Cooking Tips

Thick and lemony-coloured:
Beat yolks at a high speed with an electric mixer until they become a pastel yellow and form ribbons when the beater is lifted (or they are dropped from a spoon) for about 3 to 5 minutes. Although yolks cannot incorporate as much air as whites, this beating creates foam and is important for airy creations such as sponge cakes. View all the cooking tips >

Egg Games

Egg games are always lots of fun, but be very careful, much of the fun comes from not breaking them!

Egg Hunt
Hiding colored or decorated eggs around the house or garden for youngsters to find has long been an Easter morning tradition. Remember to hard boil the eggs first!

Egg Toss
Partners line up in two rows facing each other. Every member on one side tosses a raw egg across. After each successful catch, the players step backward, adding to the difficulty of the next catch. This is repeated until all but one egg is broken. The couple with the last unbroken egg wins.

Egg Rolling
Egg rolling was first mentioned in1684. In England and Scotland, children roll eggs downhill and the last child with an unbroken egg is the winner. In another version of egg rolling, the players push the egg to the finish line using only their noses. Very similar are egg races in which the players try to send emptied eggshells across the finish line by fanning them with a piece of cardboard or by blowing them. Since eggs are not round, winning is not as easy as it might seem!

Egg Tapping
Many countries continue the age-old ritual of egg-tapping or egg-shackling. For example, Greeks form a circle and tap scarlet eggs, one against the other. The one finishing with an unbroken egg may claim all the other eggs. (The trick is protecting as much of the egg as possible with your fingers.)

Pace Egging
In English villages until modern times, children have carried on an old sport called pace-egging. The name comes from Pasch, the word that means Easter in most European countries. This derives from Pesach, the Hebrew Passover, which falls at the same time of the year. Pace-eggers are much like Halloween trick-or-treaters. They go from house to house in costume or with paper streamers and bright ribbons attached to their clothes. Faces blackened or masked, they sing or perform skits and demand pace eggs, either colored hard-cooked eggs or substitutes such as candy and small coins.

 


Sophie Gray's NEW Fast and Fabulous Family Meal Ideas

New recipes from simple ingredients, with only 10 minute hands on preparation time, and all under $10!

Click here to download the new 16 page book...

Download Sophie Gray’s Back to Basics Recipe Book HERE

Includes the finalists and winning recipes from Sophie Gray’s Back to Basics Recipe Promotion.
  Click here >

View Sophie Gray's Back to Basics Egg Recipes here

For delicious, nutritious, inexpensive family meals that are quick and easy to prepare. Click here >


living channel and food tv recipes LIVING CHANNEL and
Food TV RECIPES VIDEO!

For new recipes as featured on Living Channel and Food TV...
Click here >
EGG GAMES
EGG SONG
Watch the World's Fastest Omelette Maker Howard Helmer video...
(Requires Broadband)
Launch Video >