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# Why Does a Green Ring Appear Around Hard-Boiled Eggs?
A faint greenish-gray ring hugging the outside of the yolk.
It doesn’t look appetizing. It raises questions. And for many people, it sparks immediate concern:
*Is the egg spoiled?*
*Did I cook it wrong?*
*Is it safe to eat?*
The short answer: **yes, it’s safe**—and no, it’s not spoiled.
The longer answer is far more interesting. That green ring is the result of a simple chemical reaction, one that reveals a lot about heat, timing, and the delicate science of cooking eggs.
Let’s break it down.
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## The Green Ring Mystery: What Are You Actually Seeing?
It forms when two naturally occurring substances in eggs meet under high heat:
* **Sulfur** from the egg white
* **Iron** from the egg yolk
When eggs are cooked too long or at too high a temperature, sulfur from the whites is released as hydrogen sulfide gas. That gas migrates inward toward the yolk, where it reacts with iron to form iron sulfide—creating the greenish-gray ring.
In other words, the ring isn’t decay.
It’s chemistry.
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## Why Overcooking Is the Real Culprit
Continue reading…