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4.52 from 179 votes (177 ratings without comment)

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18 Comments

  1. This did not work with eggs straight from the fridge. They all cracked! This is a terrible method for eggs. I should mention that my sous vide cooker instruction booklets shows 164 for soft boiled eggs at 45 mins… will not make this again.

  2. 5 stars
    These came out perfect following your simple directions! No more stressing over eggs that are over cooked or under cooked! They peeled easily! Thank you so much for your recipe!

  3. 2 stars
    It took 2 hours to heat the water to the right temp. Would rather use stovetop or instant pot.

  4. I have my own chickens, and fresh eggs are just a damn bear to peel. Typically most people use store bought eggs for all of these techniques and that’s what actually makes the difference. The older the egg the easier it will be to peel. *Rant – I worked at an egg manufacturing facility in high school, and if you think you’re getting fresh eggs at the store, bwahahahah, think again. I can’t tell you how often we unpackaged cooler rooms full of eggs and ran them back through the grader and put fresh dates on the cartons, never mind how long it takes to get from the chicken to you kitchen. Also, as someone who ran a chicken house packed with 60,000 birds in the 80s, (most houses are at least 120,000 now) 7 to a cage that was 3×3 by 2 tall, with chickens pecked bald from the stress, I fully understand that the egg manufacturing industry is a level of cruelty I think most of you would find very difficult to imagine. That’s why I have my own chickens. *rant over

    Interestingly, this actually worked with my fresh eggs. Now I’ve only done a couple, but typically when I try to peel a fresh egg that I’ve hard boiled half the darn white comes right off. The only thing that really has ever really made a difference is to let them sit for a couple weeks. but with that said, the fresh eggs definitely peeled harder than the store bought egg, but I was able to get it to peel clean. I’ll be trying this with a dozen when I get a chance to see how it holds up.

  5. I put my eggs in a vacuum bag to make it easier to get them into the water without breaking (I broke a few the first time). It worked. However, the eggs were not done at 20 minutes, so I put them back in for another 15.

  6. Do you have to wait for the temp to rise back up for the 20min? When I added the eggs, the temp dropped.

    1. You don’t have to wait until the temp gets back up. Set the timer as soon as you put the eggs into the water.

  7. The temperature dipped down quite a bit when I added my eggs. Should I wait to start the 20 minute timer until the water is back up to temp or start it right away? Thank you.

  8. How do you prevent the foam from the eggs building up in the water? Was I supposed to put the eggs in a vacuum bag first?

    1. I just put my eggs in the water without a bag. I had a little foam in the water but I didn’t feel like it was an issue. I just made sure to rinse my sous vide wand very well after it cooled down.

  9. Made a batch this afternoon and followed your instructions to the letter. This was my first attempt at sous vide eggs. They are perfect! Thank you!

    1. I HOPE they peel alright. I tried another sous vide article that said to heat water to 165 for an hour… they cooked well, but half the whites came off with the shell :-(. I will try this tonite !

    2. @Judi Judes, 3 different things can make boiled eggs easier to peal.

      1. Use older eggs. If the eggs are super fresh they are more likely to be difficult to peal when boiled.

      2. Add some salt and vinegar to the water bath. 1/2 cup of white vinegar and 1 tablespoon of salt per 6 cups of water used.

      3. (most importantly) Immediately after removing the eggs from the water bath, put them in an ice water bath.