Egg
The Prettiest Pickled Egg Recipe You Ever Did See, Thanks to Veggies
The sharp, punchy pow your egg salad has been missing
Photo by James Ransom
Popular on Food52
38 Comments
Ashley B.
October 21, 2020
You should note that adding baking soda to the brine will raise the pH, and so those aren't technically "pickled" eggs as bad bacteria can grow in a less acidic environment. Those ones should be eaten much sooner than normal pickled eggs, probably within a week.
Bob F.
November 15, 2019
Colored pickled eggs are fun, but how do I pickle them and have them remain pure white? Using pickling spice turns them kinda gray (some have suggested because of the cloves in the spice)
Brinda A.
February 18, 2020
Hi Bob! I'd guess if you used a neutral-colored aromatic, like white onion or garlic, to pickle the eggs, you won't get discoloration. Hope this helps!
Lynda L.
March 18, 2019
I must have gotten way more juice out of my red cabbage because i needed 2 tbsp of baking soda to turn the solution blue! I did get some lovely lavender purple eggs the first try. I was wondering if it would make green if i mixed some blue cabbage dye with yellow tumeric dye, so i'll be trying that out once my blue eggs are done :-D
Paul E.
January 23, 2019
I LOVE pickled eggs! I have been doing the beet eggs for years! I have never seen the blue or orange ones WOW! I love to add onions&garlic(they are both very yummy plan or on or in something) another thing I do is some kind of hot sauce. I have done Sriracha, chili paste, red pepper flakes, and Tabasco sauce. All add far less heat then you might think. So if your a chili head like me add more then you think you need!7
Sarah W.
January 14, 2018
How would the infused balsamics work in the vinegar bath? We have a store the sells both infused white and traditional balsamics, and might have some that enhances the flavors used for the dye.
Emily G.
May 4, 2017
Can I brine them in a Rubbermaid container? Does it have to be glass?
Emma L.
May 7, 2017
I've personally only used glass, but a plastic container should be fine! Just be mindful about how hot the brine is when you transfer the liquid there.
Paul E.
January 23, 2019
I have use plastic, no problem, it can stain the plastic. I like the glass better because they look so nice in the jar. In fact I bought 1/2 gal Mason jars just to do my eggs in. (I have chickens, and I LOVE pickled eggs!)
Jennifer P.
April 17, 2017
I made these a day before Easter, then made colored deviled "easter eggs" to bring to my in-laws house. They were a hit! especially because I shredded carrots and purple cabbage as "grass" to lay the eggs on. I found, to avoid super pickling, as I just really wanted the color, that I added more sugar to remove the vinegary flavor. The tumeric flavors the eggs, and is not tasty, so added less of that, a bit more prepared yellow mustard. Blue was hard to get, but the lavender color from the cabbage was wonderful! Thanks for this recipe! I had so much fun with it!
Em C.
April 9, 2017
There's no way the yolks are "curing" as described. The whites for sure. However, if the color isn't making it to the yolks than nothing else in the brining solution is.
Paul E.
January 23, 2019
If you leave the eggs in long enough it will even color the yokes. I make the best pickled eggs all the time! Tea will give the egg a nice color too. In China they call them marble eggs, they crack the shell and let them soak in a strong tea with some spices. I would have to look up the recipe, but they are called "marble eggs"
Paul E.
January 23, 2019
Oops "best" should say "beet" I do think my eggs are the best however. Just sayn'
Virginia M.
March 7, 2020
Paul E.
Here's the Marbled Tea Egg recipe, from a Taiwanese epicure I met:
Tea bath:
10 bags black tea, black peppercorns, black sesame seeds, bay leaves, brown sugar, apple cider vinegar, black soy sauce, regular soy sauce, salt to taste.
At least 18 eggs, hardboiled, cooled, then gently crack shells to create marbling.
Add crackled eggs to brine: leave in large lidded pot for 8 hrs on lowest heat. The longer the better, and overnight best.
Last hr, add 1 bottle Coca Cola, let this finish pickling process.
You may add more sugar and salt to brine, to adjust to a nice tangy flavor.
Refrigerate in sealed jars, and the brine can be used as a cooking sauce too. The aroma is REMARKABLE!
Here's the Marbled Tea Egg recipe, from a Taiwanese epicure I met:
Tea bath:
10 bags black tea, black peppercorns, black sesame seeds, bay leaves, brown sugar, apple cider vinegar, black soy sauce, regular soy sauce, salt to taste.
At least 18 eggs, hardboiled, cooled, then gently crack shells to create marbling.
Add crackled eggs to brine: leave in large lidded pot for 8 hrs on lowest heat. The longer the better, and overnight best.
Last hr, add 1 bottle Coca Cola, let this finish pickling process.
You may add more sugar and salt to brine, to adjust to a nice tangy flavor.
Refrigerate in sealed jars, and the brine can be used as a cooking sauce too. The aroma is REMARKABLE!
