How to Poach an Egg Perfectly
Poached eggs intimidate most home cooks. Here's the simple technique that works every time — no gadgets required.
3 min read · Updated 2026-04-01
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Poached eggs have a reputation for being difficult. They're not — they just require the right water temperature and a fresh egg. Here's the method that works.
What Makes a Perfect Poached Egg
A well-poached egg has:
- A fully set white with no translucent patches
- A runny, liquid yolk
- A compact shape without excessive wispy strands floating in the water
The difference between a good and bad poached egg comes down to fresh eggs and water temperature.
Why Fresh Eggs Matter
Fresh eggs have thick, gel-like whites that hold together during poaching. Older eggs have watery whites that spread out and create messy wisps. If you get the chance, use eggs within a week of laying — if the carton has a pack date, aim for within 2 weeks.
Test for freshness: Place an egg in a glass of water. Fresh eggs sink flat or stand slightly upright. Eggs that float are older and best not used for poaching.
The Method
1. Fill a saucepan with 8–10cm (3–4 inches) of water. Add a splash of white vinegar — about 1 teaspoon per litre. Vinegar helps the egg white coagulate faster.
2. Heat to a gentle simmer. Not a rolling boil. You want small bubbles breaking the surface — around 82–88°C (180–190°F). A vigorous boil tosses the egg around and tears the white.
3. Crack the egg into a small cup or ramekin first. This gives you control when you add it to the water. Check for any shell fragments.
4. Create a gentle swirl. Stir the water in one direction with a spoon to create a slow vortex. Drop the egg into the centre. The swirl wraps the white around the yolk.
5. Cook for 3–4 minutes.
- 3 minutes: runny yolk, fully set white
- 4 minutes: semi-soft yolk
6. Remove with a slotted spoon. Blot gently on a paper towel to remove excess water before plating.
Common Problems and Fixes
Wispy whites: egg wasn't fresh enough, or water was boiling too vigorously. Lower the heat.
Flat, spread-out egg: water temperature too low — the white spread before it could set. Raise the heat slightly.
Tough, rubbery white: water too hot or cooked too long.
Yolk too firm: reduce time by 30 seconds.
Poaching Multiple Eggs
Poach eggs one at a time for the first few attempts. Once confident, you can add 2–3 at a time to the water.
For batch cooking (eggs Benedict for a group), poach the eggs slightly underdone, transfer to ice water to stop cooking, and refrigerate for up to 24 hours. Reheat by placing in hot (not boiling) water for 1 minute before serving.
No Vinegar?
Vinegar helps but isn't essential with fresh eggs. Skip it if you prefer — the flavour difference is negligible once the egg is on toast.