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World's Best Deviled Eggs Recipe

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Why Do Some People Make Such Fantastic Deviled Eggs?

We've all been at a potluck where there were several different trays of deviled eggs. Some taste fantastic... and some? Yikes. Why aren't they good?

I'm about to explain what makes a delicious deviled egg, plus tell you how you can make the best deviled eggs ever.

You'll also find helpful hints for:

* the easiest way EVER to put the stuffing into the egg white halves

* how to make them look beautiful on the tray

* fun ways to decorate your deviled eggs... and

* a nifty trick for transporting deviled eggs from your kitchen.

How To Boil An Egg (Don't Skip This Part!!!)

Think you know how to boil an egg? Think again! Even the most famous cookbooks (including The Joy of Cooking) have it all wrong. They tell you to cover the eggs with cold water.

This is all wrong. Bring your water to a boil FIRST, then add your eggs. The easiest way to do this is to use a soup spoon -- put the egg into the spoon, then lower it carefully into the boiling water.

Make sure your eggs are at room temperature. Otherwise, the shell will split once you lower them into the boiling water, and you'll have eggwhite leaking from the shell.

Why boil the water first? Because when you put your eggs into boiling water, the hot water will cause the interior of the egg to shrink away from the shell, which makes it really easy to peel.

And isn't peeling boiled eggs the hardest part? Now you know how to boil an egg -- and peel it with ease -- every time!

For boiling 10 eggs: after you bring a large pot of water to boil, lower your eggs into it using a soup spoon. Then set your kitchen timer for 10 minutes.

After 10 minutes, turn off the heat and let the eggs sit in the water for 5 minutes. Then pour off the hot water and add COLD WATER to cover the eggs.

After a few minutes, pour off this water and add more cold water. In about 8 minutes your eggs will be cool enough to handle, and they'll peel perfectly every time.

The Ingredients for World's Best Deviled Eggs

The following recipe is for making 20 deviled eggs -- that is, 10 boiled eggs. Most deviled egg plates hold 18 deviled eggs. Make an extra 2 in case one of the egg white halves tears... or just to have as a treat for the cook.

10 eggs (boiled per the instructions above)

4 oz. cream cheese

3 tbsp. sour cream

1 tsp. dijon mustard

3 tbsp. onion, minced

1 tsp. fresh dill, minced (or more, to taste)

3 dashes Tabasco sauce

3 dashes Worcestershire sauce

milk (usually a few tablespoons -- this will be explained in the recipe that follows)

salt and pepper to taste

How To Make World's Best Deviled Eggs

For the boiled eggs: use a sharp knife and slice each boiled egg in half.

Use a teaspoon to carefully scoop out the hard yolk, and place the yolks in a small mixing bowl.

Put the white halves onto your deviled egg platter. (If you don't have a deviled egg platter, then you can cover a standard plate with lettuce leaves and put your eggs on them. The lettuce leaves keep the deviled eggs from sliding around.)

To your yolks, add the cream cheese, sour cream and all other ingredients. Use your hand mixer to beat them. Using a mixer makes the stuffing creamy -- and it's a lot easier on your arms than smoothing out the yolks and ingredients using a wooden spoon!

Add salt and pepper to taste. (The mustard and Tabasco add a bit of bite, so add only a little salt at first, taste, then add more if necessary. It's easier putting salt in than it is taking it out!)

About that milk listed in the ingredients: add it in, a tablespoon at a time, until the mixture is smooth and creamy. Many people don't realize how important the texture is for making excellent deviled eggs. Think about it -- too many people make gummy deviled eggs. The best ones are creamy -- and adding the milk will give you this creamy consistency.

The Easiest Way to Stuff Your Deviled Eggs

Spoon your yolk mixture into a quart freezer bag (not a sandwich bag, which isn't strong enough) then use scissors to snip off the corner. You only need to snip off a quarter inch.

Now you've made a wonderful (and inexpensive!) dispenser for your deviled egg stuffing.

Simply squeeze the stuffing out of the small hole in the quart bag into the egg white halves. This makes it easy to make really attractive deviled eggs.

If you have some yolk mixture left over after all the eggs have been filled, the mixture makes a delicious topping for crackers for an afternoon snack.

How To Make Your Deviled Eggs Look Beautiful

Here are some quick ideas for decorating your deviled eggs:

1. Snip a small bit of the fresh dill, and place it on top of each deviled egg;

2. Cut tiny strips from red or green bell peppers, and lay them in a criss-cross pattern on top of each deviled egg;

3. Snip chives and scatter them on top of each deviled egg;

4. Use a black pepper mill to grind pepper on top;

5. Slice (thinly) pimento-stuffed olives, and lay one on each egg.

6. Mince parsley and scatter it over the tops of the deviled eggs.

Be creative!

How To Transport Your Deviled Eggs

Here's the easiest way to transport deviled eggs to a party or potluck:

After you've finished making and decorating your deviled eggs, stick toothpicks in the tops of the eggs around the edges.

