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Periodic cooking: Cracking the method for the 'perfect' boiled egg

Periodic cooking: Cracking the method for the 'perfect' boiled egg
Photographs of the raw, hard-boiled (red), soft-boiled (yellow), sous vide (green) and periodic (blue) eggs. Credit: Pellegrino Musto and Ernesto Di Maio

A new method pioneered to optimally cook both the yolk and white (or albumen) of a boiled chicken egg has been in Communications Engineering. The approach, which the authors call periodic cooking, yields an evenly-cooked egg with a higher nutritional content than shell-on eggs cooked by conventional boiling or sous vide methods.

The yolk and white in cook at two different temperatures: the albumen cooks at 85 degrees Celsius, while the yolk cooks at 65 degrees Celsius. Conventional methods for cooking eggs by hard-boiling at 100 degrees Celsius result in the yolk being fully set, while cooking them at temperatures between 60 and 70 degrees Celsius in a water bath for one hour (a method known as sous vide) leaves the white undercooked.

Pellegrino Musto and colleagues developed a method for consistently cooking eggs by first simulating the process in computational fluid dynamics software. The simulations suggested a method that consists of alternating an egg between a pan of boiling water kept at 100 degrees Celsius and a bowl kept at 30 degrees Celsius, transferring the egg from one to the other every two minutes for a total duration of 32 minutes.

The authors then trialed this process in real life to produce food samples to analyze, calling it "periodic cooking." Hard-boiled, soft-boiled, and sous vide eggs were also included in the analysis—the final cooked eggs were tested for their texture and sensory qualities, with their chemical properties evaluated using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry.

Periodically-cooked eggs had a soft yolk similar to that of a sous vide egg, while the consistency of the white was somewhere between that of sous vide and soft-boiled. Temperatures in the periodically-cooked egg white ranged between 35 and 100 degrees Celsius during cooking, while the yolk remained at a consistent of 67 degrees Celsius.

Chemical analysis suggested that the periodically-cooked egg yolks also contained more polyphenols—micronutrients which have been explored for their health benefits.

The authors believe their approach could also have applications in the curing and crystallization of other materials.

More information: Pellegrino Musto, Periodic cooking of eggs, Communications Engineering (2025). .

Journal information: Communications Engineering

Provided by Springer

Citation: Periodic cooking: Cracking the method for the 'perfect' boiled egg (2025, February 6) retrieved 23 September 2025 from /news/2025-02-periodic-cooking-method-egg.html
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