[Updated] There are about as many techniques for hard-boiling eggs as there are eggs out there, but until 2017, I used the method my mother taught me because it never fails: Submerge a large egg in enough cold water to cover it and bring the water to a boil over medium-high heat. Once it begins to boil, set a timer for 10 minutes. Plunge the egg into cold water to get it to stop cooking. Plus, cold eggs are much easier to peel.
However, the trickiest part was always knowing when the water starts to boil. How would you if you weren’t standing over watching it, and we all know how that goes. In 2017, I realized that I could gently lower an egg into already boiling water and do almost exactly what’s written above — cook it for 10 minutes then plunge it into cold water, except now I use ice water and let it rest in there until it’s completely cold through, about 15 minutes — and it not only perfectly boils and egg, no pot-watching required, but it seemed to peel even more easily. I wondered if there was any science to it and whoa, there is.
Both my mom’s method and this new one work splendidly, and I promise will work for you, but I’m now fully converted to the newer method, because it’s easier and easier to peel.
Hard-Boiled Eggs
- Bring a pot of water deep enough to cover large eggs, cold from the fridge, to a boil.
- Gently lower egg(s) into it. Definitely use a spoon and don’t assume you can gently drop it with your fingers. Trust me, this leads to burnt fingers and cracked eggs.
- Cook for 10 minutes, or, if you’re me, only 9 because you want eggs that look like the top picture here, a little darker in the center. You can lower the heat to a simmer if you wish, but I find it has no effect on the final egg.
- Plunge them in ice water until they’re fully cold, about 15 minutes. If the ice melts, add more to ensure the water stays very cold.
- Eggs should peel easily but if they gives you any resistance, peel them under running water.
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Yay! I googled hard boiled eggs and smittenkitchen. I knew you could tell me how long for hard boiled eggs!
Does the required time change depending on the number of eggs you are hard boiling?? I did it yesterday with 4 and they came out perfect (….thank you!). Now I am doing 10 or more, but wasn’t sure. Thanks!
It should not. But, of course, you’ll want a big pot with lots of water.
Do you turn the heat off once the water boils?
No, you keep it! I wasn’t sure too, but then I read #3 in recipe description.
My wife insists that putting the lid on the pot has no effect on the time it takes to boil water. She won’t change her ways unless you say otherwise. So, who’s right?
That’s a pretty simple one to prove.
1- Is this recipe for eggs just taken out of the fridge or do they need to come to room temp?
2- Is the water at a real boil the entire 9 minutes or just a simmer?
Eggs Should NEVER be kept in the fridge.
In the U.S. commercial eggs should always be kept in the fridge, because producers wash off the protective cuticle. If you have backyard chickens or live somewhere this isn’t done, then you can keep them at room temp. However, it isn’t safe to do so with commercial eggs here in the U.S.
That washing is government mandated over here too.
Actually, once you bring the fully-submerging water to a boil from tap temp you can turn off the stove and wait 12 min to put the egg in ice water–a tender fully-cooked egg.
I learned this method years ago. It works every time.Thanks for reminding us.
I steam my eggs, then follow that with an ice bath when they’ve steamed for 9 mins (for a slightly jammy yolk), with the same excellent results. You can time them perfectly, and they peel like magic. And I never suffer that moment of anxiety when I lower the egg slowly into boiling water… because sometimes… sometimes they will crack.
Me too and I skip the ice bath if the eggs aren’t super fresh.
Deb, I don’t know if you will ever try this, but if you do, I know it will change how you boil eggs AGAIN. This method basically steams the eggs, uses way less water, and also results in eggs that peel very easily.
1) Add about 1 inch to a pot and bring to a boil
2) Add eggs (as little or as many as you want) and cover lid. Don’t adjust the heat
3) After 8-11 mins (depending on how cold your eggs were and how you like your eggs) turn off the heat and remove the eggs from the water. You DON’T have to put them in a water bath.
That’s it!! I really hope you give it a shot!