Now cover the eggs with plastic wrap. The toothpicks will keep the wrap from touching the eggs, and you'll arrive at your destination with your eggs looking as beautiful as the moment you finished making them.

Enjoy!

Comments

mary615 7 weeks ago

Hi. Your Hub was a related one to the Hub I just published on how to make your deviled eggs look like baby chicks. Read mine when you have time. Your recipe looks good, but I have always placed my eggs in cold water, bring them to a boil, remove from heat, cover, and just leave them alone till they are cool. I'm going to try your idea of putting them in hot water.

Buster Bucks 3 months ago

Hi mikeeez,

Yes, Nestle cream works, too!

Best regards,

Buster

mikeee gonzales 3 months ago

great recipe. can we use nestle cream for the milk instead of whole milk?

Buster Bucks 3 months ago

Hi Gina,

You can use whole milk, or 2% or even 1%. One time I used half-and- half when I didn't have milk i cthe house. The goal of adding milk is to make the stuffing creamy before you put it into your egg white halves.

Good luck!

Buster

gina 201 3 months ago

hello! regarding with the question above from rachelle, i'm also confused. what milk was used? powdered? fresh? evaporated? i don't know.. thank you though! i'm planning on serving this on my nephew's birthday.

Buster Bucks 3 months ago

Hi Rachelle,

I used 1% milk. I hope this helps. Good luck with your school project.

Best regards,

Buster

Rachelle del rosario 3 months ago

sorry, I'm new at this. i want to make deviled eggs for my project in school, so i would just like to ask, what kind of milk was used? :)))) I'm sorry for the inconvenience but i just don't know what kind to use.. please reply ASAP.. thank you! :)

Lisa pullen 5 months ago

Never heard of putting eggs into already boiling water but can't wait to try it. Thanks for sharing

Buster Bucks 6 months ago

Hi Michelle,

Yes, your idea is a good one! Thanks for sharing it!

Buster

Michelle C. 6 months ago

Have you ever cut open your egg to find the yolk on one end and not in the middle. If you want your yolk to be centered, lay your eggs in the carton on their side over night. Like Buster mentioned let them cool to room temp. before adding to boiling water. You will have perfectly centered eggs to fill with yummy filling. ENJOY your Thanksgiving :)

Buster Bucks 6 months ago

Hey pkn,

What a great idea! Thanks for telling us about it.

Best regards,

Buster

pkn 6 months ago

somewhere on the internet, I saw a neat trick for transporting the eggs....cut the eggs across instead of lengthwise. Use the empty egg cartons and place a small piece of lettuce in each cup. lay the filled egg halves on top of the lettuce pieces. close the lid and they don't get messed up!

Cooks Landing 12 months ago

The hard boiled egg technique came from Betty Crocker's home cook book published in 1950. I guess I've taken it for granted all these years. Thanks for bringing it to light once again.

Buster Bucks 13 months ago

Thanks JoAnn! Sometimes the easiest things (in the kitchen)can be a revelation.

:-)

Best regards,

Buster

JoAnn 13 months ago

Your tip on how to boil an egg is unbelievable!!!!! I cannot thank you enough. I still cannot believe it works like magic. How have I missed this all these years??

Thanks a million times.

JoAnn

Indianapolis,In

Chef M 13 months ago

Actually the vinegar in the boiling water does absoluetly nothing the best trick for eggs is to boil them for 3 minutes under a rolling boil, then remove from heat and let the eggs stand in the boiling water until the water is cool enough to handle. This gives you a perfectly cooked egg without the gray yolk. The vinegar idea only works well for poached eggs.

rvuu 18 months ago

i recently learned how to boil eggs well.... start them in cold water and heat to boiling rapidly, but the trick is to add a couple of tablespoons of vinegar to the cold water... my eggs never break and peel easily. once boiling, boil 10 minutes and immediately do 2 cold water rinses. hasn't failed me so far! by the way... i love the creamy texture of this recipe!

akirchner 23 months ago

I have a recipe for salmon deviled eggs that is SOOOO good! Love deviled eggs - the key to boiling them is to not get the boil TOO high - I start with cold water in a small pan and just get it to the boil and then let them simmer for about 15 minutes, then run them in cold water for about 5-10 minutes - let them soak and then peel. Perfecto!

Buster Bucks 23 months ago

Hello confused,

Yes, the eggs should be at room temperature and you won't have that problem. I'm going to edit the article to make sure this is clear.

Thanks so much for writing --

Buster

The confused cook 23 months ago

Why do my eggs break or split as soon as they hit the boiling water? Do I need to put them in at room temperature? I was so careful to lower them in the water but as soon as they hit the boiling water they split open. I want pretty eggs not ones that look like an octopus...lol :-)

deb 2 years ago

awesome recipe, cannot wait to try it, print friendly too. Thanks!

Melissa 2 years ago

Love this recipe, thanks!!

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