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Ever make deviled eggs and find that the yolk is way over to one side? Hate that! On the farm nobody ever had that problem and now I know why. Free range eggs lie on their side until someone gathers them and they become victuals. Megamart eggs are stored on end in cartons.
To make perfect deviled eggs store the eggs on their side at least overnight and the yolk will center itself in the white. Just put the carton on it's side. My favorite boiling method is to place room temp eggs in cool water, bring to a boil and remove from heat. Let sit covered for 12 minutes (YMMV) then cool quickly in cold water. Perfectly done and no green yolk.
I also found out that really really fresh eggs don't peel easily so give them a few days in the reefer before boiling. Running cold eggs under warm water seems to help too. You can tell how fresh the eggs are by how they float when covered with water. The higher they float the larger the air pocket because the eggs lose moisture through the shell over time. The freshest eggs lie flat on their side on the bottom of the pan, old eggs stand on end. If they stand on end, pick a tiny hole in the "large" end to let hot air escape instead of cracking the shell. A tbs or two of vinegar in the water will coagulate the white quickly if an egg does crack.
Deviled eggs is the best use I've found for truffle oil next to adding it to compound butter; garlic, shrimp or anchovy it seems to help them all.
That's 'bout all I know 'bout eggs . . .
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