16 answers

Peeling Hard Boiled Eggs - Overland Park,KS

I know this is the most boring question out there, but how do you do it? I have been peeling eggs for years, and all of a sudden, they won't peel!! The eggs are all choppy just trying to get the shell off. Do you have a special trick to get it perfect? Do you peel them right after they are done boiling, or do you wait for them to cool down? Under running water? I know a trick is to get that little skin off under the shell while you are peeling, but sometimes it won't come off. So I thought I'd ask for your tricks. Thanks!!

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So What Happened?™

I have been using Egglands Best or whatever that EB brand is. And I think the ones I was recently trying to peel were just brought home from the store.

Featured Answers

Fresh eggs are very hard to peel...... it is best to have them set a few days in the fridge before you try to hard boil them.... the shell usually slides off much easier then!

3 moms found this helpful

Yes, use "older" eggs. Then put them in a pot of COLD water and cover them by at least an inch or 2 of water. I add a little vinegar to the water. Bring the eggs to a RAPID boil over med/high heat (but not so much that they crack in the process). Boil for about 12 minutes more then run them under COLD water right away, shaking the pot to crack the shells as you rinse. Leave them in the cold water for a good while, then peel.

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More Answers

If you plan on having boiled eggs use old eggs. Fresh eggs won't peel right.

4 moms found this helpful

Fresh eggs are very hard to peel...... it is best to have them set a few days in the fridge before you try to hard boil them.... the shell usually slides off much easier then!

3 moms found this helpful

Add salt to the water before they boil. Once they're done, I run mine under cold wateer & let them cool (more so I don't burn my fingers off). When you tap them to break the shell, do it on the bottom of the egg on the fattest part. There's usually a little air pocket there so you can get a good jump on the shell and skin. Good luck! :)

2 moms found this helpful

One of my friends who owned a restaurant and is an amazing cook said not to use really fresh eggs for boiling if it matters how they look once you peel them.

Older eggs work best and I tried it at home. It seems to be true.

Best wishes!

2 moms found this helpful

Yes, use "older" eggs. Then put them in a pot of COLD water and cover them by at least an inch or 2 of water. I add a little vinegar to the water. Bring the eggs to a RAPID boil over med/high heat (but not so much that they crack in the process). Boil for about 12 minutes more then run them under COLD water right away, shaking the pot to crack the shells as you rinse. Leave them in the cold water for a good while, then peel.

2 moms found this helpful

Use organic, free range eggs and see if it gets better.

1 mom found this helpful

That is so funny, because my husband wanted deviled eggs the other day and I couldn't get a SINGLE egg to peel. I honestly spent 30 minutes peeling six eggs...I could not get under the skin!! I don't know if it's in how you cook them (which I don't because I hate the smell), or what.

I do take them out of the fridge cool to peel for my children, and they usually work cold. I roll them a bit against the edge of the sink, and then get a thumb under. It does help to do it under water, and bonus - that rinses away any tiny shell pieces you leave behind.

1 mom found this helpful

I agree fresh eggs seems to always be harder to peel. I have always added salt to the water to keep them from cracking open while they boil.

1 mom found this helpful

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