When the eggs are cooking the eggs will heat up and go to the top of the pot then they will cool down and fall to the bottom of the pot then it will heat up again and go to the top and will keep going When the eggs are cooking the eggs will heat up and go to the top of the pot then they will cool down and fall to the bottom of the pot then it will heat up again and go to the top and will keep going
yes a hard boiled egg is an example of convection!!!
Yes. hard-boiled egg
You get a hard boiled egg, and put a hole in it.
Frozen, hard boiled is like soft rubber
hard boiled egg
Either the egg wasn't boiled long enough, or the egg is rotten. Or the egg is too fresh.
No. When an egg is boiled anything living in or on it is killed.
An egg that isn't hard boiled would generally break if you bounced it. It's more than likely to break if it is hard boiled.
a hard boiled egg.
A hard boiled egg is cooked until solid all the way through, a normal 'soft' boiled egg the centre yolk will still be runny, To test the egg you need to do is spin the egg on a flat surface, if the egg is soft boiled it will wobble because part of the egg is still liquid, if it is hard boiled it will spin on end, because the contents are solid.
There are 2 Weight Watchers points in a boiled egg (based on 1 large egg).
You can shake an egg to determine if it is raw or hard-boiled by gently shaking it near your ear. If the egg makes a sloshing sound, it is raw. If it does not make a sound, it is hard-boiled.