But that’s the thing about myths—just when you’ve thrown your hands in the air and walked away, something new comes along to rekindle your hope. Like Fox Mulder, we want to believe. For me, that something new was my pressure cooker and a friend’s improbable suggestion that I try using it to make a batch of eggs. Just like that, the dream was alive again.
Video: How To Make Easy-Peel Pressure Cooker Eggs
Why the Pressure Cooker Works
I’ve actually been sitting on this revelation for a few months now, just because I didn’t trust the evidence I saw with my own eyes: Two eggs or a dozen, fresh eggs or weeks old, white eggs or brown eggs, it didn’t matter. The shells slipped easily off each time, leaving a smooth and pristine hard boiled egg. There are a few theories for why this is. Some say that, similar to steaming eggs, the pressure cooker forces steam inside the egg’s shell during cooking, causing it to separate from the egg white. Alton Brown’s theory is that it’s more about the rapid temperature change inside the sealed pot. Whatever the reason, it works! Making hard-cooked eggs in the pressure cooker is the only method I’ve found that has worked for me every single time.
How to Cooks Eggs in the Instant Pot
I based my eggs on the popular “5-5-5” method for hard-cooked eggs in the Instant Pot. The idea is to put your eggs into a steamer basket and seal them inside your pressure cooker along with a cup or so of water. It takes about five minutes for the cooker to come up to high pressure, five minutes to cook the eggs, and then five minutes of natural pressure release before removing the eggs from the cooker—hence the “5-5-5” method. I found that this basic formula worked just fine, though it typically takes my pressure cooker closer to 10 minutes before fully pressurizing. I also decided that I like the texture of 4-minute eggs better than 5-minute eggs. At four minutes, the whites are firm but soft and the yolk is cooked through but still creamy; at five minutes, I felt like the whites started to become rubbery and the yolk was a little chalky. Give it a try both ways and see which you prefer.
New to the Instant Pot? Check out our post How To Use an Instant Pot: A First-Timer’s Guide.
Stovetop Pressure Cooker Instructions
For those of you with stovetop pressure cookers, I recommend a quicker 3-minute cook time. Stovetop pressure cookers can reach a higher pressure than electric cookers and tend to cook food more quickly. (For reference, a friend of mine tested this recipe with her stovetop pressure cooker and her verdict was that 4-minute eggs were fine, but tasted slightly overcooked.)
One Caveat to Pressure Cooker Eggs
The only un-perfect thing about this way of hard boiling eggs is that, every so often, one of the eggs will crack its shell during cooking. When this has happened to me, it’s usually been during the 5 minute “natural release” period after the eggs are already cooked, so the crack is only superficially cosmetic. Not ideal if you’re planning to dye a bunch of Easter eggs, of course, but perfectly fine for deviled eggs. If your eggs seem to be cracking more often, or are cracking before the whites are set, try cooking them at low pressure instead of high pressure. My own tests at low pressure gave inconsistent results. But every pressure cooker is a little different, and you might have better luck with yours. The jury is still out on unicorns and affordable airfare. But easy-to-peel eggs? At least they are real. Don’t have a pressure cooker? Try steaming your eggs on the stovetop!
More Essential Instant Pot Recipes
How to Make Chicken Stock in the Instant Pot Instant Pot Yogurt How to Cook Frozen Chicken in the Instant Pot How to Make Rice in the Instant Pot How to Make Fast, No-Soak Beans in the Instant Pot
Some electric pressure cookers come with an “egg” or “steam” setting, but we’re bypassing that here to keep things utterly simple. Using high pressure on the manual setting will steam your eggs perfectly, don’t worry.
Pressure Cooking Tips for Really Fresh Eggs
If you’re lucky enough to have chickens or you got super fresh eggs from the farmer’s market, you may have to adjust the cooking time a bit. Try cooking for 5 minutes under pressure, wait 5 minutes before releasing the pressure, and then let cool in an ice bath for 10 minutes. If you’re using the eggs right away, try putting a little crack in each egg before pressure cooking for easier peeling. If your pressure cooker didn’t come with its own steamer basket, you can use a standard metal or silicone steamer basket in its place. (If you don’t have a steamer basket, you can skip it, but you may get a greater number of cracked eggs.) Avoid stacking eggs on top of each other since this can also lead to more cracked eggs. If you need to cook more eggs than will fit in a single layer, we suggest cooking multiple batches. The pressure cooker will take 5 to 10 minutes to come to full pressure and then being cooking. Cooking time begins once the cooker has come to pressure.