick to the white. Try it.
 
Susan S. April 3, 2023
Alas the peeled egg trick did not work at all for me-indeed it took away more of the egg than usual.
 
Donny April 2, 2023
👍
Now need a recipe for foolproof soft-boiled for Scotch eggs. Anyone..? Anyone..? Bueller..? (Thanks!😘)
 
Lisa S. April 2, 2023
Yes! Steam the eggs for 6 minutes, then into the ice water. Mold the pork mixture around them, bread, then deep fry for 6 minutes. I have a great recipe for Maple Bacon Scotch Eggs in my cookbook. The Fresh Eggs Daily Cookbook.
 
Gray F. April 2, 2023
I don't have an answer for you, but recognize the Scotch egg problem of trying to fry the sausage without overcooking the egg.

My thought was to crack the egg into a suitable container and then freeze it. Then mold the sausage around it and sous vide it at whatever temp gives you the egg doneness you desire, which should be fine for the sausage, too. Then a quick deep fry in pretty hot oil to put a crust on it.

-Gray
 
Michelle P. April 2, 2023
I used to work on a farm that sold eggs from pastured chickens. Part of my job was to wash and package the eggs. We got to take home the eggs that were too big to fit in the carton. So I have hard boiled many eggs the same day they were laid. The very best way is to steam them. I used a metal colander over a stock pot, covered. Ten minutes for room temperature eggs, thirteen for refrigerated ones. I never had a problem peeling them after steaming them.
 
Lisa S. April 2, 2023
I agree. Steaming is the only method that works 100% of the time for me with our fresh eggs. I have a feeling that people who use these other methods are also using old eggs - which of course peel easier.
 
Jenny A. April 2, 2023
Learn something new everyday! That is interesting about the size of eggs. How often were they too big?
 
sara D. April 3, 2023
Yes! I steam my eggs in the metal colander over about 1-2 inches of boiling water, with the lid on the pot. 13-14 minutes. Then I ladle them into iced water (with ice cubes) for 5 minutes. Pour out the water. Here's the important thing: I take each egg and tap it on the counter on the pointiest end and once on the side. I pinch the pointy end and the shell practically peels itself!
 
les C. April 3, 2023
Yup.This technique works well for me as well,the eggs must be put in an ice bath immediately after steaming for at least 15 minutes.Your just going to have 1 or 2 that refuse to cooperate when peeling, patience is our friend.
 
Cynthia C. April 2, 2023
Instant pot to the rescue. Put eggs into a slotted basket or anything that gets him up off the bottom of the pot insert. Put in one cup of water. Close lid. Put on high-pressure for six minutes. When it dings let it do a slow release for six more minutes. Do instant release and get the eggs out, putting them into a cold water bath immediately. The shells will slip right off the eggs. Every time.
 
Pudding April 2, 2023
So many different ways to achieve the perfect peelable hard boiled egg! Mine might be the easiest of all (from the NYT years ago, and from an egg dealer at the farmer's market). Use a slotted spoon to gently put eggs into water only about an inch deep (which creates steam), when its already bubbling, turn heat down a bit, cover, and boil. On my stove it takes about 7 minutes at a gentle boil for 8 eggs. Remove the eggs with the slotted spoon, and put aside in a bowl on the counter until the eggs are cooled to room temperature, which might take at least an hour. They peel beautifully once they've cooled totally, and can now be put in the fridge. No need for ice water baths or peeling under running water!
 
Jenny A. April 2, 2023
Seems there are a lot of ways that method could go wrong: "turn heat down a bit, cover and boil" and "gentle boil" is nondescript. It's not foolproof like just steaming. But interesting approach! I'm guessing the eggs are still cooking while they are cooling. The ice water bath is to stop the hot eggs from cooking and also helps with peeling somehow (forgot the reasoning).
 
Barbara B. April 2, 2023
I learned two easy tricks for hard boiled eggs years ago: first, starting the eggs in cold water, boil for five-six minutes then turn off the heat and let sit in the pot as long as you like. Go vacuum or read your mail. When they’ve cooled a bit, peel them UNDER RUNNING WATER. This method never fails and is quick and easy.
 
Gray F. April 2, 2023
All the myriad tips and tricks I've read over the last 65 years for producing easily peeled hard boiled eggs have proven to be nothing but a bunch of desperate malarkey and pretty much didn't work, in practice..

The trick is not to boil your hard boiled eggs! Instead, steam them. I learned this from the Sunbeam E-1 automatic egg cooker that I have been making eggs in since I first learned how to do it in the mid-50's. I don't suppose I've had a dozen sticky shelled eggs in that time.

Egg cookers are still made and pretty much all work the same way (and there is a plethora of used ones on e-bay). Oxo (and others) also make a silicone egg rack that fits in the bottom of a sauce pan, if you don't have an egg cooker or want to cook a dozen eggs at a time for spud salad.

If you are making them in a pan, put the rack in the pan; add maybe 3/8" of water in the bottom; pierce the tops of the eggs to prevent them blowing up (egg piercers are also available fairly cheaply); put the eggsin the rack (pierced side up!); steam them for whatever time you like and turn off the heat. I usually just let the eggs cool in the pan. Doesn't seem to make any difference whether you start with cold or room temp eggs.


Gray
 
Lynnie April 2, 2023
Yup! Same here. Learned this from a work colleague. Important to start them cold from fridge over hot steam. And when done, that plunge in ice water bath finishes the process so they peel clean and easily, even several days later
 
Dianne N. April 3, 2023
I have my grandmother's (born 1898) Sunbeam egg cooker. My mother had the same one. I didn't know that you could boil eggs to make hard cooked eggs until I became an adult because this was the only way my mom made them. It's just the best!!
 
Pamela April 2, 2023
Amen. I don’t look at or buy as much as I used to because it is sooooo annoying and totally distracting
 
Lisa S. April 2, 2023
About ten years ago, I started steaming my eggs instead of boiling them. 7 or 8 minutes for soft-cooked in a colander or vegetable steamer set over a pot of simmering water, 12 minutes for hard-cooked. About 20 minutes for duck eggs. Then right into a bowl of ice water. Even eggs laid that morning will peel like a charm. You don't want to use old eggs because you get that dip in one end (that's the air sac that expands as the egg ages). And by steaming them, they don't knock around and potentially crack like they can in boiling water. Also, as someone else mentioned, the steam heat is a consistent heat. And you never that that weird gray ring around the yolk when you steam them.
Author of The Fresh Eggs Daily Cookbook (HarperCollins, 2022).
 
Jenny A. April 2, 2023
The gray ring is from overcooking.
 
Lisa S. April 2, 2023
Or cooking too fast. The steaming prevents it.
 
Jenny A. April 2, 2023
Steaming for 12 minutes, then ice water is best because the steam stays hot while boiling water can cool down when eggs are added; steaming is consistent heat. Unbelievable that Cook’s Illustrated still has some recipes advising to start with cold water; I couldn’t figure out why my eggs peeled poorly.
 
Lisa S. April 2, 2023
I absolutely agree.
 
DEEFOLGER2 March 1, 2023
Wow! This was wonderful! Wish I had read it before I wasted 2 dozen eggs!
 
