Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Coloring Eggs

It's Spring, and time to hunt some eggs.
As is our annual custom, this Saturday we'll be hunting these brightly colored eggs.

If you haven't already, do not buy those pricey egg dying kits in the supermarkets. You can dye eggs with natural colors from beets, spinach, onion skins, and other veggies. Or as we did last year and this, you can use food coloring (McCormick, for example).

For each dye bath combine 1/2 cup boiling water with 1 tsp vinegar and 10 drops of food coloring in a cup or bowl. You can mix your own colors by using 5 drops red and 5 drops yellow for orange, for example. Leave the hard-cooked eggs in the dye bath for 3-5 minutes, or longer for a deeper color. Use tongs or a slotted spoon to remove eggs and place on wax or parchment paper to dry, blot any excess dye with a paper towel. If you plan to eat your colored eggs, don't leave them unrefrigerated for more than a couple of hours at a time.

Marans eggs dyed up to look like this in the house, but...

McCormick's has a chart on the back of their Assorted and Neon! dye sets showing ratios for making various colors, suggesting around 20 drops of dye in each cup, but we found that around ten drops total in each cup will give a nice pastel color. We have brown eggs, so our colors have a deeper shade for most colors, and some colors didn't turn out so well.
...looked like this in the sunlight outside!

Our Marans eggs are a chocolate color to begin with, but after they were dyed, they looked very dark brown or black in ambient indoor light. But out in the sunlight they showed a deep, almost metallic shade of whatever color. Very nice!

We've already had an egg hunt of sorts. We have two Campbell ducks and two Muskovies sitting on nests (which are fairly well hidden--we know because we had to hunt a bit). Our goose, Buttercup, was on a nest (also pretty well hidden) until a couple of days ago. She decided not to stay on her nest. Now each day she lays an egg in the yard for us to hunt up! So much for the Bunny....

We typically don't eat things that have been dyed. Of course, we're not going to eat these dyed egg shells, but will eat at least some of the eggs inside. As mentioned above, you could also use beets, spinach, onion skins, and other veggies to color your eggs. Time permitting, we'll be trying some of these this week.

Steam, don't boil those hard cooked eggs.

Sometime last year we experimented with steaming our eggs to hard cook them. We like the way they turn out. Just steam the eggs in a vegetable steamer set over boiling water for 10 minutes. Cool them right away under cold water so they don't develop that gray-green ring around the yolk. If you like soft cooked eggs (the yolk is still runny), take the eggs out of the steamer after 5 minutes.


Egg Steamers on Amazon.

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