Chinese Tea Eggs (Slightly Non-Traditional)

Chinese Tea Eggs turn hard-boiled eggs into beautifully marbled jewels, perfumed with a tea and herbal infusion featuring star anise, green cardamom pods, cinnamon, fennel seed, and Chinese five spice powder.

Black tea is seasoned with soy sauce, and Chinese five spice powder.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

Bored with the usual boiled egg for lunch? These Chinese Tea Eggs are anything but boring. These are fun to prepare and eat and although it is a three-step process, it’s easy to do, and the results are well worth the effort.

Chinese Tea Eggs begin with hardboiled eggs with evenly cracked shells (a decorative marble pattern will form later).
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

Step 1. Hard-boil 6 eggs (I actually boil up 7, in case one of the eggs ‘misfires’). Next, cool the eggs in an ice water bath until they can be held in your hands comfortably. Roll and gently tap the eggs until the shells are evenly and thoroughly cracked. Note: be careful to avoid breaking away large chunks of shell from the egg white underneath the shell.

Chinese Tea Eggs steep overnight in the refrigerator in a fragrant tea and spice bath.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

Step 2. Create a fragrant broth with which to flavor the cracked eggs by simmering together: water, black tea, herbal tea, soy sauce, a touch of honey, star anise, cinnamon, green cardamom, fennel seed, Chinese five spice powder, and Szechuan peppercorns.

A word of warning though, if you taste this stuff straight out of the pot, it doesn’t taste very good. That’s part of the magic of these Chinese Tea Eggs — the flavor doesn’t develop until the whole thing sits together and marries. So, with this recipe, go by how it smells as it is simmering, and skip tasting it (ok, I would too, but you’ve been forwarned).

Step 3. Flavor the eggs by combining them with the hot tea mixture.

Here’s where I depart from tradition. In most recipes for tea eggs, the boiled eggs are usually re-boiled in the tea mixture. This results in a firmer texture to the eggs that I don’t personally enjoy.  My solution to this is to skip the additional boiling. Instead, I create the tea/soy/spice infusion, combine it with the cracked eggs, and steep the eggs overnight in the refrigerator. As a result, my version is a little more subtle in flavor — but not too subtle — because I make up for the shorter time on the stove by using a bit more flavorings than you might find in a typical recipe for tea eggs.

For a more traditional recipe, here’s an article you might like from Food 52 for tea eggs.

Chinese Tea Eggs are weighed-down with a small bowl to keep them submerged in a soy, spice, and tea infusion.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

To be well-flavored, the eggs need to be completely submerged in the tea/soy/spice infusion. So, weigh-down the eggs with a small plate or bowl to make sure all the eggs stay submerged (they love to float) and properly infused with flavor.

Chinese Tea Eggs are served with Szechuan peppercorn salt.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

Twenty-four hours later, the Chinese Tea Eggs are ready to be peeled and their uncommon flavor enjoyed. But it’s not just the flavor that’s so pleasing. Once the cracked shells are peeled away, each egg sports its own unique, beautiful, marbled effect.

These are delicious as is, but delicately dipped in Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt they’re over-the-top.

Speaking of boiled eggs, here’s something fun from Food 52, The Mesmerizing Way Danny DeVito Peels a Hard-Boiled Egg.

I hope you have fun with these naturally high-protein, low-carb treats, that are perfect for a light breakfast, lunch, or snack.

Please share your thoughts about this recipe for Chinese Tea Eggs in the Comments section below.

 

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Chinese Tea Eggs (Slightly Non-Traditional)
This recipe for Chinese Tea Eggs calls for herbal tea. You can use whatever variety you like or have on hand but please choose a tea that includes a combination of ingredients along the lines of: hibiscus flowers, orange peel, cinnamon, lemon grass, and rose hips.© The Working Lunch Project
Black tea is seasoned with soy sauce, and Chinese five spice powder.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
You:
Rate this recipe!
Course Breakfast, Lunch, Snack
Cuisine Chinese
Prep Time 45 minutes
Passive Time 24 hours
Servings
servings
Ingredients
Course Breakfast, Lunch, Snack
Cuisine Chinese
Prep Time 45 minutes
Passive Time 24 hours
Servings
servings
Ingredients
Black tea is seasoned with soy sauce, and Chinese five spice powder.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
You:
Rate this recipe!
Instructions
  1. In a medium saucepan combine the eggs and salt and bring to a boil.
  2. Remove from heat, cover and allow to sit undisturbed for 13 minutes.
  3. Remove eggs from saucepan and immerse in an ice water bath to stop the cooking process.
  4. In a medium saucepan over high heat, bring all remaining ingredients to a boil over high heat.
  5. Turn the heat to the lowest setting that will still maintain a gentle simmer, and simmer for 45 minutes or until reduced by about half.
  6. Meanwhile, crack the hard-boiled eggs all around by tapping with a soup spoon and/or gently rolling the eggs on a countertop. You want an even, cracked pattern around each egg, but you don't want large bits of shell falling off each egg.
  7. Place the prepared eggs in a deep bowl big enough to hold them, hold a strainer over the bowl and the prepared eggs, and strain the hot tea infusion into the bowl to cover the eggs.
  8. Weigh down the eggs with a small plate or bowl and store in the refrigerator for 24 hours to allow the tea infusion to flavor the eggs.
  9. Peel the eggs and serve. Covered, these will keep in the refrigerator for several days.
Recipe Notes