Lisle December 9, 2022
I'll join the fray. I simply cook eggs in my dash egg cooker, it takes about 12-14 min. when done, leave on counter until room temp, write date on the shell using food safe marker, toss in the fridge, and they're ready to eat whenever. Never a stuck shell. No ice bath boiling water. Clean up is a snap.
 
scoutings August 25, 2022
What about the recipe for the eggs at the top of the article, e.g. in the picture by MARK WEINBERG?
 
mjs April 5, 2023
Looks like a hard cooked egg, sliced,
topped with a dollop of mayo- flavored anyway you might like and
topped with a sage leaf gently fried in butter.
Looks yummy.
 
Beth April 20, 2022
This isn't about peeling eggs, but about an amazing trick my daughter did with coloring Easter eggs. She hardboiled them, peeled and cut them in half, popped out the yolk. Then mixed up some water and food coloring, several blue, pink and green, and dropped in the whites. After a few minutes, they were dyed several different beautiful shades. Then she made deviled eggs -- what a gorgeous presentation!
 
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Michael April 15, 2022
Amen!
 
Cathryn April 6, 2022
How can I get out of this discussion? I commented on this 3 years ago and it’s still popping up every Easter. I think I know how to make eggs that peel easily now. Thank you!
 
Beth April 6, 2022
Well, just delete the email. You don't have to open it.
 
Jenny A. April 2, 2023
Press the Reply or Write a Comment prompt and you'll see "Send me emails about new replies". Uncheck the box.
 
deb April 6, 2022
i completely agree! sometimes i just leave the site after navigating all the pop up ads!
they are annoying and confusing!
is there any way you could put up an add free read so we can just look at your site?
many sites have a little cursor (?) to push to avoid ads. please! they are so plentiful now, these ads!
 
Maureen April 2, 2023
You could take the initiative instead and download an ad blocker.
 
mary April 4, 2022
Or, just use a small, thin spoon to remove the shells from the egg; just slip it inside the shell and spin it around the egg and the shell comes right off. Fast, simple.
 
Foodie April 4, 2022
I've read literally dozens of articles about boiling eggs--either hard or soft but NO ONE EVER SAYS WHETHER you need to start with eggs right out of the refrigerator or at room temperature, which surely affects the cooking time. Does anyone know?
 
Robyn April 4, 2022
Always straight out of the fridge. Place in a pot of boiling water, carefully. Simmer for 12 minutes for hard boiled. Then with a slotted spoon, place eggs in an ice bath for about 7 minutes. Crack & peel under running water.
 
Kathy S. April 4, 2022
I once used hot water from cooking pasta to boil eggs and discovered that even farm fresh eggs peel easily with this method. Just heat the water until close to simmering and drop the eggs in, you will be amazed at how easily they peel
 
Patricia April 4, 2022
I refuse to purchase the merchandise advertised when I'm trying to read and learn something from this site. Please stop putting ads in front of the articles. I do approve of this unexpected "nice" music, however. But, we are all overloaded with advertising. If it doesn't stop, I will discontinue using this site and shop elsewhere. Thank you.
 
funnyvalentine April 4, 2022
How do you think the site is funded? By ads.
 
Patricia April 4, 2022
As a former radio broadcaster and marketing director for a university theatre dept, I believe wholeheartedly in the value of advertising. However, it needs to be sensitive to the demographic being targeted. When it overtakes or blocks out the view of the people on this site, for example, it can defeat its purpose in a heartbeat, because there are so many other options for the consumer to go to these days. This is one of my favorite sites but I'm not averse to looking beyond it to find what I need.
 
Toni Z. April 4, 2022
I agree with stopping the pop-up ads because it means more work when trying to print/save a recipe or article on a flash drive for later printing (with your copyright still preserved on each page) instead of cooking with my PC open, ripe for damage from cooking.
 
Beth April 3, 2022
My husband gave me one of those microwave egg cookers for Christmas, and it works perfectly. Only cooks up to 4 eggs at a time though, so not good for a large plate of deviled eggs. It's basically the steamer method, just a little water in the bottom, microwave on high for 10 minutes, let sit for 10 more, then open and cool with ice water. Saves heating up the stove or any other appliance.
 
isw April 3, 2022
To whoever wrote your e-mail teaser: it's "die" (as in "dice"); not dye (as in Easter egg).
 
Terry B. April 3, 2022
lol...feel better now?
 
Lissi April 3, 2022
I believe that the die is cast, while the dye is set. (Yes, the common idiom suggests that the die has been cast, but, Easter is coming soon, and we do dye eggs.)
 
Julia P. April 4, 2022
I was just about to write the same thing, Lissi! Yes, I believe the email teaser was referring to coloring or dyeing eggs.
 
gpark April 3, 2022
So many comments. All proposing a different method. None based on science. Certainly the article has no science in it. I tried many methods over time. The only that results in cleanly peeled eggs is the steaming method - steamer basket over boiling water for 13-14 minutes (depending on room or refrigerator storage) for well done yolks. Pop them in ice water until cool enough to hold. Smash against the side of the sink and peel. The temptation is to peel them still too warm or too big of pieces of shell (tears the whites). In my experience, those are the only reasons to have hard to peel eggs.
 
kdenton April 3, 2022
I find steamed eggs peel perfectly every time. Fit a steamer basket over a small amount of water. Add 6 or so eggs in basket (depends on size of basket). Heat water. When steam appears, put the lid on and lower heat so water is simmering. After 10-15 minutes (depends on number of eggs), remove eggs and put into a icy cold bath. Peels slide off after about 15 minutes.
 
Nancy H. April 3, 2022
I follow NYT advice: steam (for my taste 11 minutes), take out and let come to room temp and then peel. Absolutely NO need for the ice bath if you have the time for them to come to room temp naturally. Has worked every single time since doing this way.
 
Lisle July 5, 2022
I, too, use this method with 99.99% success. Warm to room temp is the secret!
 
tonifla April 3, 2022
I tried this method & it worked well
 
funnyvalentine April 3, 2022
I always use my instant pot for boiled eggs. It's easy; five minutes under high pressure, five minutes of releasing, into cold water for five minutes.
The shells slip off.
 
tonifla April 3, 2022
Oh I have to try that method
 
ladyDee29 April 4, 2022
I must try this method as well. thank you.
 
Mavi February 23, 2023
I also use my instant pot and cook one dozen eggs for 4 minutes, with instant release, and then into icy cold water until cooled. Never had any problems with them peeling doing them this way. Worst way was trying to follow advice by baking eggs. do not do this, as the eggs developed brown spots which made them impossible to dye for Easter.
 
orit R. April 3, 2022
Air-fry at 270F 12-15 minutes depending how hard/soft you want it. Best method when you need to make lots of them for Passover or Easter. They peel easier when cook that way but you can still use the water method (definitely to cool them down) LOVE MY AIR-FRYER….
 
ustabahippie April 3, 2022
Oh dear. Now I must buy another appliance to peel eggs? Thanks for the suggestion tho.
 
ustabahippie April 3, 2022
I wish there were a way to peel eggs without using water. I’m in a serious drought in CA.
 
Beth April 3, 2022
You can, just let them come to room temp after boiling/steaming, then crack all over. You may have to pick off a few pieces of shell, and they may not be as pretty as if the shell came off easily, but they taste just as good.
 
Foodie April 4, 2022
Exactly what I was thinking (OR). But I do use gray kitchen water for outdoor plants and am waiting for OR legislation to allow gray water use from laundry and dishwasher.
 
khouria1130 April 5, 2022
If you have an Insta pot it uses so much less water than the boiling method! And the shells peel off so easily 😊
 
Karen April 3, 2022
I steam the eggs in a tall 6” pot.
Put cold water under steamer and place eggs in basket.
Bring water to a boil on high.
When simmering reduce temperature to low and simmer for 5 minutes.
At this point eggs will be jammy.
For more done eggs remove pot from heat and let sit for a few minutes.
When ready run water over eggs so you can touch them.
Peel and enjoy.
The entire process takes less than 10 minutes.
 
