What is a coddled egg? wrote:One method for making a coddled egg involves buttering the sides and bottom of an egg coddler and gently breaking an egg into it. The egg is then seasoned and the top is placed on the egg coddler, which is then lowered into the pot of boiling water for about 5-6 minutes, depending on the size of the egg and desired doneness. The egg coddler is lifted from the pot and placed on a saucer. The diner then slides the egg from the pot onto the saucer and eats it. All sorts of additions may be made to a coddled egg, including lemon juice, bacon bits, ham chunks, salmon flakes and other savory items.
Kennyz wrote:I've never really understood how the technique where you put the eggs in cold water, then bring the pot to a boil, then remove it from the heat works. For one thing, 15-20 minutes is an awfully wide range, and I would think the egg would be pretty different from one end of that window to the other.
LAZ wrote:Kennyz wrote:I've never really understood how the technique where you put the eggs in cold water, then bring the pot to a boil, then remove it from the heat works. For one thing, 15-20 minutes is an awfully wide range, and I would think the egg would be pretty different from one end of that window to the other.
The timing depends on the size of the eggs: http://www.eggs.ab.ca/recipes/basics/ha ... ooked.html
The advantage of the technique is you can use eggs straight from the fridge without worrying about cracking them. And, with hard-cooked eggs, if you let them sit a minute or two too long, it doesn't make that big a difference.
Kennyz wrote:But the timing also depends on how much water you start with. An egg that starts this way in a cup or two of cold water in a small saucepan is going to come out way different from an egg that starts in a big stockpot full of water. The difference will be significant, too, depending on how quickly the water comes up to a simmer. Did you start at high heat or medium heat? Seems like way too many variables.
Darren72 wrote:I've been using the Time Life "Eggs and Cheese" book as a guide for soft/hard boiled eggs. They recommend three methods:
1. Bring the water to just under a boil and then add the eggs, keep water at just under a boil. Cook a large egg for 4-6 min, depending on how well done you like it (add a min longer for a newly laid egg).
2. Bring the water to just under a boil and then add the eggs, kill the heat and cook a large egg for 8-10 min.
3. Put the eggs in the pan, cover with cold water, bring water to just under a boil. Cook a large egg for 4 min if you want a barely set white and a liquid yolk; cook 10 minutes for a classic hard boiled egg in which the white and yolk are both firm. Cooking times between 4 and 10 min give a softer, moister yolk. When done, put eggs in cold water and then peel.
For the first two methods, start with room temperature eggs (otherwise the cooking times will be slightly different and the eggs may not cook as evenly). For the third method, you can begin with eggs from the fridge.
The first two methods lead to tender, soft whites. The third methods leads to firmer whites and is what you'd use for "hard boiled eggs".
The difference between the first and second method is simply that the second method is a gentler, slower cooking.
LAZ wrote:Kennyz wrote:But the timing also depends on how much water you start with. An egg that starts this way in a cup or two of cold water in a small saucepan is going to come out way different from an egg that starts in a big stockpot full of water. The difference will be significant, too, depending on how quickly the water comes up to a simmer. Did you start at high heat or medium heat? Seems like way too many variables.
Weren't you the guy who said, "It's just an egg"?
Darren72 wrote:Kenny - interesting that you leave the eggs out overnight. As you probably saw in my post above, two of the methods the Time Life book recommends call for room temperature eggs. But since I generally eat eggs in the morning and don't want to wait long enough for them to come to room temperature...I got a problem. So I presume there aren't any spoilage issues with leaving an egg on the counter overnight.
Mhays wrote:My understanding of the cold-water method is that it gives everything time to come up to temp simultaneously: you're starting with cold eggs, so the cold water gives the egg time to decrease the differential in temperature between egg and water and respond to the heat at a similar rate than the water. I'm guessing the theory is that it cooks more evenly, rather than it cooking from the outside-in - I could see where this would not only address cracking but the dreaded green ring as well.
Kennyz wrote:I've heard that stuff too, but I think it's fallacy and overly complicates the egg boiling process by introducing too many unnecessary variables.
Geo wrote:In their inimitable empiricist manner, Cook's Illustrated tested all the usual suspects on the way to the perfect boiled egg. It is surprisingly like method #3, above.
Put six cold eggs in a sauce pan in one layer [and before kennyz asks me for the H2O mass, in grams, let me say this: pretty much cover the entire bottom of the pan with eggs, eh?! What's that mean, a 1.5-2 liter saucepan? Let's stipulate that.] Fill with cold H2O to a height of eggs + 1 in [that's 2.54 cm, kennyz.... just trying to be precise, here.] Raise rapidly to the boil. Cover, and remove from heat. Wait 10 mins., then shock the eggs by dropping them into an ice-water bath.
It works like a champ, time and again. No green ring, either.
Geo
What's wrong with putting the eggs into a pot of simmering water? wrote:kennyz

Darren72 wrote:... Time Life "Eggs and Cheese" book ... Put the eggs in the pan, cover with cold water, bring water to just under a boil. Cook a large egg for ...10 minutes for a classic hard boiled egg in which the white and yolk are both firm...
article LAZ linked to at http://www.eggs.ab.ca/recipes/basics/ha ... ooked.html wrote:Hard or Soft-Cooked Eggs
Place cold eggs in a single layer in a saucepan (picture A).
Cover with at least 2.5 cm (1-inch) cold water over top of the eggs.
Cover saucepan and bring quickly to a boil over high heat.
Immediately remove pan from heat to stop boiling. Keep lid on.
Let eggs stand for appropriate time:
EGG SIZE SOFT-COOKED* HARD-COOKED*
Large 3.5 minutes 22 minutes