Heidi Kennedy

Crock-Pot Natural Dyed Easter Eggs


So last year for Easter, we used Kool Aid to dye our eggs, post right here. It turned out really quite well BUT this year with our chickens, I wanted something more natural as we feed the egg shells back to the chickens as they need extra calcium in their diet. Wasn’t to keen on giving them kool aid. I also wanted to figure out if it was possible to actual cook the eggs in the Crock-Pot to hard boil them. So this is a labor of love from the last few weeks. I accomplished getting them boiled and not over done (*note to self, going over an hour for this recipe will not work) and then finding good natural edible foods and spices to dye the eggs with. This “recipe” is going to be quite open ended. You can boil as many eggs as your crock will hold without them touching each other. 12 or less will work well in your larger crocks, a smaller crock will only hold 3-4.

Print Crock-Pot Natural Dyed Easter Eggs

Rating: 51

Prep Time: 5 minutes

Cook Time: 2 hours

Total Time: 2 hours, 5 minutes

Yield: 12

Ingredients

6-12 fresh eggs (only large crocks will fit 12) Silicone cupcake liners (this is not a requirement, I just found it easier to use them) ice cubes
Turmeric Cinnamon Sticks Ground Coffee Green Tea Raw Beets 3-6 Bag of Frozen Blueberries or Blackberries Elastic Bands Girls plastic bands for hair (not the smallest size) Scotch Expressions Tape Long strips of scrap fabric anything else you want to try and decorate with Red Solo Cups

Instructions

  1. You will place 6-12 eggs in your crock making sure they are not touching (if your using the silicone cupcake liners this will make it easier).
  2. You need to pour enough water to fully cover them (if you are not using fresh eggs, an older egg has a tendency to float to the top) but not more water than that.
  3. Do not stack the eggs.
  4. Cover and turn on high for 2 to 2 1/2 hours.
  5. Use a timer and do not go over the 2 1/2 hour limit if you plan on eating the eggs.
  6. Scoop the eggs out carefully, place them in a bowl with ice water, and you may need to add more ice.
  7. The faster you cool them down the better they will look inside and if you are wanting to peel them and eat them, they will peel easier as well.
  8. Take out and dry once cooled.
  9. You are now done if you are only going to eat them.
  10. If you are going to decorate them, then the fun begins!
  11. I boiled a pan of water on the stove and would scoop out several big cup fulls to fill up about 2/3rds the red solo cups.
  12. Place the tea (2-4 tea bags per cup), ground coffee, or several scoops of turmeric with a cinnamon stick.
  13. Tea gives a faint green color, ground coffee is brown, turmeric will be orange.
  14. Use the rubber/plastic bands, decorate with tape (that you will pull off later), tie long strips of fabric around them and so on.
  15. You can even just hand the kids white crayons and let them put designs on the egg.
  16. Once ready, place the eggs into the steaming water and let them sit for several hours.
  17. When I did the beets, I boiled 6 raw beets, with stems cut, cut in half with a crock half full of water, lid placed (so put it on high) for about 4 hours.
  18. I then scooped the red beet juice/water into the red solo cups and added the egg.
  19. I added a few frozen blackberries to get the color a bit darker.
  20. I did the same with blueberries and Blackberries, boiling them in a half filled crock for 4 hours and then scooped the juice/water out and place in the red solo cup with the eggs, adding a couple of blackberries with to add a bit more red.
  21. When they are done, pull them out and let them dry.
  22. You can rub with some vegetable oil if you want them to shine.
  23. So as to not waste we fed the chickens the berries and beats and placed the coffee and tea onto the compost pile.
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When I first boiled a batch of eggs, I allowed them to touch, and found a couple had cracked. Now this isn’t really any different then what I have experienced when I boil them the old fashioned way, but I wanted to find a better way to do it without losing eggs. I used silicone baking cups (they look like cupcake papers) to hold the eggs in place and that worked a lot better. A few of those turned over but it wasn’t really a problem because it still kept them from touching each other, which what caused the cracking.

Now one might ask why would you do it in the Crock-Pot? If you are like me, I like to start something and come back to it later. That is what is so awesome with our Crock-Pots and what this does is let me get other things done while they are cooking, where I don’t have to baby-sit them. Definitely use a timer though! Now when I over-cooked them the first time it was by an hour. If you are not going to be eating the eggs, but just decorating them, the time won’t matter so much. Often times, my kids will take the eggs and go hide them in the grass and we find them and so on. I’m not going to be eating a hard boiled egg that sat in my lawn for half the day. However if you are wanting these to be pleasing to the eye, if you peel them, definitely stick to the time frame.

I used various things to dye the eggs. Now first off I purchased a dozen white eggs and we used a bunch of our brown eggs that our chickens lay. You may see little darker edged bumps on some of the brown eggs, that is normal for home grown eggs, the eggs you get at the grocery store typically have the ones with bumps removed from the selection before they are packaged. They make some fun additions to the eggs though. Of all the things I used to dye the eggs for spices we found Turmeric with a cinnamon stick to work the best. For Tea, the Green tea amazing enough worked best. I tried a lot of berry, cherry ect herbal tea’s and none of them left that good of a color. I purchased instant coffee for a dollar and that made some nice brown and deeper brown eggs. Almost marbleized. You can of course, use your own coffee but I don’t drink Coffee and even if I did, I don’t think I’d want expensive coffee to be used on eggs. I also bought some beets and frozen berries and boiled them in the crock and those came out as some interesting shades as well. One last note, a few times the egg coloring didn’t seem to stick and was sloughing off. I let it dry really well and then we cleaned the sloughing back off and it looked really cool. If you want the eggs shiny you can use vegetable oil. I choose to not do that since we will be feeding the egg shells back to the chickens.

For designs I found that what worked the best was the little plastic/rubberish bands for little girls hair (not the smallest size) fit perfectly one time over the eggs. So I could put multiple bands over in different directions and then dye the egg. I also tied some cloth on a few, I used a bigger rubber band (a bit bigger then you would use for a newspaper) and that worked okay, and I even used some specialized tape that is meant to design things (but can be pulled back off). I would definitely not do this with a raw egg, I really had to man handle the eggs to get rubber bands on them, and I was very thankful if I squeezed too hard I wasn’t going to end up with a lump of raw egg in my hand. My one last suggestion is to use red solo type cups. The first time I used mugs, and after making 12 plus mugs dirty and having to clean all that up, I realized throw away cups would work better.

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