Terry B. April 3, 2022
I've always used old eggs straight from the fridge into cold water. Don't use salt, vinegar, lemon or whatever else was mentioned. Depending on how many eggs I have is how long I boil. Typically 6 eggs for 8 minutes. I'm thinking potato salad here. When done, water is dumped carefully and cold water added to pot. I keep dumping and redoing cold water until it stays cold. I crack the egg one at a time against the pot, peeling as I go. I've never had a problem. Never had a green egg either. I looked up how to cook eggs in the 80s in the Betty Crocker cookbook.
 
Bebewatson April 3, 2022
STOP WITH THE POP UP ADS! It’s so aggravating to have to X-out the ad…sometimes it takes three or four times to get to the article, extremely annoying & a waste of time.
Thank you.
 
phip April 3, 2022
It makes me annoyed at the product it is promoting. Completely counterproductive
 
ElleT April 4, 2022
Get a free ad blocker! Declutters sites beautifully and you can turn ads back on for a particular site if you need to see links.
 
Terry April 4, 2022
Are there ad-blockers for phones? Most of us have desktop ad blockers (where the screen is bigger and ads are less in-your-face to begin with) but my phone is where I run into all the pop-ups (and probably where Bebewatson was getting them with their tiny x's that are deliberately hard to target). Some websites won't let you proceed until you've disabled the popup blocker.
 
funnyvalentine April 4, 2022
How do you think the site is funded?
 
ElleT April 4, 2022
I still get a few ads, just not the flashy, distracting, annoying ones that would make me stop using the site. I didn't agree to get ads when I signed up, and they do have other income streams, like retail.
 
Hannah January 28, 2022
I was hoping the end of this article would also have a list of the best deviled egg appetizers…
 
Jim January 19, 2022
Is there a recipe for the gorgeous eggs in the photo that headlines the article???
I wanna know how to make those! Thank You!
 
SarahWarn January 19, 2022
I'm rather surprised this article mentioned Kenji but not steaming the eggs. This is my most reliable way of getting peelable eggs, though the effect could well be mimicked by starting with boiling water.
 
Molly F. January 27, 2022
Steaming eggs is the way to go.
 
Jeffrey B. April 3, 2022
I only steam them. The advice to add vinegar or baking soda is pointless. The key is cold eggs meeting hot water, the hotter the better…hence steam. 12 ½ to 13 minutes for hard 9 minutes for fudgy 6 for soft. Plunge into ice bath for 15 minutes and you are good to go for deviled eggs, egg salad etc.
 
Sherry W. April 3, 2022
Do I keep the water boiling once I put the cold eggs in it or do I turn the heat off and let the eggs sit for suggested time?

 
phip April 3, 2022
All for steaming. Always works for me
 
David S. December 4, 2020
I find the best way to peel hard boiled eggs is to put them in cold water in the saucepan straight away after cooking, drain the water out leaving a little in the bottom once cooled and then shake the saucepan, bouncing the eggs off the sides. The whole shell becomes cracked all over and in most cases, after some shaking, the shell falls off in a couple of pieces. If not, you can almost wipe the shell off. This is efficient and quick If boiling a number of eggs.
 
marianne December 3, 2020
Use room temperature eggs. Put water in pan and let it come to a rolling boil. Lower eggs into boiling water with a spoon. Boil eggs for 8 minutes. Remove from heat and leave eggs in pan to cool. No need to put them in ice. Just peel them after they cool. This has never failed for me. You can also take them from pan and refrigerate if not needed right away. They still peel perfect. I have tried many other ways and this way has worked every time for me. Learned it from one of the cooking shows on YouTube.
 
ladyDee29 April 4, 2022
I have tried this method as well it worked sometimes, and maybe my timing has been off. I will try again. All I want is easy-cooked peeled eggs.
 
FrugalCat December 3, 2020
I didn't read all 170 comments, but here's my (grandma's) trick. Crack the egg, then roll it around on the counter while applying a little pressure. Shell just slides off.
 
Mary A. February 23, 2020
Steam for 13 minutes. Submerge in ice water and crack. Shell will just peel off.
 
Mary A. February 23, 2020
This works for older or very fresh eggs.

 
Jenny A. January 27, 2022
Yes, steaming is best because adding a cold egg to boiling water cools down the water. Steaming is consistent heat. 13 minutes steamed is perfect every time. I used to follow Cook’s Illustrated method of starting in cold water but the egg shells stuck, as noted in this article.
 
Marion B. April 3, 2022
Cooks illustrated must have updated their recipe. You lower the eggs into 1” of boiling water. Cook 13 minutes and then submerge in ice water bath 15 min. For me this is the only method I’ve used that works every time on old or new eggs.
 
Jenny A. April 3, 2022
Yes, they did update it on their article about how to cook hard boiled eggs but didn’t update in their actual recipes (such as Curried Egg Salad and Cook’s Country’s Herbed Deviled Eggs as two examples). Those recipes still state to bring to a boil, then take off the heat for 10 minutes, which has never worked (the shells stick). It baffles me that they ever even advised it as a method and frustrated me when I had to bring them to volleyball tournaments.
 
Michele K. February 23, 2020
All eggs peel easily when they’re older. The difficulty is with fresh egg right from the coop. I’ve tried every technique and have never found a way to peel them well.
 
BayouBlssm December 3, 2020
I have laying hens & had the same problem until I saw how to steam eggs. Bought a cheap folding steamer insert. After steaming, even same day fresh eggs, the shells almost slide off after cracking. Perfect eggs. It still amazes me every time!
 
Liz December 9, 2020
How long do you steam them?
 
MichelleBee April 3, 2022
To peel fresh laid eggs poke a hole in the end of egg with a thumb tack before cooking. It works.
 
Sue April 3, 2022
Steam 13 minutes then place in an ice bath for 10 minutes.
 
Jeffrey B. April 3, 2022
13 minutes max
 
Terry April 4, 2022
How does the interior of the egg not leak out?
 
Terry April 4, 2022
My question was for MichelleBee...apparently replying to a specific comment doesn't work.
 
Beanie April 4, 2022
@Terry I’m guessing it’s similar to the concept of poking two holes in a can in order for the can’s contents to come out. In order for the inside of the egg to leak out, there would need to be a second hole to allow air/water to displace the contents inside and make it/allow it to leak.
 
Mary A. October 21, 2019
Start by steaming or pressure cooking eggs and then dumping into ice bath. You have to have fast, hot heat to make them peel clean.
 
Beth October 21, 2019
Never tried pressure cooking eggs. How long would you pressure them in an Instant Pot?
 
Mary A. October 22, 2019
I use a stove top pressure cooker and it is six minutes.
 
Arthur Q. January 17, 2020
I use Instant Pot with the 5-5-5 rule. 5 mins HP, 5 mins NR, 5 mins dunk in cold water. Crack shells all around, it slid right off.
 
Ann A. June 28, 2019
I hard cook eggs in cold water, brought to boil. Turn off heat and let eggs sit for 10 minutes. I prefer to lift out the eggs with a slotted spoon and air-cool. This method ensures that the foods eggs are safe to be held at room temp. Air-cooled hard cooked eggs are not "potentially hazardous foods."

Later I store the eggs in the refrigerator until ready to use.