Nutritional facts per serving:

73 calories

5g fat

212mg sodium

1g carbs

0g fiber

6g protein

 

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Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt

This recipe for Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt is a great seasoned salt to have on hand, lending an Asian flair to many dishes.

Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt is a recipe that uses toasted ground Szechuan peppercorns mixed with fine sea salt for a a seasoned salt with Asian flair.
Photo: Cynthia Dalton

Sometimes the difference between a really great lunch and just a ho-hum affair is experimenting with new and different flavors. This is why a few homemade seasoned salt recipes are great to have in one’s pantry — it just keeps life interesting!

Seasoned salts can add a note of something special to all kinds of simple mainstays, such as an otherwise innocuous scoop of cottage cheese or the ubiquitous boiled egg.

So, here’s my take on Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt. Some recipes call for toasting the peppercorns in some oil before grinding but I don’t find the oil necessary. I just toast the peppercorns in a dry skillet on medium high heat for about 3 minutes or until the peppercorns fill the kitchen with their fragrance. Once cooled, I grind them in a spice grinder, run them through a sieve, and mix them with fine sea salt.

I do find that salt blends don’t really taste their best until they’ve had a chance to sit in a cool, dark, dry place for 2 or 3 days, so plan ahead on this one.

For some additional information on Szechuan pepper and to visit a really fun site with some interesting recipes, check out Omnivor’s Cookbook.

You’ll find lots of different spellings for these peppercorns — Schezwan, Sichuan, or Szechuan to name a few but anyway you spell it, the flavor is unique. It’s somewhat citrusy, somewhat floral, has a bit of a gingery sting (but it’s not too hot), and is slightly astringent, as in balsam or pine. Toasting does seem to cut way down on the slight numbing quality on the lips and tongue that these peppercorns possess.

Szechuan peppercorns* aren’t really peppercorns at all, but are actually a dried berry. Here’s more information on Szechuan peppercorns from The Epicentre.

I hope you enjoy this recipe for Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt. Please use the Comments section below to share your thoughts.

Print Recipe
Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt
You'll know when you've got the Szechuan peppercorns toasted to perfection — your kitchen will be filled with a hard to define pine-meets-vanilla-meets-citrus scent. © The Working Lunch Project
Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt is a recipe that uses toasted ground Szechuan peppercorns mixed with fine sea salt for a a seasoned salt with Asian flair.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
You:
Rate this recipe!
Course Lunch, Snack
Cuisine Asian
Prep Time 10 minutes
Passive Time 2-3 days
Servings
servings (¼ teaspoon each)
Ingredients
Course Lunch, Snack
Cuisine Asian
Prep Time 10 minutes
Passive Time 2-3 days
Servings
servings (¼ teaspoon each)
Ingredients
Toasted Szechuan Peppercorn Salt is a recipe that uses toasted ground Szechuan peppercorns mixed with fine sea salt for a a seasoned salt with Asian flair.
Votes: 0
Rating: 0
You:
Rate this recipe!
Instructions
  1. In a dry skillet, on medium-high heat, shaking frequently, toast the Szechuan peppercorns until their aroma starts to fill-up your kitchen.
  2. Remove from the heat and transfer to a paper towel to cool.
  3. When Szechuan peppercorns are cooled, transfer to a spice grinder and grind to a fine powder.
  4. Force the powder through a small seive and combine with the fine sea salt.
  5. Store in a glass jar in a cool, dark, dry place for 2 to 3 days to allow the flavor to permeate the salt and develop.
Recipe Notes

Nutritional facts per serving:

0 calories

0g fat

590mg sodium

0g carbs

0g fiber

0g protein

 

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