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Home Collections Party Food

Devilled eggs

By:Nagi
Published:5 Feb '25Updated:8 Feb '25
75 Comments
Recipe v Video v Dozer v

Hard boiled eggs are boring. Devilled eggs are fabulous!! They are the devil indeed because you will eat more than your fair share without realising it, then everybody at the party will resent you for years to come!

Devilled eggs

The way I like my devilled eggs

Devilled eggs are easy and delicious when made well. But all too often, they suffer from overcooked yolks, too much mayo, and lumpy fillings!

This version, inspired by a Julia Child recipe, swaps most of the usual mayo for butter, creating a softer, creamier texture with better flavour (butter always wins!). A touch of mustard and hot sauce adds tang and a hum of warmth without overpowering the egg, with just a smidge of mayo.

This is the way I love my devilled eggs. Rich enough for party canapés yet light enough for a meal on the side of a salad.

See FAQ below for chatter about why butter over oil, and recipe references, including April Bloomfield’s Spotted Pig, Cafe Paci, Julia Child and Serious Eats.

Devilled eggs

Why they are really called “devilled eggs”

It is true that devilled eggs are devilishly good and they are the devil because you can’t stop eating them! But actually, devilled eggs got their name from an old culinary term for spicy or zesty foods, since the flavours added give them a little “devilish” kick. 🙂

Proof of filling creaminess:

Devilled eggs

What you need to make devilled eggs

Firstly…. eggs! The secret ingredient in today’s recipe. 😂

the Eggs

We need 12 eggs which will make 18 to 20 pieces (ie egg halves) filled generously with the filling. 12 yolks doesn’t make enough to fill 24 pieces – unless you bulk out the filling with mayonnaise or other flavourings that overwhelm the egg flavour which then kind of defeats the purpose.

Egg size – The recipe calls for “large eggs” which are eggs sold in cartons labelled as such, 600 – 660g / 24 oz for a dozen. It will work fine with extra large eggs too (700g/25oz) but if you start getting into jumbo egg territory, use the recipe scaler to dial up the filling ingredients a bit so you get the right flavour.

TIP: Boil them from fridge-cold. This keeps the yolks a little creamier as it takes a little longer to come to temperature and cook.

FOR THE FILLING AND GARNISH

And here’s what you need for the filling and garnish. Despite the hot sauce in this (I use Tabasco), they are not spicy. It’s just enough for a faint background hum. The Tabasco provides far more flavour and tang than spiciness.

  • Mayonnaise – Just a touch to loosen the filling a little. Whole egg mayonnaise is recommended as it has a smoother, more rounded flavour than regular mayo (which is sweeter and sharper), though it’s not a deal killer. Kewpie will also work.

  • Tabasco or other hot sauce – This mainly adds tang and flavour, I wouldn’t call these eggs spicy at all. In fact, it is surprising how much tabasco flavour comes through without the spiciness! Feel free to use another hot sauce of choice (Franks, sriracha etc). If you are unsure of quantity because of different spiciness levels, start with less and add more at the end, to taste.

  • Cold butter – Some recipes use olive oil rather than butter. But honestly, butter gives a better flavour (of course!) and the texture is nicer too – soft and creamy like buttercream frosting. Also, oil makes the filling a little pastier than using butter, because I think the oil emulsifies more strongly with the yolks.

  • White wine vinegar – For extra brightness. Egg yolks with butter is so rich and creamy, you need vinegar to cut through it. Substitutes: red wine vinegar (it won’t colour the filling red), champagne or sherry vinegar, or apple cider vinegar. As a last resort: Regular white vinegar but use half the amount.

  • Salt – The recipe calls for a modestly heaped 1/4 teaspoon of cooking salt / kosher salt. I know that’s a weird amount, but we’re working with on a small scale with the filling so it is what it is! Other salts – If you only have table salt which is much finer, use a heaped 1/8 teaspoon. For sea salt flakes, use a level 1/2 teaspoon.

  • Dijon mustard – For extra punch and flavour. Substitute with yellow mustard (American mustard) though use a little less.

  • Chives and paprika – Classic garnishes for devilled eggs. I use regular paprika (aka sweet paprika) though smoked paprika is also nice.

