As someone who spent the vast period of my life from ten years old to about a year ago not eating eggs, mastering the hard-boiled egg has represented a bit of a challenge to me. Pre-age 10, I only knew my mother's. They were long-cooked, powdery-textured, with palid yellow yolks rimmed in an unappetizing blue-gray. Of course since then I learned to avoid that by shocking the just-cooked eggs in ice water, but I had no impetus to dial down the exact timing AND figure out how to get the shell cleanly off a fresh egg until I started eating them myself.
We're there.
Got the idea from the Food Lab book (don't own it, but briefly perused a friend's copy) and instantly grokked that his method would work--but I think mine's better. Who wants to measure ice cubes?
Here's what I did. Brought water to a very low simmer. Lowered just-purchased fresh eggs in with a slotted spoon. Pre-cooked for one minute. Removed eggs with slotted spoon and dropped into a bowl of ice water. Rested them for another minute. Returned them, again via slotted spoon, to the same pan of barely-simmering water. Increased heat slightly to bring water back to bare simmer, then set timer for eight minutes. When done, I spooned the eggs back into the ice water.
About five minutes later, here's the egg I made with proof via the shell of just how beautifully they peeled:
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THAT, is a perfect hard-boiled egg.
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