TODD COLEMAN
Culture

Chinese Tea Eggs

In this year’s SAVEUR 100, we take stock of our favorite things: recipes, people, places. We consider every last one a new classic.

By The Editors


Published on December 28, 2011

As beautiful as they are delicious, these popular Chinese snacks, called cha ye dan, are made by hard-boiling eggs, gently cracking their shells, and simmering them in a fragrant brew of black tea and spices—cinnamon, star anise, whole cloves. The flavored tea imparts a sweet flavor that carries right through to the yolk, and a sepia tint that lends an antique, marbled look to the white. Home cooks, chefs, and street vendors across China have their own takes on the centuries-old recipe: Some add soy sauce to the brew; others up the sweet and spicy quotient by mixing in sugar and peppercorns. No matter how they're made, they have pride of place on our table.

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