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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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The perfectly "boiled" egg isn't boiled it all... it's baked. This
recipe requires an exact oven setting. Place as many eggs as you'd like in an oven pre-heated to exactly 149°. Bake for at least an hour or longer.. it doesn't matter beyond that point. The egg(s) will be unlike any you've ever eaten. The white will be delicately set and smooth as custard, and the yolk will be orange and soft. Kev See: "Cooking For Eggheads" Discover magazine February 2006 issue |
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notbob commented:
Place as many eggs as you'd like in an oven pre-heated to exactly 149°. Fat chance. Agreed...but what about simmering them in an electric skillet set for that temperature? Seems like the water could provide a temperature buffer, and you could easily monitor it with a probe thermometer. I might give that a try. Alternately, it ought to be possible to pre-heat water to that temperature in a saucepan and simmer the eggs while continually monitoring (because you'll probably have to lower the heat as water evaporates). If you had one of those lab-grade immersion heater/circulators, this would be a snap. Bob |
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Bob Terwilliger wrote: notbob commented: Place as many eggs as you'd like in an oven pre-heated to exactly 149°. Fat chance. Agreed...but what about simmering them in an electric skillet set for that temperature? Seems like the water could provide a temperature buffer, and you could easily monitor it with a probe thermometer. I might give that a try. Alternately, it ought to be possible to pre-heat water to that temperature in a saucepan and simmer the eggs while continually monitoring (because you'll probably have to lower the heat as water evaporates). If you had one of those lab-grade immersion heater/circulators, this would be a snap. Bob Boy, what a great idea! Stand over a skillet monitoring the temperature for an hour instead of putting them in boiling water, setting a timer for 15 minutes and walking away.... Can't wait to go home and waste an hour! |
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kevnbro wrote: The perfectly "boiled" egg isn't boiled it all... it's baked. This recipe requires an exact oven setting. Place as many eggs as you'd like in an oven pre-heated to exactly 149°. Bake for at least an hour or longer.. it doesn't matter beyond that point. The egg(s) will be unlike any you've ever eaten. The white will be delicately set and smooth as custard, and the yolk will be orange and soft. Kev See: "Cooking For Eggheads" Discover magazine February 2006 issue 140 degrees C or F ? |
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In article ,
"Bob Terwilliger" wrote: notbob commented: Place as many eggs as you'd like in an oven pre-heated to exactly 149°. Fat chance. Agreed...but what about simmering them in an electric skillet set for that temperature? Seems like the water could provide a temperature buffer, and you could easily monitor it with a probe thermometer. I might give that a try. Alternately, it ought to be possible to pre-heat water to that temperature in a saucepan and simmer the eggs while continually monitoring (because you'll probably have to lower the heat as water evaporates). If you had one of those lab-grade immersion heater/circulators, this would be a snap. Bob I steam my eggs in the steamer basket of the pasta pot. Even fresh laid eggs peel for me pretty much every time now. :-) -- Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
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OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote:
"Bob Terwilliger" wrote: notbob commented: Place as many eggs as you'd like in an oven pre-heated to exactly 149°. Fat chance. Agreed...but what about simmering them in an electric skillet set for that temperature? Seems like the water could provide a temperature buffer, and you could easily monitor it with a probe thermometer. I might give that a try. Alternately, it ought to be possible to pre-heat water to that temperature in a saucepan and simmer the eggs while continually monitoring (because you'll probably have to lower the heat as water evaporates). If you had one of those lab-grade immersion heater/circulators, this would be a snap. I steam my eggs in the steamer basket of the pasta pot. Even fresh laid eggs peel for me pretty much every time now. :-) I have a different question. When eggs are pasteurized, they're heated to 147°F. That kills everything of consequence that could be in the egg. When egg white reaches 150°F, one of the proteins, ovotransferrin, coagulates, but as it's only about 12% of the white, it creates a very tender solid, difficult to lift intact. The major proteins coagulate at about 180°F whereupon, the white becomes more firm. Yolk proteins begin to thicken at 150°. I'm skeptical of this oven method, if any of us even had ovens that could be so stringently regulated. Whole eggs - the yolk and white mixed together - set around 165°F. Pastorio |
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