Devilled eggs
Devilled eggs
Creamy fluffy devilled egg filling in a mini food processor

How to make devilled eggs

My rules are simple – don’t overcook the eggs. And don’t use too much mayo!

Oh, also, a nifty trick for how to boil eggs with nicely centred yolks for the smartest looking devilled eggs on the block!

1. centred egg yolks

For devilled eggs, you want a boiled egg with a yolk that is centred within the egg white as much as possible. This not only looks attractive but if the yolk is too off-centre, the egg white wall on one or more sides can be thin and break.

Boiled eggs with centred yolks

The trick for centred egg yolks is to stir the water regularly as the eggs are boiling. The centrifugal force when the eggs roll and spin helps keep the yolks centre as the whites set. We tested it and it works consistently 95% of the time, whereas without it’s kind of pot-luck where the yolks end up!

How to boil eggs with centred yolks for devilled eggs

If you read the steps and wonder – why fridge cold eggs, why boil water first? Answers are over here -> How to boil eggs.

How to make devilled eggs
  1. Boil 10 minutes – Bring 12 cm / 5″ water to a boil in a large pot. Once it comes to a full boil, lower fridge cold eggs in gently using a spider or slotted spoon. Start the timer and boil for 10 minutes.

    ⚠️ Lower heat a touch, if needed, so the eggs are not being jostled around so much they crack (but not too much, else they won’t cook!). Make sure the pot is roomy – you need the space for the swirling step.
    💡We need hard boiled eggs for devilled eggs. If they are soft boiled, the whites are a little too fragile to pick up. 

  2. STIR every minute – Using the handle of a wooden spoon, stir the eggs every minute 5 or 6 times. Stir around the edge of the pot at a decent pace to get the water moving, then retract and watch the eggs swirl around in the water. This is what makes the yolks cook so they are centred.

How to make devilled eggs
  1. Sink of water – Transfer the eggs into a sink filled with cold tap water using a spider or slotted spoon. Leave for 5 minutes until cool enough to handle, then peel.

  2. Peeling eggs – Crack the base of the egg (weakest point) then peel under water (it’s easier).

A note on fresh eggs

Fresh eggs (ie within 2 days of being laid, which is not any store bought egg!) will not require swirling as the whites are tight enough that the yolks stay nicely centred when boiled. Ironically though, fresh eggs are harder to peel neatly. 🙂

2. Making the devilled eggs

While some recipes will just call for mashing the filling, is so much nicer if it’s fully smooth and fluffy – easy to achieve with a quick blitz.

How to make devilled eggs
  1. Remove yolks – Cut the eggs in half, marvel at how the yolk is centred (for most of them!). Scoop the yolks out with a teaspoon.

  2. Creamy devilled eggs filling – Put the yolks and all filling ingredients EXCEPT the butter into a small food processor. Blitz until the yolks are broken up. Add the butter then blitz until there are no butter lumps remaining, scraping down the sides as needed. The filling should be smooth (smear with back of spoon to check).

    💡Blitzing tool – I use a mini food processor that came with my stick blender. Handheld electric beater works too, like making frosting! Stick blender doesn’t work (gets stuck in blades). For a regular food processor or stand mixer, either use a small bowl insert or expect to scrape down the sides a fair few times. Hand method – Use softened butter, smear/mash until smooth, push through a fine sieve.

How to make devilled eggs
  1. Fill – Choose the best 18 to 20 egg white halves. Transfer the filling to a piping bag fitted with a nozzle of your choice (I use a star tip), though even no nozzle is fine too. Pipe the filling in generously in whatever pattern you choose, mounding it to around the same size of a whole yolk.

    💡As noted above in the ingredients sections, 12 eggs will make 18 – 20 filled halves. Eat the spare egg white halves (so healthy!), or chop them up and throw into a salad.

  2. Garnish – Sprinkle with paprika and chives. Then serve!

Devilled eggs

Devilled eggs

Even better the next day!

And my last pitch for devilled eggs is sheer convenience for make ahead and storage purposes. They are great today, but even better tomorrow once the filling flavours have had a chance to meld. They keep perfectly for 3 to 4 days in the fridge – possibly even 5 days (though I feel like 4 days is my limit for peeled eggs).

