Photo from American Egg Board |
Q. I was wondering what I am doing wrong. Almost every time I make hard boiled eggs, I get this greenish color covering the yellow yolk. Do you know what causes that? Is it harmful? C.D. Grandville, MI
A. According
to the American Egg Board’s “Eggcyclopedia”, you probably cooked your eggs
either too long or at too high of a temperature. The greenish-grey ring between the yellow and white of a hard
cooked egg results from a reaction between the sulfur in the egg white and the iron
in the yolk.
Is
the green ring harmful? No, but it does not look very appetizing.
A
sure-fire method of cooking hard-cooked eggs, which will avoid the dreaded green
ring, is to place the eggs in a saucepan in a single layer. Add cold water to
cover the eggs by one inch. Heat on high just to boiling, then remove from the
burner and cover the pan. Let the eggs stand in hot water for 12 minutes for large
eggs (15 minutes for extra-large, 9 minutes for medium). Drain immediately and serve warm. Or
cool under cold running water then refrigerate.
The
Eggcyclopedia has lots of info, from egg safety, to recipes, to trivia. I don’t
make hard-cooked eggs very often, maybe twice a year, and one thing that I
forget is to buy my eggs ahead of time. The Egg Board recommends to buy your eggs for hard cooking
and peeling (used for deviled eggs, as an example) at least 7 to 10 days ahead
of when you need them. This allows
the eggs to develop an air pocket on the larger end, making it easier to peel
after cooking and cooling.
1 comment:
What a great tip. Never new the part about the air pocket, or why the green ring for that matter.
Thanks
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