I have used this method for years. Works like a dream.
I only steam now. Check out Kenji Lopez-Alt at Serious Eats for perfect instructions.
How do you have I inch of water boiling for 11 minutes and not evaporate?
This just doesn’t sound right…even for steaming.
My grandmother always used the pasta utensil to submerge and retrieve the eggs. Works pretty darn well.
I got this from Rachel Ray: the easiet, best way ever to hard boil an egg is to STEAM THEM. Bring water to boil in a pot with a steamer basket in it. When it starts to boil, place your eggs in the basket and cover and let steam for 12 minutes. Run cold water into the pot when done. You will NEVER have a problem peeling these eggs. The shells practically slip right off. Try it!
Tried this method yesterday. Perfect results. No cracked shells which always happened when I cooked the eggs in boiling water.
Do they have to be in a single layer, or can just put as many as fit in the steamer basket?
Try this- use the trivet in the instant pot. One cup of water.
Then..:.5,5&5. 5 mins on high pressure, 5 mins natural release, 5 mins in an ice bath. Hard boiled egg peeling perfection!!!!!! 🎉🎉❤️
Just made eggs with this method–perfection!!
When I submerge my eggs in the icy bath, I let them crack a little bit, on the notion that the differential temperature will suck in a thin layer of water between the egg and the shell, which renders them almost self-peeling.
I agree that this is THE best way! I do often get a cracked egg or two but they’re still usable. Super easy to peel and perfect every Time!
The vibrations from the boiling water cracked my eggs against the pot.
Oh no! I tend to use a small pot and they’re fairly packed in there. You can absolutely turn the heat down to a simmer; I haven’t found it makes any difference in cooking time or had any effect on the eggs in the end, positive or negative.
Steam! I do them in an ancient double boiler with a handled steamer top. Bring water to boil, plop steamer top on, cover. Set time for 11 minutes. Remove top, dump hot water out from bottom, fill with water and ice, tip eggs in, chill.
I use a pressure cooker to hard boil eggs. They turn out perfectly every time.
I swear by this method. I do turn the water down so it’s not a rolling boil to avoid cracking. I also read that the age of the egg effects peeling.
I’ve been using the place eggs in boiling water then take off the heat and let them
Sit in the pot of water for 15 mins. Perfectly cooked, not rubbery, over or undercooked. Zero egg smell. Good luck!
My way: I only use Jumbo eggs. Put refrigerated eggs in a pot and fill with cold water. Place over a burner (gas) with flame at medium. Set timer for a shallow 20 minutes and leave well enough alone. (If you find the water is boiling too rapidly and making noise about half way thru, (Sometimes I think the dial creeps up,) then turn it down. Otherwise don’t do a thing until the timer goes off. Then pour out the boiling water and run a spray of cold water on the eggs in the sink, not in the pot, for a minute or two. Go about your business. They are easy to peel 97% of the time, hot or cold. And they are perfect, no grey rings around the yolks. The Brown shelled eggs are more beautiful in the shell but they have a tougher membrane which makes them HARD to peel.
I use a 2-quart pot that works with a Countertop Induction Cooker unit. The pot holds 7 eggs very neatly. Important to use old eggs because the shells come off much easier than new eggs. Set the timer for 12 minutes; start with cold eggs from the fridge and cold tap water. Power high (10) until the water boils, usually less than 2 minutes. Turn power down to 3 or 2.5 for a bare simmer. Come back in a few hours, peel the (cool) eggs under running comfortable-temp tap water.
Better: A steamer basket that is a pot with vent holes, sits on a support trivet in the Instant Pot cookpot. Fill the pot to the bottom of the steamer basket with water. Holds up to 12 eggs. Lid is a heavy dinner plate to hold in the steam and create a bare trace of pressure. Bring to boil on stovetop, reduce heat to barely make steam. Set cell phone timer for 30 or 40 minutes. Turn off heat when the cell phone reminds. Return in a few hours and peel the eggs under running tap water. These steamed eggs peel super easy.
