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Taiwanese Tea Egg

Traditionally, Taiwanese Tea Eggs are a staple at 7-11 convenience stores across Taiwan. These eggs, hard-boiled and marinated in a hot bath of spices and soy all day with their shells on, hold cherished memories for those born and raised in Taiwan.

Our recipe deviates slightly, resulting in a soft-boiled tea egg that may not replicate the exact childhood memories, but they certainly offer a tastier experience.

How to Make a Delicious Taiwanese Tea Egg

This recipe serves 4, or less depending on how many eggs you want to indulge in at once.

Ingredients

  • Large eggs: 4 ea

Brine

  • Water: 200g
  • Black tea: 10g
  • Star anise: 2 ea
  • Cinnamon: 1ea
  • Sugar: 20g
  • Vinegar: 50g
  • Soy sauce: 250g

Step 1: Prepare the Brine

The brine starts with boiling black tea, star anise and cinnamon in a pot of water. Bring it to a boil, remove from the heat and add sugar. Make sure the sugar is well dissolved before adding vinegar and soy. Pour the brine into a container and put in the fridge to allow it to cool.

spices and water sugar spoon

Step 2: Soft-Boiling the Eggs

For the eggs, we prefer a soft boil to a hard boil. Traditionally, a Taiwanese tea egg sits in a solution of water, salt, tea, and spices for at least an hour, hard-boiled and with its shell on.

The eggs are gently cracked during the marinating therefore creating a beautiful marbling pattern. Although the eggs look great, the flavor tends to sit on the shell which gets peeled off. We prefer the marinate without the shells.

boil eggs boil eggs

Step 3: Cooling and Peeling

Bring a pot of abundant water to a boil and gently drop in the eggs one at the time. If the eggs were in the refrigerator the water will stop boiling for a few seconds, wait until it comes to a boil again and then turn down the heat slightly.

Gentle boiling will avoid the egg white tasting rubbery - we are being picky here. After the time is up, rinse them under cold water for a minute or add them to bowl with ice. Peel immediately, which might upset the purists.

cool eggs in ice boiled eggs

Although we prefer in the 7 minutes ball-park, boil them to your preference. How long should you boil eggs? Using the method of adding the cold eggs to boiling water - soft boil goes from 5 to 7 minutes and hard boil is in between 10 and 12 minutes.

Step 4: Marinating

When the eggs are cooked to your preference and the brine liquid is cold, place the eggs in it and allow them to sit, submerged, for at least 1 hour, and up to 3 hours.

Ensure the eggs are fully submerged with the help of a plate. The longer they marinate, the more flavorful but also more salty.

tea egg brine taiwanese tea egg in brine

Do not toss the brine, as it can be re-used for at least three times.

Serving and Storing

We prefer to eat the tea eggs on the same day that they are prepared, however, you can make them in advance, keep them refrigerated, and snack on them within 3 days - after that you are on your own.

soft boil taiwanese tea egg

Tea Selection for Tea Eggs

The most appropriate tea to use for making tea eggs is black tea. The eggs get their dark color mainly from the tea itself. The darker the tea, the better. Oolong tea can also be used to make tea eggs.

We recommend using a dark-style oolong tea, Taiwanese Tieguanyin is a good option. If you don't have access to loose leaf tea you could use black tea from tea bags. This is more about the eggs than the tea. For this recipe, we used Jade Rouge Black Tea.

 

Browse Black Teas

Spices for Taiwanese Tea Eggs

Although we use just cinnamon and star anise in our tea egg, feel free to explore other spices to give a different and unique taste to your own creation. This is just a brief list of spices and aromatics that go well with tea egg flavor:

  • Cloves
  • Fennel Seed
  • Szechuan Peppercorn
  • Licorice
  • Orange Peel
  • Ginger
  • Garlic

Making a Traditional Tea Egg

For a more traditional take on the tea egg you would still follow the same steps, but instead of peeling the egg, you would just crack the egg all around, with the help of a spoon, and then marinate the egg with shell on.

The cracked shell will allow the marinade to penetrate into the egg, giving it that popular marble tea egg appearance. Allow it to marinate for longer to ensure that the flavor steeps into the egg properly.

cracked egg traditional tea egg

Whatever method, or recipe, you decide to do, Bon Appetite!

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