Leave it to the legendary chef and master of French cooking to show us a new tip for making hard-boiled eggs.
Advertisement
Jacques Pepin's Deviled Eggs
Credit: Abby Hocking

Jacques Pépinneeds no introduction. Thelegendary chef, authorandTV hostis known the world over, and, asFood & Winerestaurant editor Jordana Rothman reminded us at a panel at this year'sFood & Wine Classic in Aspen, long before he was cooking stateside, he cooked for three French presidents. Appearing in the very first issue ofFood & Wine杂志,celebrates its 40th anniversary this fall, he's been part of the F&Wfamily since day one, and in 36 years, he's only ever missed the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen three times.

At this year's event, Pépin and his daughter, Claudine, demonstrated dishes from his 2017 book,A Grandfather's Lessons: In the Kitchen with Shorey,and unsurprisingly, they both offered a host of cooking tips that any home cook would do well to heed. Among them was an interesting trick for determining if an egg is cooked. When he showed it off to the audience as he was preparing魔鬼蛋, it got him a loud round of applause (and in our book, any egg-cooking technique that garners a round of applause is worth paying attention to!).

If you're hard-boiling an egg and aren't sure if it's fully cooked through, spin it on the countertop. If it's wobbly or doesn't spin, then the egg isn't cooked. But if you spin it and it turns like a top, then you know it’s cooked.

As Pépin said, "You twist it and to know that the egg is totally cooked, it will stand up like a top. A raw egg doesn't turn."

That's because when the egg is fully cooked, the solid inside—as opposed to the liquid inside of a raw egg—gives it a stable center of gravity and makes it spin evenly.

Jacques & Claudine Pepin
Credit: Abby Hocking

Of course, the comedic duo—the pair was playfully teasing and contradicting each other the whole time—had other pointers for cooking hard-boiled eggs, too.

For one, you want the water to be at a gentle boil—not too hot. Claudine said that her dad always calls them "hard-cookedeggs," not "hard-boiled," and she always remembers that slight difference, because otherwise, she would boil them forever.

Second, in order to avoid any green color or sulfur smell, it's important to shock the eggs in cold water right away after you remove them from the heat. The cold water also makes it easier to peel those, ahem,hard-cookedeggs.

“Running water gets in between the shell and the membrane and the shell just slides off,” Claudine explained.