Gonna try using the Induction Unit with my iron plate “adapter” for pots that won’t othewise work on the Induction unit. Get the Instant Pot inner pot making steam, reduce power, set the Induction Unit timer for that 45 minutes and come back eventually.
Would be simpler to learn to use the Instant Pot? Maybe someday.
It’s easy to see I don’t get excited about hard-boiling eggs or worry about them when they are done. I am allergic to undercooked eggs and deliberately overcook them on purpose. I usually have some hard-boiled eggs in the fridge in a Zip-Lock.
Quick meals. Cut cold hard-boiled egg in half lengthwise; a spoonful of: Sriracha if I am in the mood; Thousand Islands makes an instant almost-Deviled egg; a teaspoon of Lea & Perrins (Worcestershire Sauce), or Soy Sauce on the yolks for a nice ultra-quick snack or meal.
I’m here to declare that this method is perfect– been using it since you first published it, Deb. And I’ve found that I can easily lower five eggs simultaneously into the boiling water with my spider tool.
We made Salade Nicoise on Saturday w/ grilled tuna, so we turned to Alice Waters for the egg (how did I know you would teach us the proper way to make a HB, excuse me, as Alice says, “hard-cooked” egg). ‘Room temperature lg eggs, bring a pot to boil. Turn down to simmer, gentle lower eggs into water w/ slotted spoon. Keep water just below a simmer for 9 min. Lift eggs out and plunge into ice water bath. When cool to touch, crack all over.’ I never liked HC eggs before these. Of course, my husband loves all.
Seriously? It’s a hard boiled egg. Did our moms get an ice bath for them?
If you’d like to eat it 10 to 15 minutes later, not hot and gross, yes.
Haha. My mother (who was born in 1916) always put them in a cold water bath. So yes. Yes, our moms did.
I agree with some of the comments. 7 of 13 of ours cracked as we put them in. Going back to my old method.
We use this method with one adjustment: eggs cold out of the fridge tend to crack very easily when they hit the boiling water, so we put ours in a bowl of warm tap water while the pot comes up to the boil, just to warm them up a little first. For firm yolks we only do 7-8 minutes, so it’s a little faster too.
Yes, Albert, they did. At least, mine did, as did my grandmother.
It’s a miracle! I tried this method this morning and will always use it to prepare hard boiled eggs. You are indeed a cook to copy 😍
Haha, I can only eat a hard-boiled egg if it’s hot. Cold ones, when not in a salad, just gross me out.
If you put a tablespoon of vinegar in the water, it helps prevent the shells from cracking when you lower the egg in. It helps!
I poke a hole in the large end first. I do all the Deb steps. Then I crack them lightly in the ice bath so the water gets under the shells.
I’ve always used a similar method:
1. Place as many eggs as you want in a pot.
2. Add cold tap water till all are eggs about 1/2”-1” covered.
3. Put lid on pot and bring to a rolling boil
4. Turn of the pot, leave covered:
2 min for soft boiled (aka 2 min egg)
6 min for medium boiled (aka ramen egg)
10 min for hard boiled
5. Submerge in ice water till cold
6. Peel when needed
Works every time
You can add a table spoon of salt or so to the pot of water and if the eggs happen to crack the egg won’t leak out of the shell. Tip from my grandmother. Always works.
Hard boiled eggs, the bane of my existence. As directed, I gently dropped the cold eggs into boiling water, cooked 10 minutes, plunged in an ice bath for 15 and voila…perfectly easy to peel hard boiled eggs! I am so happy, finally, a method that works…thank you Deb!
This method just changed my life and saved me time, frustration, and egg! Thank you.
Have you tried using your instant pot for hard boiled eggs?
This is not long enough.
The last time I hard boiled eggs I was sitting in the kitchen waiting for the water to boil and suddenly my dog barked at the boiling water. Guard dogs aren’t just for home intruders!