Ilene
April 6, 2017
For blue eggs; I used about half the brining/pickling mix for 4 eggs. I then added some blue food coloring (the neon blue shade), about 4-5 drops. I submerged the eggs fully and refrigerated them covered. I made 2 eggs marbled and the other 2 all blue. I believe they will be a hit!
Steve H.
April 5, 2017
Just shared this on the Facebook page of Eggpub.com, hopefully it will be tried by a few more people.
Frederique M.
April 5, 2017
ooooooh! I make lactofermented beets and red cabbage saurkraut and I ALWAYS keep the sour probiotic liquid they were in in the back of my fridge to make vinegrettes with.. would that work? I have a bright fushia liquid in my fridge now that was made from lactofermented chiogia beets with mustard seeds, peppercorn and fennel seeds... definately could be a winner!
Emma L.
April 7, 2017
Yum! That sounds like my kind of vinaigrette :-) I definitely think that could work! Maybe heat the liquid first, though, to help introduce its bright color to the eggs.
Frederique M.
April 7, 2017
HMMM... would like lukewarm or warmish work? I'd hate to kill the probiotics in the liquid! They would be a happy and healthy gut occurrence in these pretty eggs !
Emma L.
April 7, 2017
It should! I tested the recipes with very hot liquid, but I imagine there's a sweet spot between lively probiotics and effective dye. Let me know if you try!
Frederique M.
May 5, 2017
I come back with results! I ended up using the cold lactofermented liquid without heating it at all, and left them submerged (I had to use skewers to keep them from floating up) for a good week (I think it was 7-8 days).
The results were a greyish lavender, which was strange as the liquid was fushia to begin with. Cut up on a salad they were really pretty and the flavour was AMAZING! Really smooth, tangy, earthy from the beets and the yolks almost seemed to be deviled they were so creamy! I have never had pickled eggs before, so I was scared, but they were amazing!
Wish I could send photos! :)
The results were a greyish lavender, which was strange as the liquid was fushia to begin with. Cut up on a salad they were really pretty and the flavour was AMAZING! Really smooth, tangy, earthy from the beets and the yolks almost seemed to be deviled they were so creamy! I have never had pickled eggs before, so I was scared, but they were amazing!
Wish I could send photos! :)
Paul E.
January 23, 2019
I make the beet eggs all the time and dont usually pour it over hot. The color gets in no problem. Keep them on the fridge!!
Allison W.
April 5, 2017
I love this and I'm going to try it, but I'm compelled to observe I've found absolutely no method better for hard-cooked eggs than steaming them. I put them straight from the steamer to an ice water bath, and the eggs are *much* easier to peel. The only other technique I've found useful is to age the eggs a few days before hard-cooking.
Paul E.
January 23, 2019
Steaming works great!! 13 min for hard boiled, from a min or 2 for softer yoke. They dont crack, the youk doesn't turn green and yes they are much easier to peel! Also use older eggs. I raise chickens and don't even try to boil one fresh off the nest, but ones that fresh are perfect for poached eggs!
Jackson F.
April 4, 2017
My grandmother makes pickled beets and eggs every Easter. This made me crave hers so badly!
M
April 4, 2017
Can't wait to try this. This looks like a really great way to enjoy the Easter colours beyond the egg display and pile of shell crumbs.
But let's be honest -- it's a recipe! There are exact measurements, cooking times, etc, even if it's not separate from the body of the article.
But let's be honest -- it's a recipe! There are exact measurements, cooking times, etc, even if it's not separate from the body of the article.
Jennifer
April 3, 2017
Love this--so old school! My parents refused to eat beets--but made, and loved,eggs pickled in beet cooking liquid. All these tricks, from turmeric to red cabbage, are ones I grew up with in the 60s & 70s! Love it!
Rachelwrites
April 3, 2017
Perfect for a spring brunch!
Debi
April 5, 2017
PURPLE
Red cabbage is the chameleon of the vegetable world. Boil it in water and you get a deep purple liquid. But play with the pH level (how basic or acidic the solution is) and you can go from blue to green to pink. Because pickle brine is vinegar-based, you need some baking soda to balance the solution from magenta to lavender. It will fizz and fuss, but that’s just right.
2 cups shredded red cabbage
1 tablespoon caraway seeds
2 3/4 teaspoons baking soda
Red cabbage is the chameleon of the vegetable world. Boil it in water and you get a deep purple liquid. But play with the pH level (how basic or acidic the solution is) and you can go from blue to green to pink. Because pickle brine is vinegar-based, you need some baking soda to balance the solution from magenta to lavender. It will fizz and fuss, but that’s just right.
2 cups shredded red cabbage
1 tablespoon caraway seeds
2 3/4 teaspoons baking soda
delana
April 5, 2017
Yeah, how about the blue eggs? They are the prettiest and the ONLY reason I clicked on this bait.
Sarah J.
April 7, 2017
Sorry for the confusion! The header for "purple" actually instructs how to make blue eggs—those are the instructions we followed to get the pretty blue eggs in the picture.
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