8
4
1/4
or
1-1/2
1/4
1
ar
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c
c
c
c
T
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Eggs
Onion Skins
Tea Leaves
Coffee Grounds
Olive Oil
Wine Vinegar, red
Water
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Today, lacking hot ashes, these eggs are simmered very slowly on the
stove top, or in a slow cooker. Despite the shells, color and flavor
penetrate through into the yolk. For some alternate names
see Note-2.
Do-Ahead: - (weeks)
- Collect a bag of dried Onion Skins over a week or three
of cooking. Exact amount is not important, just that there are a
lot of them.
Make: - (7 hrs - 30 min work)
- Fill a roomy saucepan (or Slow Cooker, see
Note-1) half way with cold Water.
- Pierce EGGS and scald them 30 seconds in rapidly boiling
water (makes peeling much easier). Place them, immediately and
carefully, in the cold water. I scald the eggs 2 or 3 at a time,
handling them with an Egg
Spoon.
- Heap the Onion Skins on top, along with either Tea
Leaves or Coffee Grounds as desired. Add Olive Oil
and Vinegar, then add cold Water to cover well.
- Bring Eggs to a boil over high heat, then turn to very low,
a bare simmer, for about 6 hours, adding boiling water if needed.
- One at a time, cool Eggs under cold water just sufficiently
to handle them. tap on a hard surface, then massage the shells
gently, just enough to crack the shell. Peel them. If you want them
nice and round, continue to cool floating in cold water.
- These Eggs are usually served at the Sabbath meal, for
Passover, or may be included as a garnish in salads and the like.
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