Several years ago our family was fortunate enough to spend the summer in Europe – with most of our time being in Germany.
Soft-boiled eggs were an every day part of our breakfasts. They were perfectly cooked – and kept at a perfect temperature – and I became hopelessly addicted to them!
As our time in Germany came to a close, we (I) purchased egg plates, egg dishes, egg spoons, . . . . and many more treasures – to bring home with us – in an attempt to replicate our wonderful experience. But, try as I might, I had trouble reproducing those perfectly cooked soft eggs! It seemed as though they were either over-cooked – and practically hard boiled, or under-done and nearly raw.
Searches of all of the best cookbooks, the internet, and every resource I could think of yielded as many different techniques as there were sources and produced nothing but a long series of trials and failures. And so, I gave up. I put away the little egg plates and egg spoons and for a very long time, there were no soft-boiled eggs at the Homestead (insert frowning face here). And then, one day, as I was doing research on a totally unrelated cooking process, it came to me. I knew what I was doing wrong. (The white and the yolk are made up of different blends of proteins, and so the white sets at a higher temperature than the yolk. . . . The methods that had been suggested – and touted for years, did not take that into consideration – I know, exciting stuff huh! It’s how I roll. . . )
Out came the little egg plates and spoons, the salt bowl and egg topper. We were back in business! The soft-boiled eggs have returned (insert happy face here!). Now, they are cooked to perfection. And served with a freshly baked English muffin, or a piece of buttered toast, the joy in the morning is back!
Having a very large flock of chickens means that we have a never-ending supply of these luscious little nuggets. They are packed with protein and in spite of all the bad press targeting them for so many years, eggs – all of them – the whites and the yolks – have been proven to be very good for you!
You don’t need to have egg plates or egg cups or egg spoons or an egg topper to enjoy these gems. A small bowl or ramekin filled with salt, rice, grain, seeds – works well as a holder for your eggs. The back side of a table knife – tapped around the top of the egg will crack the egg open just fine. Demitasse spoons, teaspoons – or even toast soldiers (thin pieces of a firm bread – toasted and buttered) will retrieve the yummy goodness waiting to delight your palate. Be creative – be thrifty – get organized – and get going! Get out your tools and lets get to it – soft-boiled eggs are calling.
Enjoy,
Kathy
P.S. You are going to want to make these – and save the shells! Wash them out carefully and let them dry – You will want them to use when you see what’s coming later in the week!
How to Cook the Perfect Soft-Boiled Egg
Ingredients
- 1 to 4 eggs no more than 4 at a time
Instructions
- Fill a sauce pan with several inches of water (enough to cover the eggs).
- Set the pan over high heat and allow the water to come to a rolling boil.
- Lower the heat and let the water reduce to a rapid simmer.
- Gently lower the eggs into the water, one at a time.
- Cook the eggs for 5 to 7 minutes; 5 minutes for a moderately runny yolk, up to 7 minutes for one that is more set.
- Remove the eggs from the water (using a slotted spoon if you plan to cook more than one batch).
- Run under cold tap water for 30 to 60 seconds.
- Set the egg, upright, in an egg cup or a small bowl or ramekin filled with rice, salt, or dried beans, grains, small gravel (cleaned – of course), whole dried corn . . . use your imagination. If you avoid egg spills, you can use your base over and over again.
- Remove the top by tapping gently with a knife around the top of the egg, or if you are lucky enough to have one, use an egg-cutter.
- Eat the eggs while they are warm, scooping out with a small egg spoon, or buttered crusty toast spears.
- If you are doing more than one batch of eggs, return the water to a rolling boil and repeat from step 3, adding water if needed.
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