Hard-Cooked Eggs in a Muffin Pan

February 8, 2013 • Resources

Hard-Cooked Eggs in a Muffin Pan

Here’s a handy step-by-step tutorial on how to bake hard-cooked eggs in a muffin pan. The results? Simpler, easier-to-peel (hooray! this is my least favorite part!) and softer texture (the whites aren’t rubbery). You can make as many dozen at a time as you have muffin pans. Amazing.

hard-cooked eggs in a muffin pan

Preheat oven to 325. Place a dozen eggs into a standard 12-count muffin pan. Bake for 25-30 minutes.

Hard-Cooked Eggs

Place hard-cooked eggs into a cold water bath. The eggshells may have some brown spots on them after baking, but these will wash off easily in the water.

Hard-Cooked Eggs in a Muffin Pan

  Let those babies take a nice cold bath until cooled through. Now they’re ready for coloring or peeling.

Hard Cooked Eggs in a Muffin Pan

Crack and peel your pretty eggs. Look, no gouges or shell marks from peeling. Just easy, perfect little eggs. You may find some small brown spots on the whites from baking.

Hard-Cooked Eggs in a Muffin Pan

There you have it. Lovely little hard-cooked eggs in a muffin pan. No grey rings around the yolk from over-cooking, either. They’re ready for your favorite deviled egg or egg salad recipe!  Like the fun texture on the egg? Use a serrated knife when slicing.

This post from my archives is being re-run as part of BlogHer’s Smart Mom’s Guide to Being Busy editorial series, brought to you by Rice Krispies and BlogHer.

Kitchen Tip: Hard-Cooked Eggs in a Muffin Pan

Inspired by Alton Brown

Yields: 12 hard-cooked eggs

  • 1 dozen eggs
  • 1 12-count standard muffin pan

Preheat oven to 325. Place 1 dozen eggs in muffin pan. Bake 25-30 minutes (mine took 25, this will depend on your oven). Place eggs in a cold water bath until cool. Peel.