Does keeping them in the ice water after boiling prevent that ‘grey ick’ I was always taught was prevented by starting in cold water? And why on earth if you are boiling water would it matter if you started with ‘fridge cold’ water?
Reasonably certain she means eggs cold from the fridge, not water.
I understand it comes from overcooking the eggs, or older ones in the fridge. I don’t experience it with this method.
A simmer vs rolling boil won’t have any effect on egg since water boiling temp is the same either way.
I disagree with your Oct 13, 2018 comment that hot hard boiled eggs are gross! Maybe if they are very hard boiled, but just-past-medium boiled hot eggs are delicious. Like a poached egg i can eat with one hand. With that in mind, here’s my method (which is only easy to peel when using old eggs):
Put 2-3 eggs cold from fridge in small pot. Cover with cold tap water. Put on med-high heat.
Take shower (~15 min from walking away to stove to returning to stove).
Turn off stove but leave eggs on stove in hot water.
Get dressed.
Drain eggs and run under cold water for a minute while you put shoes on.
Peel under cold water.
shake off, sprinkle of seasonal salt, put in a container, and walk out the door. Eat on commute.
Perfect (hot) hard boiled eggs, to go! Timing may need adjustment if getting ready with children. lol
Something to note: If you live at elevation like I do (5000 ft), water boils at a lower temperature than sea level (say NYC). I use this method, but following the timing exactly often yields slightly undercooked eggs, sometimes with runny whites (no thanks). I haven’t totally dialed the timing yet, but generally i leave them in the boiling water for a minute or so, before moving to cold water. Or in one version of this method, you leave them in the hot water (off heat) for 5 minutes before moving to ice bath and so sometimes I’ll do that but leave them a bit longer than 5 minutes. Point is, if you live at elevation you will need a bit more cooking time.
I love this method! It’s foolproof and works like a charm every time. However, I always lower the heat to a simmer once the eggs are gently lowered into the boiling water. I find if I don’t, they all crack, big time.
Hi, I’ve always been one of those “just boil the s%$* out of them and then they are done :). I will follow this! Any idea if adjustments would need to be made for higher altitudes? 3,000 ft or a bit more?
Thanks
Pam
Sounds just like my method, although I do 8 minutes to get a softer yolk.
Also, a key thing I learned from a Julia Child book is to poke a single hole in the egg shell with a pushpin. Helps the peeling process to separate the egg from the shell. Works like a charm!
i think the peelability (did i just make that word up?) of the egg depends more on the age of the eggs (older eggs are easier to peel), but an ice water bath definitely helps to shrink the egg away from the shell. i have used Julia Child’s (and the Georgia Egg Board’s) method in her book, The Way to Cook, for making hard cooked eggs (they’re not boiled at all. put them in cold water. turn the gas off when they start to boil, remove from heat, cover and let sit for 17′, then plunge into an ice bath for 2′, then back in the hot water for 10 seconds, then back in the ice bath for however long you want) for a long time, and if i use eggs just bought from the store, they don’t peel super easily even if i follow the directions to a t. but i will try this method with new eggs and see what happens because that other method is tedious. i did it mainly to avoid the dreaded green ring, which i’d read came from boiling the eggs. maybe not?
I always start with the eggs in cold water then bring up to a boil, but I thought I’d give this method a try. 2 of the 10 eggs cracked severely and the white leaked out into the water – which reminded me why I quit boiling eggs this way years ago. Did you not have this problem?
I used this method and half the eggs popped (cracked) upon touching the water because the temperature differential is too great. Not a reliable method. Do not recommend.
This method worked perfectly! Thank you so much. My guests RAVED that their eggs were always rubbery or with a weird texture. But not these babies! This method produced excellent results. So simple, but so necessary in the life of us that love hard boiled eggs! Grazi!
Oh, my gosh! Perfection! Thank you!
Thank you! Easiest peeling eggs ever!
