Those poachers and silicone pouches….If only there was a more natural way to cook your eggs. If only they sold them in some sort of holder or casing that you could put in the boiling water and remove them from later.
I’m not interested in taking credit for it because it wasn’t my tip originally but in the interests of clarity perhaps Sadexpunk can tell us which method he actually used as his example technique on the other page reads remarkably similar to the one I posted…
Sad’s : hot water out the tap into a pan, eggs in pan whilst kettle boils, fill a frying pan with kettle water, keep pan on lowest setting so no bubbles, crack eggs into pan.
Mine : Warm eggs in a bowl of warm water.
Frying pan of water with just enough water to cover the egg.
Boil water & turn off heat. Just as water stops bubbling, drop in egg. Let it sit there for a couple of mins, spoon a bit of water over the top of the egg for a minute.
Additional – I use hot tap water so probably around 60 degrees for as long as it takes to boil enough water (in a kettle) for your pan. I heat the frying pan as the kettle is boiling and then go on with the bubble tip above.
OPs : Get the water to almost boiling, then put the eggs into the water in their shells and roll them around gently for 10 seconds – then crack them into the pan.
🙂
Also…
.If only there was a more natural way to cook your eggs. If only they sold them in some sort of holder or casing that you could put in the boiling water and remove them from later.
Successful pre-dipping attempt this lunchtime here. 3 pretty old eggs (display un 5ht March, Best before 12th – will I die?) and definitely less of a milky mess than I’d usually get with eggs that old straight from the fridge.
I did invoke the marmite the toast before placing the eggs on sub clause which might be controversial to some.
Your first mistake is putting eggs in the fridge. You’re not American, stop that.
This seems to be one of the most inconstantly answered questions on the internet! Eggs in fridges definitely last longer; but they degrade faster in the cold; but they might take on tastes from other stuff in the fridge; that they need to remain a constant temperature so the fridge is the best place in the home; but you can’t smell if they are off if they are cold; that they are only stored at room temp in the store as they would get condensation on the shell on the way home and as its porous thats a great way for it to take in bacteria…..and on and on….
You’re overlooking one important factor. This is STW, therefore I’m right and everyone else is wrong. (-:
The whole thing of putting eggs in the fridge is because the US treat eggs differently. By law in the US eggs have to be sold washed which potentially damages the shell and increases the risk of salmonella infection, in the UK the opposite is true and eggs cannot be sold washed, we mitigate the risk of salmonella by inoculating our hens. This is where the contradictory advice comes from.
If you put eggs in the fridge, as you say, you risk contamination from other strong flavours like smoked cheese, cut onions etc. It’s not necessary.
^^^^ egg school day which is good. Still staying in the fridge though.
I’ve a Lakeland microwave poacher thing which a mate recommended. Tried it and went straight back to the pan method. Pretoast the toast to ensure it’s ready when the eggs are.
OP, it worked for me fine, a good tip if you want to do multiple eggs. I did pop a small amount of vinegar in and my eggs were about, hmmm 3 or 4 hours old 🙂
With my method on the other page there’s no water ,no mess and you get all the egg.
Most importantly you can easily do it at work.
It means that you can easily do Parma ham, dark green leaf with a poached egg on top for lunch. Total joy.
With my method on the other page there’s no water ,no mess and you get all the egg.
Most importantly you can easily do it at work.
It means that you can easily do Parma ham, dark green leaf with a poached egg on top for lunch. Total joy.
We eat loads of eggs as we’ve our own hens and ducks. We just use the saucepan method, no problems. Again as a few have said, use the freshest eggs. The older ones come apart a bit but still taste great.
I really can’t understand all the fannying about? with eggs. 😉
I just ate poached eggs done the old school way, frying ban, water off boil, i love them. Anyway, i keep eggs in the fridge as my catering tutor told me the bacteria on the shell surface can pass through the shell at room temps.
Maybe false but she was a good chef so i believed her.
I used to work at an egg wholesaler and they weren’t refrigerated there.
Fresh eggs get poached in the pan, not so fresh get boiled in the shell for 6 mins, then stop cooking by putting in cold water, shell and there you have it, cooked but soft eggs, they aren’t poached but are a million times better than those plastic poacher travesties.
Why are you all using frying pans? That seems suboptimal to me, you’re using a pan a foot across to cook something the size of, erm, an egg. What’s the thinking here?
another success, same method as before topped with black pepper, chopped chillis and feta cheese.
I’m not interested in taking credit for it because it wasn’t my tip originally but in the interests of clarity perhaps Sadexpunk can tell us which method he actually used as his example technique on the other page reads remarkably similar to the one I posted..
oops, just re-read first page, it is indeed your method that im using teasel rather than OPs, so thanks for that and apologies 🙂
FWIW i tried OPs ‘dipping in boiling water’ method before but when cracking the eggs, a thin lining of egg was sticking to the shell, so wasted egg. admittedly not much, but with teasels ‘tap water’ method this isnt happening.
theyre turning out so well theyre overtaking scrambled eggs as my favourite now.
I tried (for the 1st time in my 60 years) this morning… boiling some water in a smallish saucepan, (in the meantime breaking 2 eggs into a cup) took the pan off the boil & swirling the water then pouring the eggs in & putting the pan back on for a few minutes. No vinegar.
Spot On!
Had them on toast with Pate
(& for the record they were free range (£1.50 a dozen) & straight out of the chiller)
Eager to try the op idea. Though I have good results with cracking the eggs into an espresso cup or small mug and pouring it in to the water slightly submerged.