Make them today and take them to a party this weekend. Or think, meal prep! Make a batch and enjoy it with a big leafy salad on the side. This is what I’ve been doing all week, having made two batches in the last 48 hours alone, plus the multiple batches my brother made (who did the leg work creating this recipe). There have been a LOT of devilled eggs in my vicinity over the past week! – Nagi x

Devilled eggs FAQ

Depends where you live!! It’s “deviled eggs” in the States, but “devilled eggs” here in Australia, UK and … well, most of the rest of the world?? 🙂

This is a version based on a Julie Child recipe for a boiled egg filling which uses butter. People have adapted it to a devilled eggs recipe and we’ve done the same.

We were also inspired by the famous Cafe Paci curry butter devilled eggs which we love and are delicious, but extremely rich. Too rich for me! (Mind you, I’m that person who wants to eat more than one piece of devilled eggs).

In preparing to share our recipe, we also made a version based on April Bloomfield’s Spotted Pig devilled eggs (in New York, it’s closed down), which Kenji used as the basis for his Serious Eats recipe. While delicious, we felt the recipe makes a stiffer filling (it’s made with oil rather than butter), with a rich but more pasty rather than creamy mouthfeel.

The recipe we chose to share gives you a softer, creamier filling. I like both oil and butter based devilled egg recipes but prefer this butter version. Plus, we don’t want to be copying Kenji! 🙂

3 to 4 days in the fridge in an airtight container. Probably 5, but I’m a little conservative with peeled eggs. If taking to a party, do the paprika and chives sprinkle just before serving.

Devilled eggs make the perfect finger food to take to a pot luck, picnic or party! Two options for transporting them safely:

(1) Cut a small piece from the underside of each egg white half before filling so it has a flat base. After filling pack eggs into a container lined with a paper towel for transport. The flat bases also stop the eggs sliding around if you’re carrying them on a plate when serving.

(2) Roughly scrunch up sheets of foil, and loosely line a wide container with it. Form little cup-shaped beds in the foil to hold the eggs in place while transporting.

Bonus tip: It’s easier to pick up and place delicate, filled eggs using a table spoon to scoop under them!

My brother did the legwork for this recipe. He’s been the devilled egg provider in the family for years and I finally cornered him to “finalise” the recipe. He did the oil vs butter comparisons (butter wins for flavour and texture, filling made with oil is a little pastier), and figured out the best way to keep the yolks centred when boiling.

We batted back and forth on what our idea of the “perfect classic” devilled egg flavour was and were both adamant that it has to be egg-forward rather than mayo-forward flavour. We don’t like the mouthfeel of a slick of mayo grease in anything. Egg yolks, while rich, have a different mouthfeel – it’s not greasy, and this is what makes iconic dishes like real Carbonara, Tiramisu and Chocolate Mousse so special.

Then we debated the level of tang that was “perfect” for devilled eggs. Without tang, the filling is overly rich, but our first iterations were a smidge on the over tangy side.

Oh, so many options!! We were tempted to cram in multiple offerings into this post but I decided we should reserve them for another time. Curried Devilled Eggs, Gochujang Korean Devilled Eggs, Crispy Bacon, Spanish, Cowboy Devilled Eggs – so many fun options!

Watch how to make it

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Devilled eggs

Devilled eggs

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 10 minutes mins
Boiled eggs cooling: 5 minutes mins
Total: 43 minutes mins
Party Food
Western
4.56 from 9 votes
Servings18 – 20 pieces
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. Arguably everybody's favourite egg recipe! Easy, affordable party food that's excellent for making ahead.
Making a great one is easy – just don't overcook the eggs, don't use too much mayo and make the filling smooth rather than lumpy. Oh, and use butter rather than oil (creamier, tastier – thank you Julia Child!) and enjoy the nifty trick for boiled eggs with a neatly centred yolk.
Don't worry, they're not spicy. And PS, you don't need to wait until your next party. They make a great meal with a big Garden Salad on the side!

Ingredients

  • 12 large eggs (50-55g / 2 oz each in shell, fridge cold (Note 1)

Devilled eggs filling (Note 2 for subs):

  • 2 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 2 tsp Tabasco or other hot sauce
  • 1 tsp white wine vinegar
  • 2 tsp mayonnaise , whole egg mayo preferred, or kewpie
  • 1/4 heaped teaspoon cooking salt / kosher sale (Note 3)
  • 50 g/ 3 tbsp cold unsalted butter , cut into 1 cm / 0.2″ cubes

Garnish:

  • Paprika , regular/sweet, or smoked
  • 1 tbsp chives , finely chopped
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

(ABBREVIATED RECIPE)

  • Hard boil eggs, halve, blitz yolks with Filling ingredients except butter, then blitz in butter. Pipe (18 – 20 pieces), garnish, serve!