Bravo!! Best result every hard boiling eggs. I cooked 8 eggs and they all peeled like a dream!! I like eggs done the way you do, Deb, but since I live in Colorado at altitude, I boiled for 10 minutes instead of 8 (since EVERYTHING seems to take longer to cook at 5380 feet of altitude than it did on the east coast) and results were perfect with center cooked like the picture you posted. THANK YOU for this life changing recipe!!
Deb, my husband says you’re a national treasure. He’s not wrong. None of your recipes have failed me. Seriously, my eggs just peeled easily. Hallelujah! Thanks for the blog and cookbooks!
Hi Deb,
I don’t suppose you know the cook time for quail eggs? I’m looking to make small devilled eggs for a cocktail party and am not sure how many minutes they’d take compared to chicken eggs.
I put the eggs in a steamer basket over enough water to just touch the bottom of the basket. Cover and immediately set the timer for 21 minutes. As soon as the time goes off I plunge the eggs into an ice bath until cooled down. They come out perfectly every time. One small issue is that sometimes the vibration makes an egg crack during steaming. To prevent that I put a couple of them in those little silicon poaching shells and make a buffer around them.
Have you tested this with super fresh eggs, like right out of the coop? I haven’t found a successful way yet to get the shells off of my fresh eggs. Look forward to giving this a try!
Where did you find the cute egg holder??!
It’s from Le Creuset, however, it was in a schwag bag from a food conference. Looks like they’re available online, but not in pink.
Just steam them. That’s all. No Ice bath needed. Shells never stick.
I always bring my eggs to room temperature before putting them in boiling water (ice cold eggs + boiling water = cracks) If I start them in cold water, I find them impossible to peel.
I discovered this method myself this past year… I eat a lot of eggs, so this has been a life changer. Like you, I always used to start them in cold water thinking that plunging them into boiling water would cause a disaster. Thanks for spreading the word!
One thing I do is put a steaming basket on the pot. It keeps the eggs off the bottom and allows water to circulate. I find the eggs are more consistent.
I add a tsp. of white vinegar to the water, it helps prevent them cracking.
When I have tried this technique the eggs seem to crack even when lowered very slowly??? How do you prevent this?
Very slowly lower it. My theory is that those that crack already had a hairline crack. In general, none crack if I’m careful.
This was my mother’s method as well. I’ve read many other various steps such as using room temperature eggs, baking soda in the water, etc. and they have never made a noticeable difference. However, the fail proof step to easy peeling is always using “older” eggs.
I have put all that aside now that I have a instant pot. It is my new best friend when it comes to hard boiled eggs. They come out beautifully.
Does it make a difference if you use fresh eggs or week-or-two old ones? Thanks.
Mine were about a week old.
My eggs cracked because they were bouncing around while boiling :( Is there some way to prevent this?
I’m not positive because I rarely have farm-fresh eggs to compare to.
Thank you!! I was allergic to chicken and eggs from 12 to 48 and now in my mid-50s I’m allowed to eat them again. Every time I try to make egg salad sandwich from my childhood or put a hard boiled egg in gazpacho, the shell does not come off easily. You are my cooking guru!
I steam the eggs and the shells come off perfectly. Just google how to do it, as there are different times for the number of eggs. I have one of those foldable steamer baskets which works for me.
Perfect perfect perfect! I live in Denver do I gave it a couple more minutes. They came out, well perfect!
It worked perfectly! Just as you promised, and I’ve tried all kinds of recommendations from famous cooks. But yours was the best!
I do exactly as you do, Deb, but I always bring my eggs to room temperature before putting them in the water. I find that eggs—especially organic ones—are more likely to crack if cold eggs are plunged into boiling water. At room temp, fewer eggs crack when submerged.
Just a thought…
I was converted several years ago to the “hard-steamed” method instead of “hard-boiled”. It’s super easy and I get perfect eggs every time.
https://www.seriouseats.com/steamed-hard-boiled-eggs-recipe