I tap the large round bottom of the egg on a hard surface to break the shell. Because this is where the air cell is located, I roll the egg from bottom to top several times, moving air to the top of the egg. Then I slip a small spoon into the bottom of the shell and slide the spoon to the top and/or side of the egg. I repeat this several times. The egg will be perfectly peeled. Back into refrig or immediate preparation.
 
Voi S. June 28, 2019
Gee, you just wrote a manual about how to boil and peel eggs.
 
Cathryn June 1, 2019
I've always sprinkled a healthy dose of salt in the water before boiling the eggs, and then an ice bath when they're finished. Then, they peel like a dream.
 
lorraine June 12, 2019
Oh wow! I never put in cold water after they boil in the salt water. Will try this. How long do you usually boil your eggs? I do 6-8 mins
 
Marilyn V. February 6, 2020
That is the way I think June of almost all my life
 
Deanna April 4, 2019
I use a teaspoon, it slides easily under the skin of the shell. Fool proof, always works. I showed my daughter and she was blown away.
 
Lori J. March 19, 2019
I feel my eggs under running coldish water!! Works every time! I also add salt to the boiling water, not certain how this works or not, but it doesn't seem to hurt!! ;)
 
MLa February 21, 2019
I believe I have finally cracked the How-to-get-an-easy-peel problem. One day I decided to take a leaf from the recipe for tea eggs (cook eggs 6 minutes to hard boil, remove from water, crack shell all over lightly with back of spoon, add tea, soy & star anise to water, put eggs back in and boil some more). There's never, ever a problem peeling tea eggs. So I now boil the eggs, take them out of water, crack all over lightly with back of spoon, return to water for some more boil time. Let them cool - in cold water or not. And peel. Easy.
 
Brandy T. February 2, 2019
I always put eggs on cool water, and heated them with the water. Do not do this. Don't. Let water boil, add eggs. Cook, and drain immediately under cold water. When eggs have sat in cold water enough to be cold throughout, crack and roll over counter to create as many cracks as possible, and place back in cool water bath. Do this to all eggs, and start shelling with the first one. You'll see the shells start to slide off, i had a few that i split the shell in the middle and slid the top and bottom off. Tried the eggs in cold water to boil yesterday, those shells were horrible. Cold water cool, shell splits, and continued cold water immersion is key
 
Dm November 12, 2018
If you don’t have an egg piercer, use a safety pin. Poke a hole in the round end and drop in simmering water. You will see a little albumen come out which is the path the water takes to travel along the shell. It makes it almost full proof to peel easily. Learned this years ago on one of Julia’s shows.
 
Elaine H. November 9, 2018
Old eggs are always easy to peel, but fresh eggs are impossible! I struggled with this until I found out that if you lower your eggs into boiling water, they shell comes off easily.
 
Denise T. September 13, 2018
Haha! I've been doing it this way for years! It's so simple and easy!
 
Don T. January 16, 2018
Easier way is to just boil them, shut off the heat and let it cool in it’s own. Then crack the shells by gently bouncing them on the counter a few time. Then peel them. I just did. 5 seconds per egg.
 
Shae T. December 12, 2017
There are no hard and fast rules for preparing eggs and tell that it is ready. Only you have to follow the ideal procedure of cooking to get the desired result.

Gently place a layer of eggs in the saucepan
Keep enough space between them
Pour water into the saucepan up to an inch above egg
Put some salt to avoid cracking of shells
Heat it up for about 12 – 15 minutes
Turn off the burner
If you want more check the below link:
https://foodgear.org/hard-boiled-eggs-done/
 
GayleK70 August 10, 2017
I use my rice steamer and then the jar with water and lid method after cooling the eggs in ice water. 99.9% effective
 
Karen July 9, 2017
I've found the easiest way to get eggs to peel easily, regardless of how fresh they are is to steam them. I put them in my electric veggie steamer for 15 mins if the steamer is already hot, 25 mins if using a cold steamer. When they're done, I throw them into a pan of ice water until they've cooled enough to handle them, and peel with no problem. A pan with a steamer insert works just as well. If you do it this way, put in 1 inch of water and your steamer insert. Cover and bring to a boil, then add the eggs. Cover and cook for 12 mins. Works like a charm.
 
Beth June 29, 2017
How about if you want to keep the cooked eggs for several days before peeling them? They're harder to peel then, is there any special way to do it?
 
John P. August 24, 2018
Throw into a pot of very hot water. Let sit for a minute & peel. It all has to do with the contraction of the membrane, but I haven't figured it all out yet.
 
Lori J. March 19, 2019
Crack the shells on the inside edge of the sink, put egg under cold running water, and peel with ease!! Works every time!! Good luck!
 
Kathy W. June 28, 2017
I haven't read all the comments, so I don't know if this was mentioned, but I pressure cook my eggs. I have never had a problem peeling pressure-cooked eggs, no matter how fresh.
 
KC July 2, 2017
How long?
 
Kathy W. July 5, 2017
Place eggs in steamer basket and add at least a cup of water to the pressure cooker. Close up and set to High pressure. 4 minutes at High, then give it 5 minutes after that before releasing the pressure, then plunge into ice water for about 15 minutes.
 
Cynthia T. June 26, 2017
i love this it made no pain!, be careful if u dont find this recipe!.
 
Beth June 21, 2017
That's pretty much the way I do it, except I hold it under running water as I peel it. Dunk it in icewater first, though.
 
Jukes June 21, 2017
Smack, roll and slide. I learned this method from Mark Summers' show Unwrapped on food network from a lady working at a potato salad factory. She was doing about one every three seconds and was flying through hundreds of flats of boiled eggs. Take the egg, hold in palm, smack it gently but firmly against the vertical side of the sink, then press and roll it all the way around to the first side you smacked. Stick it in a bowl of water and slide the whole shell off. It is the fastest and most efficient way I've ever shelled boiled eggs.
 
J R. June 15, 2017
I use an egg piercer on the fat end of the egg. I believe it helps to separate the membrane from egg, making the shell come off in larger pieces.
 
Marie C. June 25, 2017
J Ryan: Where can I get an egg piercer????
 
J R. June 29, 2017
At least 6 major outlets. There is also a piercer/slicer combo.
 
J R. June 29, 2017
Just google it
 
John M. June 30, 2017
You can use a push pin, if you are careful.
 
Sonja H. June 5, 2017
After cooling, in the same pan add about 1-2 inches of water and the lid. Shake vigorously for one minute. Voila! Eggs practically peel themselves.
 
Charles T. June 4, 2017
Hard boil egg, then straight to ice bath. Place 2 or 3 eggs in a plastic jar with a lid. Fill jar half way with tap water, place lid on jar and shake vigorously, for about one minute, then peel eggs. Amazing.
 
Shirley I. June 3, 2017
Kenji Lopez-Alt Food Lab
http://www.seriouseats.com/2014/05/the-secrets-to-peeling-hard-boiled-eggs.html
FOOL PROOF HARD COOKED EGGS and THE PEEL!
 
Hilda May 5, 2017
Put half a teaspoon of bicarb in the boiling water with the eggs. Works wonderfully. Love my ladies fresh eggs and this helps with the peeling.
 
Marie C. May 3, 2017
I have tried all the methods, and still the egg don't peel like it should!! I stand trying to peel the egg ans swear at the same time!!! My Sheltie's love hard boiled eggs but it is a pain in the ars to peel them!!!
 
Pam June 25, 2017
Fresh eggs will never peel easy no matter what method used! For your pet and salads, cut the hard boiled egg in two and spoon out.
 
