One important egg skill omitted - how to tell the difference between a raw egg and a cooked one, when both still in their shells.
OK. How do you achieve this fundamental task? Sounds like a shake deal.
One important egg skill omitted - how to tell the difference between a raw egg and a cooked one, when both still in their shells.
You've reminded me of an egg story:I've never come across a bad Egg, unless it was some person who was notorious for being one. That bad Eggs are rare in the carton, is probably why most people don't check if an Egg is bad.
You've reminded me of an egg story:
A couple of weeks ago, I was at Kroger, and I needed some eggs, grabbed some, opened them to check for cracks, then put them in the cart.
While that was going on, another fellow grabbed some eggs. When I looked up, I noticed that two of his eggs were very obviously broken, like the tops had been pushed in. Broken, not cracked. Broken.
He was a much older gentleman, and when he put them in his cart, I thought maybe he just missed seeing that, so I said, "Hey, excuse me, but you've got two broken eggs in there."
"Yup," he said as he wheeled his cart away, "Last time I get sent to the store for groceries, I bet."
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You spin them. One spins freely, the other wobbles. I can't remember which is which though. Slight flaw in my plan.OK. How do you achieve this fundamental task? Sounds like a shake deal.
2) Cracking open Eggs without breaking the Yokes, Sunnyside up Eggs
Well, whether it's right or wrong, I'll say that seems a long time to boil an egg.
15 minutes seems a bit long. Soft boiled is around six minutes.10/11 Minutes or 15? What's the difference between a Hard Boiled Egg and a Soft Boiled Egg?
15 minutes seems a bit long. Soft boiled is around six minutes.
I have one of those egg toppers. As you might suspect, they don't work nearly as well as promised.
When I crack an egg, I crack it around the middle, but I crack it on a flat surface, not the edge of a bowl. I give it a pretty hearty whack, and one whack will get me a straight crack about 1/3rd of the way around, and that's enough to get it open pretty safely.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.thekitchn.com/heres-how-to-crack-an-egg-like-jacques-pepin-248411?amp=1
It's also helps if the egg you're using is a bit on the larger size - easier to manipulate.Thanks for the enlightenment. I recall seeing someone crack open an Egg and pour out its contents, entirely with just one hand. That definitely results from lots of practice becoming second nature.
It's also helps if the egg you're using is a bit on the larger size - easier to manipulate.
It's not terribly hard - when you go to crack it, make sure your hand/fingers are snug/close together around the egg, and get your thumb and one of your better fingers near where you expect the crack to develop when you smack it.
Give it a firm whack, get that thumb and finger to catch just a little on either side of the crack, then just spread your hand out and open and there it is.
It's good for impressing little kids and shutting up smarmy sisters-in-law who can't themselves cook, but will tell you that you can't cook if you can't crack an egg with one hand "like the pros."
As you can guess, I have experience with both, especially the latter.![]()
You spin them. One spins freely, the other wobbles. I can't remember which is which though. Slight flaw in my plan.