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How to Make Amazing Deviled Eggs

These are the best deviled eggs ever. They’re almost exactly like the classic but with a secret ingredient that makes them unbelievably delicious.

I am always amazed by how quickly deviled eggs disappear from a serving tray. I don’t know why I’m amazed though. I mean, I eat six of them myself while arranging them on the tray before the party. Anyhow, they’re good. I like them. Other people like them. These are my favorite ones.

Deviled eggs in a dark red serving tray.

Secret Ingredient for Amazing Deviled Eggs

This deviled egg recipe follows the basic idea that you see in recipe after recipe. It’s hard boiled egg yolks mixed with mayonnaise, a drizzle of cream or milk, mustard powder, paprika, salt, and a bit of lemon juice. What makes these different, and really and truly the best deviled eggs ever, is the addition fresh herbs. Specifically, I use dill and/or chives.

You don’t need very much of the herbs. It’s just that little bit. They make the deviled eggs look pretty – speckled with green – and the taste is just a subtle difference, but a delicious difference, from the more basic version. You’re going to gobble all of these up before you get to the party, for sure!

How to Make Deviled Eggs

After hard-boiling or, even better, steaming your eggs, cool them and peel them. Note that you can alternately buy already hard-boiled and peeled eggs at the grocery section. They’re usually found in the deli section. I think cooking them myself is best but you can’t beat the convenience of having a batch of deviled eggs ready in under 10 minutes if you buy them pre-cooked.

Carefully cut the eggs in half lengthwise. Remove the yolks and put them into a bowl or bag.

Arrange the whites on a serving tray. The one in the picture is specifically designed for deviled eggs and you can get one like it here.

Deviled eggs cut in half with the yolks being removed.

Mash the egg yolks together with the other ingredients. I use a fork to mash them. You can do it in a ziptop bag as I have done here but it’s easier to use a bowl and then transfer the mixture to a bag after.

You can simply scoop the yolk mixture into the whites using a small spoon but it looks much prettier if you pipe it in. Use a piping bag if you have one. If not, a regular quart or gallon-sized ziptop bag works as long as it’s not “flat-bottomed for easy filling”. The flat-bottomed bags don’t allow you to snip off a bottom corner as needed for piping.

Snip off a little bit of one corner, like ¼ inch. Once you start piping, if the yolk mixture isn’t flowing well, you can make the hole a bit bigger.

Mashed egg yolk filling in a ziptop bag with a pair of scissors.

Using a swirling motion, pipe the yolk mixture into the whites.

Egg yolk mixture being piped into egg white halves in a tray.

Serve immediately or cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for up to one day. If you do the latter, make extra because I guarantee you’ll be plucking them out of the fridge every time you walk by.

Deviled eggs in a dark red serving tray.

Podcast Episode: Making Deviled Eggs

Listen to our editor, Christine Pittman, explain briefly how to make these deviled eggs, with some great tips along the way, by clicking the play button below:

Listen to more Recipe of the Day episodes here.

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The Best Deviled Eggs

The Best Deviled Eggs Recipe

Contributor: Christine Pittman

These are the best deviled eggs ever. They’re almost exactly like the classic but with a secret ingredient that makes them unbelievably delicious.

  • Author: Christine Pittman
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Cook Time: 0 minutes
  • Total Time: 10 minutes
  • Yield: 12 servings 1x
  • Category: Side Dish
  • Method: Stovetop
  • Cuisine: American

Ingredients

Units Scale
  • 12 hard boiled eggs, cooled and peeled
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 1 Tbsp. whipping cream or milk
  • 1 Tbsp. fresh chopped chives
  • 1 Tbsp. fresh chopped dill
  • 1/2 tsp. lemon juice
  • 1/2 tsp. mustard powder
  • 1/4 tsp. salt
  • 1/4 tsp. paprika or smoked paprika, plus more for garnish

Instructions

  1. Cut the eggs in half lengthwise.
  2. Put the yolks into a bowl. Arrange the whites cut-side-up on a serving tray.
  3. Into the bowl with the yolks put the mayonnaise, whipping cream, chives, dill, lemon juice, mustard powder, salt and ¼ teaspoon of the paprika. Mash it all together with a fork until very smooth. Taste. Add more salt if desired.
  4. Scoop yolk mixture into a piping bag or ziptop bag (see notes above about which bags work and which do not). Cut off ¼ inch of a corner of the bag.
  5. Use a swirling motion to pipe the yolk mixture into the hollow of the whites. If the yolks are not flowing freely, make the hole in the bag a bit larger.
  6. Serve immediately or cover and refrigerate for up to one day.

Love this recipe? I’d appreciate it if you could scroll down and add a *5 star rating* to help others know they’ll love it as well!

This post originally appeared in May 2018 and was revised and republished in April 2021.