(FULL RECIPE)

    Hard boil eggs with centred yolks:

    • Large pot – Bring a large pot with 15cm / 6 water to the boil. Lower eggs in gently using a spider or slotted spoon. Lower heat a tiny bit if needed to stop the eggs from jostling around so much they crack.
    • Boil and swirl – Boil eggs for 10 minutes. Swirl the water every minute for the first 6 minutes, using the handle of a wooden spoon. Give the water 4 or 5 fast stirs in one direction to make the water and eggs swirl in the water. The centrifugal force will make the yolks cook centred in the egg white (ie no thin broken egg white walls) (Note 4).
    • Peel – Fill a sink with cold tap water. Remove eggs from the boiling water using a slotted spoon or spider. Leave for 5 minutes until cool enough to handle. Tap the base then peel under water (it's easier).

    Fill devilled eggs:

    • Remove yolks – Cut eggs in half and remove the yolks using a teaspoon.
    • Filling – Place the yolks and all filling ingredients EXCEPT butter in a small food processor (Note 5). Blitz until yolks are broken up. Add butter and blitz, scraping down the sides as needed, until the butter is blended through. The filling should be creamy (smear with back of spoon to check).
    • Choose the best 18 to 20 egg white halves. (Note 6) Brush yolk crumbs off the cut surface.
    • Pipe – Transfer filling into a piping bag fitted with a nozzle of your choice (I use a star). Fill so it's mounded – I do about the same amount as a whole yolk.
    • Sprinkle with paprika and chives. Serve! (Best enjoyed at room temperature rather than fridge cold as the filling is creamier.)

    Recipe Notes:

    1. “Large eggs” are an industry standard size, sold in cartons labelled “large eggs”, 600-660g / 24 oz for a dozen. “Extra large eggs” also ok, but if using jumbo, scale up the filling a touch (move servings slider until mustard increases to 2.5 teaspoons).
    2. Filling subs and notes:
    • Dijon mustard – American mustard but reduce to 1.5 tsp
    • Tabasco – adds faint background spiciness, but mostly flavour and tang. Can use other hot sauces – Franks hot sauce, sriracha, Mexican hot sauces. Start with less, add more at the end to taste.
    • Vinegar – sub with red wine vinegar, champagne or sherry vinegar, apple cider vinegar. Last resort – regular white vinegar (halve amount).
    • Mayonnaise – Whole egg mayo is smoother, less tangy and less sweet. But not a huge deal if it’s regular mayo.
    3. Salt – For table salt which is much finer, use a heaped 1/8 teaspoon. For sea salt flakes, use a level 1/2 teaspoon.
    4. Centred yolks – For devilled eggs, we want the yolks centred as much as possible so we don’t end up with thin egg white walls that break when picked up. The swirling technique works about 90/95% – see in post for photo of eggs compared with and without the swirling.
    5. Blitzing – I use the small food processor that came with my stick blender. You can also use a handheld electric beater. For hand – use softened butter, mash/stir, then pass through a sieve to make the filling smooth.
    6. Quantity – 12 eggs does not make 24 pieces, it makes 20 pieces. Because I don’t like to bulk out the filling with excessive amounts of mayo to fill 24. Eat leftover whites or chop up and put in a salad!
    Leftovers and make ahead – Excellent for making ahead! Perfect for 2 days, still 95% as good for 3 to 5 days (though garnish fresh, if serving to company). Best to de-chill for creamiest filling, just take out of fridge 30 minutes prior. See FAQ section for more info, including tips on transporting your eggs safely!
    Nutrition per piece, assuming 20 pieces.