Brandy T. February 2, 2019
Fresh eggs can be peeled easily. I didn't believe it yesterday but I finally figured it out. Boil water first. Add eggs. Simmer, not hard boil. Cold water bath when done. Refresh cold water till eggs are fully cold. Then, crack and roll eggs on counter for bunches of shell cracks. Replace each in water. This lets water get between egg and shell for very easy removal. Complete for each egg, placing back in cold water, and start peeling the first one you cracked. I like boiled eggs again since I figured this out.
 
Pam W. May 2, 2017
I recently started cracking the egg all over. Then I peel a bit off the big end and work a teaspoon under the membrane and around the egg. A bit fiddly but an impeccably peeled egg.
 
cloroxat May 1, 2017
Let's all (posters) gather up somewhere in the middle of the country and have a boil/ steam off this fall. We can all bring a flat of eggs and get to work! I have tried every imaginable trick over the years and have found some excellent methods, but once in a blue moon any method will fail. I have used eggs as old as three months and as new as 3 minutes from the farm up the road...
 
SYLVIA W. May 1, 2017
I SWEAR A LOT........I TRIED THEM ALL....I STILL SWEAR........


 
Nicola P. April 28, 2017
All of the different suggestions found in these comments and the article all work sometimes, but not always. Only one this is foolproof. Steam don't boil the eggs for 12 minutes. When 12 minutes is up, drop into an ice bath for 5 minutes. Thank you, Alton Brown. Foolproof for over a year.
 
Penny B. April 18, 2017
I if the under water trick during Easter and my deviled eggs were perfect!!! Thanks!😁
 
Robyn April 17, 2017
For a perfectly boiled egg to peal smoothly every time, is start them off in boiling water. Yes, boiling water! Not cold water. Gently boil for about 12 minutes, then submerge in ice cold water. They peel perfectly every time. Does not matter if eggs are old or new. This trick works.
 
Kathy S. June 5, 2017
This is my way. Plus I add baking soda, a scant 1/4 ts poon before the boil , ice bath, cracked, and the peel slips off in the ice bath
 
Anne April 16, 2017
sorry, I've tried the underwater tSrick etc, it works on older eggs, but as we buy eggs from our local farmers market sometimes they are super fresh - and I sill haven't found a way: the peel comes off in irritating little tiny bits. But I'll try the shaking them in an airtight container...
 
Britta April 18, 2017
Plan ahead
 
KC July 2, 2017
Try the steaming method. I have found that works with our fresh eggs.
 
Debe April 15, 2017
Thanks for this....I tried the shaking bowl method other commenters mentioned, not so good. Peeling eggs can be tedious but the under water method just made it so quick. Again, love this and thanks!!
 
Henry H. April 15, 2017
I peel and egg by cooling the eggs down enough to handle, by filling the pot they are boiled in with cold tap water. Next, Crack the egg on the side of the sink. Finish cracking with your finger nail, following the center part of the egg. Go all the way around. Next, use your thumb to gently start peeling the egg under cold water. Once you have the center crap peeled, both ends will lift off like a lid.
 
Jonah April 15, 2017
I have tried many many techniques and the only one that has consistently worked for me is to heavily salt the boiling water.
 
ChefJune April 15, 2017
Can't believe I am just seeing this for the first time now! Maybe I will resume making deviled eggs with this technique to use. Thanks is not a good enough term... :D
 
Kathy B. April 15, 2017
I have found that using the method Joslyn has shared works perfectly for me. Shaking the eggs in a covered container that has some water in it is so easy! The eggs peel beautifully and no more sad looking pot marked eggs.
 
Sandra L. April 15, 2017
Put eggs in pot with water bring to a boil .Boil for 30 seconds.Turn down heat to low.Cover.Set timer for 12 minutes.Cool eggs in cool water.Peel.No need to run under water. Best way for tender easy peel eggs
 
Mariss June 4, 2017
Agreed- the slow cooking and sitting in hot water turned off works . Probably like the steam method. I'm a preschool teacher that occasionally has to peel someone else's hg are booked cooked eggs- who need to be enlightened- just can't think of a polite way to educate those parents - lol
 
Joslyn April 14, 2017
I boil 6 to 12 eggs, depending on how many I feel I'll need. Cool. peel and dry them, place them in a zip-lock bag with a few paper towels, and refrigerate. They last at least 5 days, if they aren't eaten before that.
 
Joslyn April 14, 2017
Here is an even easier and quicker way to peel eggs. Into a bowl with a tight fitting lid; place your cooled, hard boiled eggs and about a cup of water. Seal tightly, swiftly and firmly shake the bowl up and down about 10 times. Your eggs will practically fall right out of their shells!
 
Joslyn April 16, 2017
Make sure your hard boiled eggs are cooled before you use this method. I usually let eggs sit in cold water 10 to 15 minutes.
 
cookinalong April 14, 2017
Pressure cooker is the way to go. Either an Instant Pot or a regular old stove topmodel. Cook 6 minutes, plunge into cold water...They practically peel themselves and the yolks are a bright, sunny yellow without any dark green ring.
 
tamater S. April 14, 2017
Question: When do you put the eggs in the pressure cooker - when the water is boiling, and then put lid and timer on? Or put eggs in regular temperature water, put lid and time on?
 
Kestrel April 14, 2017
I completely agree with this! 5 minutes in the pressure cooker, and they practically peel themselves!
 
Kestrel April 14, 2017
For me, I use the regular set up. Use a steamer tray in the bottom of cooker, add a bit of water but not so much it covers the eggs. The steam will cook them-they don't need to be submerged.
 
DMStenlake April 15, 2017
Do you cover the eggs with water?
 
MRubenzahl April 16, 2017
No, not necessary to cover. Just an inch of water in the bottom.
 
SandyToes April 17, 2017
I agree with pressure cooking. I struggled for years, tried every trick in the book, and the most consistently easy to peel are pressure cooked, hands down. I cook them on a rack over about 1 cup of water (I don't measure) for 5 minutes on high, 6 minutes natural release, then plunge into ice water until cooled. Perfect every time. Because they cook and peel so easily, I now keep a bowl of hard-cooked eggs in the fridge all the time, ready for snacking or a quick bite to tide me over until dinner.

And if you haven't made potato salad under pressure yet, try it! Put eggs on top of potatoes, cook for 6 minutes and quick release. Chill the potatoes in the freezer, drop the eggs into ice water. While the eggs and potatoes are chilling, make your sauce, then peel the eggs and toss them all together. Fastest potato salad ever.
 
Beth April 14, 2017
Additional trick- instead of using vinegar, put about a spoonful of baking soda in the water in the boiling water. Then using ice bath and running cold water and peeling should be a snap.
 
Marjorie April 14, 2017
Similar to the steaming method, I have found that pressure cooking (I use an Instant Pot - just 2 minutes) before submerging in ice bath, makes peeling almost completely effortless.
 
PaulaE April 14, 2017
I just tried the steaming and spoon method. Worked perfectly. I'm at high elevation (almost 9,000 feet), so I steamed 6 eggs for almost 20 minutes, then ran cold water in the pan over the eggs for about 3 minutes. Then I rolled the eggs around in the pan after draining, cracking them a bit. Then I used a small spoon through one of the cracks, loosening the shell from the white. Fast and perfect.
 
Suzanne M. April 14, 2017
I do the spoon upside down takes the shell off with no blemishes
 
Khoi B. April 14, 2017
This is a mere basic kitchen technique that actually does not work. Good tricks that work are on YouTube.
 
