Halloween Deviled Tea Eggs

  3.4 – 5 reviews  • Halloween
Level: Easy
Total: 1 hr
Active: 40 min
Yield: 12 eggs

Ingredients

  1. 1/2 cup dark soy sauce
  2. 2 tablespoons chili oil
  3. 2 tablespoons loose black tea leaves
  4. 1 tablespoon Chinese five-spice powder
  5. Kosher salt
  6. 1 teaspoon sugar
  7. 12 large eggs, at room temperature
  8. 3 tablespoons mayonnaise
  9. 1 tablespoon Chinese mustard
  10. 1/2 teaspoon Sriracha
  11. Freshly ground pepper
  12. Orange gel food coloring
  13. Black sesame seeds, for garnish

Instructions

  1. Combine 7 cups water, the soy sauce, chili oil, tea leaves, five-spice powder, 2 teaspoons salt and the sugar in a medium pot over high heat. Bring the mixture to a boil, then reduce the heat to a simmer. Cover and simmer for 10 minutes. Turn off the heat, uncover and let cool completely.
  2. Meanwhile, bring a large pot of water to a boil. Gently add the eggs and cook for 7 minutes. Remove the eggs and transfer to a bowl of ice water; let stand until cool to the touch.
  3. Once the eggs have cooled, lightly crack the shells all over. The goal here is to make enough cracks to allow the flavor of the soy sauce mixture to steep into the egg. (You can also put them on a kitchen towel and roll gently.) Add the cracked eggs to the soy sauce mixture, making sure they are completely submerged. Refrigerate for 24 hours.
  4. Peel the eggs. Cut a small piece off the wide bottom of each egg so it will sit flat, then cut off the top. Scoop out the egg yolks into a small bowl and mash them up with a fork. Stir in the mayonnaise, mustard, Sriracha, a pinch of salt and a few grinds of pepper. Tint orange with food coloring.
  5. Pipe or scoop the filling into the egg whites. Sprinkle with black sesame seeds. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 12 servings
Calories 127
Total Fat 10 g
Saturated Fat 2 g
Carbohydrates 2 g
Dietary Fiber 0 g
Sugar 1 g
Protein 7 g
Cholesterol 187 mg
Sodium 695 mg

Reviews

Nancy Frey
This recipe was a hit at our Halloween party! I didn’t have black sesame seeds so used poppy seeds and they gave the same effect. People were raving about them the following Monday at work.

Sidenote – Definitely not a “conventional” deviled egg but really flavorful and fun to make – the 1 star reviews this recipe has received for having asian ingredients are just hateful.

Lisa Perez
This is not Halloween Deviled Eggs. This is just Chinese Girl Eggs. I made this and it was a just a super big mess
Kevin Howell
favrite in the family

Leslie Navarro
Yum!!

 

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