    Nutrition Information:

    Calories: 59cal (3%)Carbohydrates: 0.2gProtein: 3g (6%)Fat: 5g (8%)Saturated Fat: 2g (13%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 2gTrans Fat: 0.1gCholesterol: 104mg (35%)Sodium: 75mg (3%)Potassium: 38mg (1%)Fiber: 0.03gSugar: 0.1gVitamin A: 212IU (4%)Vitamin C: 0.1mgCalcium: 16mg (2%)Iron: 0.5mg (3%)
    Keywords: devilled eggs, egg recipes
    Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

    Life of Dozer

    We had the fundraiser for Sophie’s Legacy at the Small Animal Specialist Hospital near my home on the weekend! Raising awareness for veterinarian mental health. I really want to show you a video but I won’t manage to finish it today, so it will have to wait until Friday. It’s special!

    So for now, some phone snaps – before:

    During:

    After:

    He did so good. It was a hot day, there were hundreds of people and we were there for most of the day.

    I love this damn dog so damn much. 🥰

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    75 Comments

    1. Sue Chorley says

      March 1, 2025 at 6:48 pm

      We have devilled egg plates here in Bulgaria. They are plastic but you don’t notice that when they are served up and garnished.

      Reply
    2. Tom MacKay says

      February 28, 2025 at 4:02 pm

      You need to reconsider your deal with Jamie Oliver’s website. Not sure it helps you with your goals? You decide.

      Reply
    3. Ella says

      February 25, 2025 at 6:17 am

      5 stars
      I am not a fan of butter in my devilled eggs. To add creaminess I add a whole boiled egg to the yolk mixture.

      Reply
    4. Kathy says

      February 23, 2025 at 4:04 pm

      1 star
      I made these last week, I really hoped these would be great, and whilst they were edible, they were too tart for my liking. Either too much white wine vinegar or Tabasco (which is vinegary too). It really overpowered and did not taste like classic deviled eggs I love. Disappointing, as my sister in law makes grate ones for me each Christmas, but wont share the recipe.

      Reply
    5. AndieP says

      February 8, 2025 at 8:28 pm

      5 stars
      Nagi
      Funny as in work this week we were talking about retro 70’s Pineapple & Cheese Hedgehogs and how we all loved them, so I am going to try these at next party along with the hedgehog
      re the comments on the Devilled Eggs Plate, I thought using the JB’s dried black beans suggestion from the Prawn Cocktail mini tacos, which could also fit into a 70’s canape theme.
      As for Dozer, we just love him and I hope you both raised lots for the Vets charity.
      AndieP

      Reply
    6. Marca Kassera says

      February 7, 2025 at 7:04 am

      He IS such a sweetie pie!! Love him too (and I haven’t even met him!!)

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:43 am

        He is pretty darn adorable!! 🙂 N x

        Reply
    7. Sue Keane says

      February 6, 2025 at 8:50 pm

      I make these every Christmas and for BBQs nearly the same recipe as Nagi yum. I wish I could find a Devilled egg plate

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:44 am

        There’s such a thing??!!

        Reply
        • Sue Keane says

          February 7, 2025 at 5:10 pm

          You have to search for vintage Devilled egg plate

          Reply
          • SamBuchan says

            February 20, 2025 at 9:04 am

            I did and darn it now I want one too!

            Reply
    8. Diane Schaefer says

      February 6, 2025 at 10:16 am

      Love the butter – so creamy – I also make devilled eggs with my pickled eggs. HUGE hit with MANY requests for more and the recipe!! love it 🙂

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:44 am

        WOW! Now THAT is a cut above!! N x

        Reply
    9. Jennifer Vanzella says

      February 6, 2025 at 9:52 am

      5 stars
      Made devilled eggs last night as a side to pasta salad, yum! I curried them for a change which I haven’t done for a long time, double yum!

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:44 am

        PERFECTION!!!! Yummm I loved curried eggs in any form! N x

        Reply
    10. Mary says

      February 6, 2025 at 9:33 am

      I love devilled eggs! And yes they are the first to go at any function. Will have to try your recipe but I always add bacon in mine. To me that makes a killer egg. Although right now we are in an egg crisis here in the states. Even non brand names eggs are $6-7 a dozen. Hoping this problem doesn’t last long over here and we can get back to normal. Dozer looks like he lived up to his name in one of those pictures. Happy he is doing so well. Belly rubs for him. 🐾🐾

      Reply
      • Dominique says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:56 am

        I think it is pretty much the same everywhere, re the price of eggs Mary. In New Zealand we pay between $8 and $10 for 10 large or 12 mixed !,, wicked!!! I don’t believe they will go down here…😢

        Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:45 am

        Same here!!! I couldn’t believe my luck that I chose to share these in a week of an egg shortage 😭 Thankfully though it seems ok now! N x

        Reply
    11. Terry Marshall says

      February 6, 2025 at 9:30 am

      5 stars
      I love it! But did you ever considering garnishing with capers? It’s a ‘cut above’!