Rosemarie W. April 14, 2017
Easiest for me after egg is hard I just crack the top of egg and insert a back of teaspoon and get it under shell comes off very easily I also use this method on oranges
 
Jill April 14, 2017
I boil the eggs with a little vinegar in the water. Then run them under cold water and let the water overflow the pot while I crack the egg all over the shell using the inside of the pot. Then I peel them under the running water while they are still lukewarm.
 
Sam April 14, 2017
You're right Bob...straight from Serious Eats and Kenji Lopez-works perfectly EVERY time!
 
Bob W. April 14, 2017
Sam, thanks for pointing me to Serious Eats. It looks very interesting. I discovered my recipe in Cook's Illustrated magazine published by America's Test Kitchen. Until I read the CI recipe and tried it, I was having pretty good luck bringing the water/ eggs to a boil, removing from heat for 12 minutes and, of course. finishing with an ice bath. Steaming Is by far superior to boiling. Pressure cooking the eggs sounds like the ultimate way to do it. But, that's for people who own pressure cookers.
 
Bob W. April 14, 2017
Here's a tip. Don't boil your eggs. Steam them for 13 minutes. You can use a steamer basket, as you would steam vegetables. When done, place the eggs in ice cold water for 10 - 15 minutes. This process causes the membrane to attach to the egg shell instead of the egg. Peeling under water is a good idea. To crack the eggs, I put 5 or 6 eggs in a pot and shake the pot back and forth on top of the stove or a cutting board. The eggs practically peel themselves.
 
Tom Q. April 14, 2017
Tap the hard boiled egg on both of the pointy ends and then roll them,using your palm with slight pressure. This cracks the shell all around, and makes it extremely easy to remove. Tom q
 
Karin B. April 14, 2017
Do not put the shells through your garbage disposal. They will settle into the grease in your pipes and become hard as concrete in areas where there is not enough pitch to assure a speedy downward flow. Trust me, I know!
 
brid April 14, 2017
Put them on the compost or in the wormery. In Britain anyway................
 
DMStenlake April 15, 2017
Eggshells in the garden!
 
Aimee M. April 14, 2017
I still swear by grandma's way: cool them with running cold water, crack 'em all around in your favorite way (mason jar with a little water or gently tapping the all around on cutting board) then separate the well cracked shell under running water. My kids and I make it a game: they "smash" (yes we have lost some over time) and I peel :)
 
Richard H. April 14, 2017
Absolutely the best way I've found is to place a steamer basket into a pot, bring it up to a full steam, place your eggs inside and cover steaming the eggs for 13 minutes. Transfer the eggs to an ice bath to cool and then peel. I've tried this method several times with excellent results.
 
btglenn April 14, 2017
Steaming the works for me as well - but I also crack them and let stand in water to cool before peeling.
 
les C. April 14, 2017
I use Thomas Keller`s method from ADD-HOC AT HOME,place eggs in pot,water to cover 1" .As soon as it starts to simmer for 7minutes then ice bath,put in a small jar with water ,shake and peel.
 
diana April 14, 2017
I've been boiling eggs every day for 3 yrs now and can say that the ice bath is key. The last step; of peeling while under room temp water, however is not needed. Eggs at room temp or close to it and boiling (but not in a rolling boil) in only 1" of water made a difference as well.
 
Pete April 14, 2017
Salt the water you boil them in. This let's them peal easily. If you don't believe boil without the salt. Then you'll see.
 
Rina S. April 14, 2017
Adding vinegar to the boiling water helps.
 
Penny B. April 14, 2017
The hard way.😂 I will definitely try this back this weekend. Maybe my eggs won't look like they have potholes. 😬
 
Nicola P. October 8, 2016
All these peeling methods are fine and useful but I have found that without exception, steaming the eggs and then plunging them into a ice water bath allows for shell-free peeling 99% of the time. Like nothing else.
 
Rebecca April 7, 2016
Under water, slide a smallish spoon under the shell. Works pretty much every time. :)
 
Pisanella April 14, 2017
Yes, that's how I have done it for many a year, even with eggs almost straight from my hens!
 
Boomdog02 March 25, 2016
I have found this method for peeling foolproof: submerge the hot cooked eggs into an ice bath, and gently crack them a bit on one of more of the sides. This allows the cold water to seep in between the hot egg and shell and separate them making peeling easy!
 
Ruth K. May 22, 2015
First of all, prick the eggs with an egg pricker on the WIDE or FAT end of the egg. That's the side where there is a bit of space between the shell and the membrane. Theoretically, it stops the eggs cracking whilst being cooked. When I peel them (under cold running water) I always crack that "fat/wide" side first. Usually works. Sometimes it's frustrating and doesn't work and some egg white breaks off.
 
NancyJ April 14, 2017
This works - if you don't have an egg pricker, try a thumbtack. The sturdiness helps you control the piercing - you only want to get through the shell a bit.
 
jc May 20, 2015
6 minutes in a pressure cooker and you get perfect hb eggs that peel easily.
 
cloroxat May 22, 2015
JC…you're dead on. I go 4 min. after it starts to jiggle, turn off the heat and let it sit 4 min. under pressure. Depressurize, then ice, or cold water 'til cool. Shell usually comes off in two pieces, sometimes, nearly in one piece….but….too many people are afraid of pressure cookers, and that's too bad.
 
Linda May 20, 2015
I put a small pin head hole in egg before boiling. Usually prevents cracking. After boiling drain and run cold water over them. When cool drain water and shake the eggs around in the pan till they are pretty cracked. They peel very easily after that. If you save the unpeeled eggs, just roll them on the counter till they crack. Then peel
 
Grace May 20, 2015
I steam my eggs. They peel slick even a month later. Much better than boiling them. I have not tried the oven method yet.
 
oregon C. May 20, 2015
Place your boiled egg in a jar with a lid & water. Shake for a few seconds. Shell peels right off. Kids love to help with this method.
 
Scott M. May 20, 2015
I've seen people do that with a coffee cup....over the sink with your fingers over the top to prevent excess water loss. Pretty neat looking.

 
Shelly L. May 17, 2016
For the passover holiday I have to peel three dozen eggs. So after hb I put in a large plastic container about 8 to 10 at a time with water. Place lid on tight, shake shake shake. Open lid and all your eggs are basically peeled and looking awesome.
 
Linda May 20, 2015
These ideas are great if you plan on using your eggs right after you boil them. If I have older eggs, in order to use them up I will boil a batch and then put them back in the refrigerator to eat over the next few days. I find them hard to peel. Is there a special trick to peeling boiled, x-days old, shell on eggs? Thanks.
 
Scott M. May 20, 2015
Linda........do you have a pressure cooker? I have three and use them ALL the time. So many people think they're dangerous, but all you have to do is ensure that the little pipe upon which the jiggler rests is clear of debris. If that's clear to vent, they're never any problem.
 
dan M. April 14, 2017
Hey scott, Are the eggs in the pressure cooker submerged or dry?
 
wallace T. April 18, 2015
Yes+,+this+does+work+as+Mom+showed+us+how+some+60+years+ago+....
 
klipster April 6, 2015
The best tip I've ever learned for peeling an egg is to use a teaspoon to slide on the inside of the shell with the concave face of the spoon facing the egg...

I imagine if you did this underwater as suggested in this tip, it would be even smoother...
 
