Deviled Eggs
photo by xtine
- Ready In:
- 30mins
- Ingredients:
- 17
- Yields:
-
12 egg halves
ingredients
- 6 hard-boiled eggs
- 2 green onions, minced fine
- 1 small kosher dill pickle, minced fine
- 14.79 ml finely minced parsley
- 14.79 ml mayonnaise
- 14.79 ml cream cheese, room temp
- 7.39 ml french's yellow mustard
- 2.46 ml sugar
- 2.46 ml ground cumin
- 2.46 ml pepper
- 1.23 ml seasoning salt
- Tabasco sauce
- 0.25 ml garlic powder
- 0.5 ml onion powder
-
for garnish
- paprika, to garnish
- minced chives, to garnish
- black caviar, to garnish
directions
- Peel & halve hard boiled eggs.
- Put yolks into a bowl, mash & mix well with mayonnaise, mustard, cream cheese, sugar, cumin, pepper, garlic powder, onion powder, green onion & pickles.
- Taste mixture before adding seasoning salt. You may need less than 1/4 teaspoon. Season to taste with seasoning salt & tabasco.
- Stuff egg white halves with yolk mixture. You can do this with a spoon, or you can put the yolk mixture into a quart-size plastic bag & snip off one corner to act as a pastry bag. Or if you want to get really fancy you can use an actual pastry bag with a fancy cake decorating tip on the end.
- Squeeze yolk mixture into egg white halves. Refrigerate before serving to allow yolk mixture to set. Don't garnish until just before you are ready to serve (especially if you are using paprika).
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
<p>I'm originally from Atlanta, GA, but I now live in Brooklyn, NY with my husband, cat, and dog. I'm a film and video editor, but cooking is my main hobby - if you can call something you do multiple times a day a hobby. <br />I enjoy all types of food, from molecular gastronomy to 70's suburban Mom type stuff. While I like to make recipes from cookbooks by true chefs, I don't turn my nose up at Campbell's Cream of Mushroom - I'm not a food snob. <br /> I love foods from all nations/cultures, and I am fortunate enough to live in NYC so I can go to restaurants which serve food from pretty much anywhere on the globe. Because of this most of my recipes tend to be in the Western European/American food tradition - I find it easier to pay the experts for more complicated delicacies such as Dosai, Pho & Injera. I really enjoy having so many great food resources available to me here in NYC. One of my favorite stores is Kalustyan's http://www.kalustyans.com/ <br />they have every spice, bean, & grain in the world. If there's something you can't find, look on their website. I bet they'll have it and they can ship it to you! <br />Many of my recipes are Southern, because that's the food I grew up on. I hope the recipes I have posted here will be useful to folks out in the 'zaar universe! <br /> <br /><img src=http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b399/susied214/permanent%20collection/Adopted1smp.jpg border=0 alt=Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket /> <br /><img src=http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b399/susied214/permanent%20collection/smPACp.jpg border=0 alt=Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket /> <br /><img src=http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b399/susied214/permanent%20collection/PACfall08partic.jpg border=0 alt=Photobucket /> <br /><img src=http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b399/susied214/permanent%20collection/IWasAdoptedfall08.jpg border=0 alt=Photobucket /> <br /><img src=http://i38.photobucket.com/albums/e110/flower753/Food/my3chefsnov2008.jpg alt= /></p>