If a boiled egg has a green (or gray-green) ring around the yolk, it’s not a mystery or a danger sign—it’s just a chemical reaction from overcooking.
🥚 What causes the green ring?
Egg
When eggs are cooked too long or at too high a temperature:
- Sulfur in the egg white reacts with iron in the yolk
- This forms iron sulfide, which creates that greenish ring
✅ Is it safe to eat?
Yes—completely safe.
It may:
- Taste slightly different
- Have a drier texture
…but it’s not spoiled or harmful.
🔥 How to prevent it
✔️ Better boiling method:
- Place eggs in a pot and cover with water
- Bring to a boil, then turn off heat
- Cover and let sit:
- 9–12 minutes (depending on size)
- Transfer immediately to cold or ice water
👉 Cooling quickly stops the reaction that causes the ring.
💡 Extra tips
- Older eggs are slightly more prone to this
- Avoid rapid high heat for long periods
- Don’t keep eggs boiling continuously
🧠 Bottom line
That green ring doesn’t mean anything is wrong—it just means the egg was overcooked.
If you want, I can show you:
- How to get the perfect soft-boiled or jammy egg every time
- Easy peeling tricks (no sticking shells)
- How to tell if an egg is fresh or expired