Grace April 5, 2015
Years ago I watched a 'World Champion Egg Peeler'. He cracked both ends of the egg, then rolled it onto a hard counter top, cracking the whole shell. He then quickly peeled the lot of them. I use this method with about 98% success.
 
Rosa L. May 25, 2015
I crack the shells that way also. Then I start at the large end where there is usually a small air pocket, hold the egg under running water, insert the bowl of a teaspoon between the membrane and the egg and the shell come right off with about your same rate of success. Plus it is faster to me than peeling it with my fingers.
 
Alicia April 4, 2015
I tried this. Also tried the baking them in the oven method that's also on this site. I'm going back to my old way.
 
cloroxat November 9, 2014
I've worked this problem for years. the best and most reliable method is to put your eggs in a pressure cooker on a rack that suspends the eggs just a 1/2 " above the bottom of the cooker. Close 'er up and turn on the heat. As soon as the little rocker on top starts to jiggle, let them cook for four minutes. After four minutes of cooking (jiggling), turn off the fire and let them rest.
After four more minutes with the fire out, remove the pot to the sink, run cold water over the pot to depressurize it. I promise you that every egg you cook this way will peel mostly in one piece, or at most two pieces. I've run dozens of dozens through, old and young eggs, and they all peel perfectly. you might get a little green around the yolk, but not much…just try it…..
 
Bet August 31, 2014
I tried steaming them after reading about it here and on another food website that rhymes with Mysterious Beets, lol. Steam for 12 minutes and then put into ice water. It worked perfectly. Thanks for all the tips!
 
meg April 6, 2015
What rhymes with mysterious beets?
Why is out a secret? Serious eats?
They cite Alton Brown here all the time.
 
willie4u August 15, 2014
I draine the hot water from the pot. Then I use the back of a table spoon and crack all the eggs on all sides. I then run very COLD water in a bowl and put all the eggs in at the same time--make sure enough water is in the bowl to cover the eggs completely! Wait 20-30 mins to let the cold water separate the shells from the inner egg. Then you can almost always peel the shell away in one long peel! Works every time for me!!
 
Jerry August 15, 2014
I also peel them under running water. The water pressure helps the shell release from the egg. I also I break the shell all over. It seems to help.
 
Mildred L. August 15, 2014
I boil 2 dozen eggs at a time. Put eggs in a large pot of cold water, bring them to a rolling boil, turn the fire off, cover the pot with a tight fitting lid ,set the timer for 20 min. When timer rings pour off hot water, run cold water over eggs for a few min. pour off cold water, now shake the pot up & down till all the eggs are cracked ,cover the eggs with a little water, the shells just roll off. Also no green rings inside the egg.
 
Janice August 4, 2014
I boil my eggs for 10-15 minutes depending how many I have. I place them in a bowl with cold water (you can add a few cubes of ice). Wait 10 minutes. Crack each egg on the ends and roll them on a cutting board (hard surface). Start peeling on the round end of egg. I usually pinch the shell and it comes right off in a strip.
 
samsung August 4, 2014
by the way, starting with salted water is good as the salt permeates the eggshell and membrane to some extent making the eggs somewhat pre salted and pricking the large end makes them rounder... also be mindful never to overcook, usually 10 mins. is more than enough... when cooling do so in the same pot of salted water, first adding extra salt and stirring for a moment to disiolve and the adding crushed ice until you have cold water. do this in the sink or a basin as you will have some overflow with the melt and then allow eggs to sit until cold in the ice bath. then refridgerate until needed and they stay sterile in the shell until peeled. best peeled at cool room temperature for eating whole, peel cold for egg salad.
 
samsung August 4, 2014
i learned by watching the movie "Angel Heart" and seeing Robert Deniro gently crush the shell by rolling it and then peeling back the shell in a strip around the egg... many friends impressed at the dinner table when served unpeeled hard-boiled eggs...
 
cherrylipgloss August 4, 2014
I drain the hot water carefully out of the pot and immediately dispense crushed ice into the pot. Let sit for about ten minutes or until eggs are cold. Crack and peel easily.
 
marianne August 1, 2014
After I boil my eggs, I put them in the freezer until the egg feels cool(about 30 minutes) and the shell slides right off with no problem. They do not get frozen in that length of time.
 
Jeanne P. July 31, 2014
When the eggs are about boiled, I remove them one at a time with a slotted spoon and over the stainless steel sink with cold running water smack them on the hard on the side of the sink. I roll them, pressing until the shell is in many tiny pieces. The egg, still under running water, will usually separate from the membrane and there you have it ! Once in awhile there will be one stubborn egg that won't separate easily, but most will. Happy egg salad ! (one of my favorites)
 
Anita July 20, 2014
Oh, sorry! You put the vinegar in the water in which you cook the eggs.
 
Anita July 20, 2014
However you cook them, and however you peel them, the addition of a teaspoon or so of plain, white vinegar makes the peeling job even easier.
 
Frances C. July 17, 2014
i peel them under running water from the faucet...it works. kind of the same idea. i crack them all over first, then peel under the faucet.
 
Tom H. July 16, 2014
Boil the water before putting the eggs in. That's all there is to it and it works every time. Shells often come off in two pieces.
 
Dave A. July 11, 2014
boil our eggs...empty the hot water fill with cold water...the water will take on the moderated tempreture of the hot eggs...turn on luke warm water gently roll eggs between your palms under the tap water back and forth...the shells slide off almost in one piece
 
James T. July 2, 2014
I think I saw this being done on Iron Chef America once (or maybe it was an episode of The Next Iron Chef). And I think the chef was Michael Chiarello. I've been doing it that way ever since. But I think the real key to peeling a hard-boiled egg is how it is cooked. I learned the pinhole trick from a friend who read Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything cookbook. For those unfamiliar with this technique, you simply get your water simmering first. Then carefully tap (I use the end of a butter knife) the blunt end of a thin needle until the pointed end pierces the shell. I leave the eggs in the carton for this. And you're supposed to pierce the broad end of the egg, so flip them over, if necessary. Then carefully lower the egg(s) into the simmering water. Cook for 12 minutes, uncovered. Then immediately plunge into a prepared ice bath for 5 minutes. Peel the eggs in the ice bath. I have the least amount of problems when following this technique.
 
PaulaE May 13, 2014
My miracle method, found somewhere online: Boil water first, lower to a high simmer, slip eggs one by one into the water from a large spoon. Adjust to a low simmer, cover and cook for 11 minutes. Run cold water into the hot water for a bit, then drain most of the water out of the pan. Put the lid back on and shake vigorously. I mean REALLY vigorously. You'll find that most of the shells have come off almost completely. I then rinse each egg in running water to get the small bits of shell off. Works like a charm, and the yolks are sunny yellow.
 
James T. July 2, 2014
Hmm...I've heard many different methods. "Shake vigorously...". This one is new to me. I might have to give that a try just out of plain curiosity.
 
James A. April 16, 2014
Eggs ARE personal. I prick the air bubble end with a thumbtack so as to have an egg shaped egg without the flat end. Then plunge them into boiling salted water returning to the boil and shutting off the fire and letting them sit for 15 minutes. Then I roll the eggs while still warm to crack the entire shell and peel them under a trickle of cold running water.
 
James T. July 2, 2014
Salted water, eh? Interesting!
 
Ileana M. April 14, 2014
I peel my eggs the same way! So much easier in a bowl of water. The shell comes off more easily and in bigger pieces.
 
