That headline is classic clickbait—but it’s pointing to a real technique used in high-end kitchens. Many fine-dining and five-star hotels don’t “hard boil” eggs the traditional way. Instead, they use more controlled methods for better texture and consistency.
Here’s what they actually do:
🍳 The “Five-Star Hotel” Way to Cook Eggs
1. Steaming Instead of Boiling
Rather than dropping eggs into boiling water, chefs often steam them.
Why?
- More even cooking
- Less cracking
- Easier peeling
How it’s done:
- Bring water to a boil in a pot with a steamer basket
- Add eggs straight from the fridge
- Cover and steam:
- 6 min → soft yolk
- 9–10 min → medium
- 12–13 min → fully set
👉 This is one of the biggest “restaurant secrets.”
2. Precise Temperature Cooking (Sous Vide Style)
Luxury hotels often use temperature-controlled water baths.
This technique comes from Sous vide.
Example:
- 63°C → custard-like egg (very creamy)
- 68°C → soft but set yolk
- 72°C → firm white, jammy yolk
Why chefs love it:
- Perfect texture every time
- No guesswork
- Impossible to overcook (within reason)
3. Starting Hot vs Cold (They Don’t Guess)
Instead of the common “start in cold water” method, many chefs:
- Add eggs to already hot steam or controlled water
- This ensures predictable timing
4. Ice Bath Finish (Non-Negotiable)
After cooking, eggs go straight into ice water.
Purpose:
- Stops cooking instantly
- Prevents green/gray yolk ring
- Makes peeling much easier
5. Older Eggs for Peeling
Hotels often use eggs that are a few days old, not ultra-fresh.
Reason:
- Fresh eggs stick to the shell
- Slightly older eggs peel cleanly
⭐ So… Should You Stop Boiling Eggs?
Not necessarily—but if you want restaurant-quality eggs, steaming or controlled cooking is a noticeable upgrade:
- Better texture
- Easier peeling
- More consistent results
✔️ Simple Upgrade You Can Try Today
If you only change one thing:
👉 Switch from boiling to steaming + ice bath
That alone will give you a “five-star” difference without special equipment.
If you want, I can show you the exact method chefs use to get that perfect jammy egg (like in ramen)—it’s one of the most popular restaurant tricks.