Wednesday, October 7, 2009

The Incredible Edible egg!


It's that time of year when we find egg salad back on our menu. The Easter season always brings us back to hard boiled eggs. My guess is even you have "eggs" on your grocery list this week.
Didn't you just love to color Easter eggs when you were a child? I fondly remember those tiny plastic bottles purchased in a little cardboard box filled with the primary colors. And oh what a mess the minuted drop made on the kitchen table. But what fun it was to gather around the table together with our siblings, the air rich with the smell of vinegar.
If you are creative enough and still have a bit of a kid in you, coloring eggs may still be an activity you may want to participate in this weekend. No need for those jars of dye, you can use wonderful things from nature to color your eggs. Did you know that the skin from purple or white onions will dye your eggs wonderful rich colors? Try it- you will be pleasantly surprised. Just add the skin of one or 2 purple onions to your boiling water and during the cooking time (6 minutes) you will have colored some beautiful eggs.
Or you could forgo the coloring process and just buy some brown eggs. Did you ever wonder what makes an egg white or brown or speckled? It is the breed of chicken which dictates the color of the shell. White feather, white earlobed chickens will produce white shelled eggs. Red feather, red earlobed chickens will produce brown eggs. The flavor and nutritional value of the eggs will remain the same regardless of the shell color.
To ensure that you are starting with fresh eggs, do this little test: Fill a bowl with water. Place an uncooked egg in the bowl. Does it float or sink? If it floats, throw the egg away. It has passed its prime freshness. As eggs age they lose water through the shell. An egg that floats contains little to no water and is no longer fresh.
Once you hard boil all those eggs, are you wondering what you are going to do with them? Here are a few recipe ideas for you to try.
1. Slice them into fresh green salads
2. Dice the eggs and add to potato or tuna salad
3. Make a Cobb or traditional egg salad.
Or why not try this lower fat deviled egg recipe for a nice change.

Deviled Eggs

Ingredients:
12 large hard-boiled eggs , (see Tip), peeled
1/3 cup nonfat cottage cheese
1/4 cup low-fat mayonnaise
3 tablespoons minced fresh chives , or scallion greens
1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish
2 teaspoons yellow mustard
1/8 teaspoon salt
Paprika , for garnish

Direction:
1.Halve eggs lengthwise with a sharp knife. Gently remove the yolks. Place 16 yolk halves in a food processor (discard the remaining 8 yolk halves). Add cottage cheese, mayonnaise, chives (or scallion greens), relish, mustard and salt; process until smooth.
2.Spoon about 2 teaspoons yolk mixture into each egg white half. Sprinkle with paprika, if desired.

Make Ahead Tip: Cover and refrigerate for up to 1 day.

Tip: To hard-boil eggs: Place eggs in a single layer in a saucepan; cover with water. Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Reduce heat to low and cook at the barest simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from heat, pour out hot water and cover the eggs with ice-cold water. Let stand until cool enough to handle before peeling.

Nutrition
Per serving: 34 calories; 2 g fat (1 g sat, 1 g mono); 71 mg cholesterol; 1 g carbohydrates; 3 g protein; 0 g fiber; 85 mg sodium; 31 mg potassium.

Recipe courtesty of Eating Well magazine

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