Mike April 13, 2014
I usually plan to peel as soon as they are cooked. I put my eggs in a full boil pot of water straight from the refrigerator. This puts a crack in the shell allowing water inside the shell. When cooked I dump all the hot water out, run cold water until they are easy to handle and the shells all but fall off.
 
Susan February 9, 2014
This is the only way I've found to peel fresh-from-the-chicken-this-morning (or even last week) eggs. The cracking and submerging makes all the difference.
 
SFchef January 21, 2014
How do I make hard boiled eggs that wont get stinky in the lunchbox when its opened?
 
MRubenzahl January 21, 2014
My guess is you're overcooking them. I use a pressure cooker (which makes them easy to peel) and there are a billion methods.

The one most experienced cooks seem to use doesn't actually boil them. Place in cold water, bring to boil, turn off. Leave for ten minutes (some say 12 minutes, some say less - experiment). Then cool in an ice water bath.

 
shoestringmama January 20, 2014
Genius! Worked like a charm even on the wickedly fresh eggs we're lucky to get.
 
Christina P. January 19, 2014
We just started steaming our eggs, and old or fresh, they peel amazingly well.
 
Jenny G. January 17, 2014
I've always found it easier to peel eggs if they can rest overnight in the frig after cooking them.
 
James T. July 2, 2014
Haha, ain't nobody got time for that. Actually, that saves lots of time the next morning! Good tip.
 
Christiane K. January 17, 2014
I boil my eggs with 3 spoons of salt. Wash them down in cold water once ready, doesn't matter if it's soft boiled or hard boiled and then just peel away. No need to soak them under water or nothing. The shell should slide right off, sometimes even in one single pull. :)
 
Blonddee January 17, 2014
Once cooked and cool, crack the shell and start the peel. Then stick the bowl of a teaspoon under the shell, turn the spoon around, under the shell and voila.
 
James T. July 2, 2014
Wow, never heard of that one before! Good tip. I might try this next time.
 
PaigeBakes January 17, 2014
That's how I peel them learned from trial and error in making large quantities of deviled eggs!
 
MRubenzahl January 17, 2014
My comment on baking soda was overly terse. Here's the experiment I did.

I had two batches of eggs, one old, one fresher, and boiled three batches. One in water; one in a low dose of baking soda (1/2 tablespoon, if I recall correctly) , one in a higher concentration (3 tablespoons?). The higher concentration was truly awful. It affected the taste of the eggs and in one egg that had a crack, it was nasty!

There was no difference in the difficulty of peeling any of the batches. I know many, many others report success, including outfits I trust.

Now, here's an important fact: Several articles I have read, including in Cook's Illustrated, have reported huge variability in ease of peeling. J. Kenji Lopez Alt reports of the Cook's Illustrated experience (he was there at the time), "Not a single (method) worked perfectly every time - some eggs just seem stubborn no matter what you do to them - but the most consistent method was to shock them in ice water immediately after cooking, then peeling them under cool running water." So I think my experiment needs to be done on a much larger sample before I condemn baking soda.

Here is America's Test Kitchen / Cook's Illustrated's method: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKpCGD5IpcU

And Serious Eats tacked the topic with the usual thoroughness: http://www.seriouseats.com/2009/10/the-food-lab-science-of-how-to-cook-perfect-boiled-eggs.html

And again, I use the pressure cooker, and the shells come of practically by themselves.
http://feedme.typepad.com/my_weblog/2012/02/easy-peel-boiled-eggs-from-a-pressure-cooker.html
 
Kenza S. January 16, 2014
Thank you! Now this is really useful. I have shared it with friends.
Kenza. (http://figandlemon.wordpress.com)
 
Duane January 16, 2014
boiling water 10 minutes with salt pour out and cold water then peel underwater
 
Cherry W. January 16, 2014
Boil water then add eggs. Boil gently for 10 mins. Place saucepan with eggs under cold water & run till cold, tipping hot water out as you go. take eggs out one at a time, knock on hard surface to crackle all over then return to cold water in pan. Then peel each egg, easy peasy. Once an end piece of shell has come off I roll the egg between my hands so water runs between the membrane and the egg. This makes it very easy to peel.
Don't leave eggs in cold water, or any water for too long before you peel them. You will have a grey edge to the yolk. Nothing wrong with that but personally I don't like it visually.
 
Celeste R. January 16, 2014
I steam my eggs. Old or new, doesn't matter. Steamer basket, put em in when water is boiling. 10 minutes, take them out, and you're done. No ice water, cool down, nothing. They'll be PERFECTLY done when they cool and peel like a third degree sunburn. Try it!
 
James T. July 2, 2014
A 3rd degree burn would probably remove the flesh as well, but I know what you mean. :)
 
Stacey January 16, 2014
How do you peel a soft-boiled egg?
 
MRubenzahl January 16, 2014
Same methods work, in my experience. But now I use the pressure cooker for soft boiled, too, and again, the peels come off without effort.
 
MRubenzahl January 16, 2014
I cook my eggs in a pressure cooker. They peel like magic. The shells just about fall off. Even if the eggs are fresh.

My article on this: http://feedme.typepad.com/my_weblog/2012/02/easy-peel-boiled-eggs-from-a-pressure-cooker.html
 
James T. July 2, 2014
A tool I must soon [buy and] get familiar with.
 
Katherine January 16, 2014
Posts like this fascinate me. I always assumed that everyone peels eggs (and satsumas) in the same way. Cool egg in a bowl of cold water or howevere you prefer. Tap gently on a flat work surface to cause the shell to break and fragment. Roll gently using the palm of your hand against the work surface. This loosens the shell whilst it's still attached to the membrane and then it just peels right off. Just like when you peel a satsuma!
 
Maria F. January 16, 2014
I tried adding a tsp of baking soda to the cold water before boiling. It worked great!! Since it was only my first time trying...I will surely try it again. For now, I'm happy with my perfect looking deviled eggs!
 
Abi M. January 16, 2014
I add baking soda to the boiling water.
 
carswell January 16, 2014
I've always peeled my eggs this way.
 
AntoniaJames January 16, 2014
I've done it that way as long as I can remember, the only difference being that I use a large dishpan in my sink into which I run filtered cold water. I plunge the just-cooked eggs into the pan, all the while running the cold water. I don't wait for the eggs to cool very much - just enough to handle. If making a large batch, thus warming up the water in the dishpan, I pour off some of it and replace it with cold. (Otherwise, I just leave the cold water running as long as necessary to keep the water cool.) When done peeling, I scoop all the large pieces of eggshell and put them into the green waste bin; the tiny bits go into the disposal with the drained water. Game on! ;o)
 
Phyllis G. January 16, 2014
have you tried the baking soda trick? i never have. keep meaning to. add 1 teaspoon baking soda to the water. helps albumen separate from shell. i just wonder if it permeates the shell and flavors the egg. i find it particularly hard to peel my 5-minute eggs because they are so fragile. i'll try this trick, kenzi!
 
MRubenzahl January 16, 2014
Tried the baking soda trick. Total fail.
 
Kenzi W. January 16, 2014
I've tried it! The results weren't magical enough for me to do it again, and the water has a kind of off smell to it. I think that McGee wrote about how the water actually does permeate -- so there's that, too.
 
Joy B. January 16, 2014
I crack the egg all over on a hard surface, then wedge a soup spoon underneath a crack and peel -- it works amazingly well.
 
Catherine L. January 16, 2014
Love both these ideas! Now I can stop mangling every egg I boil. It just doesn't taste as good when it's a gory mess...
 
Kenzi W. January 16, 2014
I've never tried that! On the list.