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:43 am

        THANK YOU for the idea!!! I can totally see it 🙂 N x

        Reply
    12. Be says

      February 6, 2025 at 9:16 am

      Thank you the most thorough exploration of devilled eggs ever!

      I look forward to trying it with the confidence of knowing all the ins and outs.

      I also prefer the above spelling, to avoid any association with the word “vile”.

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:45 am

        I never thought of that!! 😂

        Reply
    13. Maggie says

      February 6, 2025 at 7:39 am

      Which is correct devilled or deviled?
      Deviled is the accepted spelling in the United States and Canada for an adjective describing food that is seasoned with horseradish, mustard, paprika or pepper to impart a strong flavor. In other English-speaking countries, the spelling is devilled.

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:46 am

        Both are right! Deviled in the states and Devilled here in Australia, UK, NZ…. It is the same as other words like “favourite” (Aus) and “favorite” (US) – N x

        Reply
    14. Lynne Allardice says

      February 6, 2025 at 7:11 am

      5 stars
      Perfect devilled eggs! Yes, has to have two “l”s otherwise I’m afraid it’s got a “vile” in the middle and vile it ain’t!

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:46 am

        😂 I NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT!!

        Reply
    15. Dominique says

      February 6, 2025 at 6:48 am

      Thank you Nagi. As usual this recipe is certainly a keeper. I will even put it in the cookery book I am writing for my little great Grandaughter , Bella, for when She is older. ( a few of yours have already joined the family ones in that book ! ) But of course, my joy is always to see “our” Dozer at the end of the recipe. What a beautiful fur baby .Thank you for sharing him with us. 👍😍

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:49 am

        AWWWW! I love hearing that you’re making a cookbook for your great granddaughter, that’s such a great idea! N x

        Reply
    16. Holland OConnor says

      February 6, 2025 at 5:51 am

      Thanks for the recipe Nagi! Dozer looks fabulous and his coat is so shiny! I want to come back as him in my next life!
      So eggs in New York are costing up to $19.00 a dozen! Deviled eggs are like busting out caviar for guests lol. I will definitely tuck this recipe in my back pocket for when the chickens are feeling better. 😞 thanks as always you are truly my 💯 trusted source for all things food. I am making your carnitas tonight! They are a family favorite.

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:50 am

        what??!! There’s an egg shortage???

        Reply
    17. Marjorie says

      February 6, 2025 at 5:30 am

      Hi Nagi and Dozer,
      Another lovely email from you….and pics of the fabulous Dozer. Re boiling eggs: I don’t! I start with cold eggs from the fridge, boil them a couple of minutes and turn them off and let sit in the hot water til they cool. Could be hours but they are always perfectly done and not rubbery. Easier to do this way too. Just sayin’

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:51 am

        I feel like I have tried boiled eggs every which way but THAT I have not tried!!! OK, I have to try that! N x

        Reply
    18. CiCi says

      February 6, 2025 at 4:52 am

      One L in deviled here in CA-USA… You’re so right, deviled eggs are the 1st empty platter at gatherings! Fun to make several varieties too! ☮️

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:51 am

        Yes!! Curried is definitely my fave at the moment 🙂 N x

        Reply
    19. Kathy says

      February 6, 2025 at 3:57 am

      These deviled eggs look delicious and I’m making them this weekend. Dozer looks very happy – you’re a good mom to him!

      Reply
    20. Barbara says

      February 6, 2025 at 3:56 am

      I am US born and raised and have never seen deviled eggs spelled devilled eggs. Had an argument with my autocorrect while typing this message 😂

      Reply
      • Nagi says

        February 7, 2025 at 7:52 am

        BA HA HA! Autocorrect and I often have arguments and I always lose! It’s a double “ll” for the States 🙂 One “l” here! N x

        Reply
    Older Comments

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