Making Eggs for 50 peopleWater vs. milk/cream (or nothing) in traditional (French) omeletsScience of fast (high heat) vs. slow (low heat) scrambled eggs and omeletsReverse engineer the Perfect Japanese OmeletHow can I ensure that scrambled eggs will be fully cooked?Scrambled eggs for a buffetNeed to cook pasta for 200 people(Intentionally) Mixed Texture 'Scrambled Eggs'

A food item only made possible by time-freezing storage?

Meaning of 'ran' in German?

To what extent is it worthwhile to report check fraud / refund scams?

Can Northern Ireland's border issue be solved by repartition?

Why are there two fundamental laws of logic?

Subverting the emotional woman and stoic man trope

Strange Sticky Substance on Digital Camera

Is it impolite to ask for an in-flight catalogue with no intention of buying?

What do you do if you have developments on your paper during the long peer review process?

Is there a way to hide HTML source code yet keeping it effective?

Why does this image of Jupiter look so strange?

Organisational search option

My manager quit. Should I agree to defer wage increase to accommodate budget concerns?

Going to France with limited French for a day

Why did UK NHS pay for homeopathic treatments?

Guitar tuning (EADGBE), "perfect" fourths?

Does "as soon as" imply simultaneity?

How to deal with my team leader who keeps calling me about project updates even though I am on leave for personal reasons?

Is it more effective to add yeast before or after kneading?

Is it possible to encode a message in such a way that can only be read by someone or something capable of seeing into the very near future?

How can I repair this gas leak on my new range? Teflon tape isn't working

How do you use the interjection for snorting?

Which place in our solar system is the most fit for terraforming?

Late 1970's and 6502 chip facilities for operating systems



Making Eggs for 50 people


Water vs. milk/cream (or nothing) in traditional (French) omeletsScience of fast (high heat) vs. slow (low heat) scrambled eggs and omeletsReverse engineer the Perfect Japanese OmeletHow can I ensure that scrambled eggs will be fully cooked?Scrambled eggs for a buffetNeed to cook pasta for 200 people(Intentionally) Mixed Texture 'Scrambled Eggs'






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








3















My first time, making scrambled eggs for buffet, my company brought in box of liquid eggs, to be cooked in deep stove top pan. Any suggestions of what needs to be done, how much butter, milk, how to cook without burning them, etc... All help is appreciated...










share|improve this question









New contributor



Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Do you have access to a steamer or do you have to use a pan on the stove?

    – MikeTheLiar
    9 hours ago











  • no steamer, usually the cook uses large round deep pan, he is sick and I am the only one that back him up

    – Reggiem
    9 hours ago

















3















My first time, making scrambled eggs for buffet, my company brought in box of liquid eggs, to be cooked in deep stove top pan. Any suggestions of what needs to be done, how much butter, milk, how to cook without burning them, etc... All help is appreciated...










share|improve this question









New contributor



Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Do you have access to a steamer or do you have to use a pan on the stove?

    – MikeTheLiar
    9 hours ago











  • no steamer, usually the cook uses large round deep pan, he is sick and I am the only one that back him up

    – Reggiem
    9 hours ago













3












3








3








My first time, making scrambled eggs for buffet, my company brought in box of liquid eggs, to be cooked in deep stove top pan. Any suggestions of what needs to be done, how much butter, milk, how to cook without burning them, etc... All help is appreciated...










share|improve this question









New contributor



Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











My first time, making scrambled eggs for buffet, my company brought in box of liquid eggs, to be cooked in deep stove top pan. Any suggestions of what needs to be done, how much butter, milk, how to cook without burning them, etc... All help is appreciated...







eggs bulk-cooking scrambled-eggs






share|improve this question









New contributor



Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









New contributor



Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 8 hours ago









MikeTheLiar

2,2621 gold badge13 silver badges22 bronze badges




2,2621 gold badge13 silver badges22 bronze badges






New contributor



Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked 9 hours ago









ReggiemReggiem

161 bronze badge




161 bronze badge




New contributor



Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




New contributor




Reggiem is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.

















  • Do you have access to a steamer or do you have to use a pan on the stove?

    – MikeTheLiar
    9 hours ago











  • no steamer, usually the cook uses large round deep pan, he is sick and I am the only one that back him up

    – Reggiem
    9 hours ago

















  • Do you have access to a steamer or do you have to use a pan on the stove?

    – MikeTheLiar
    9 hours ago











  • no steamer, usually the cook uses large round deep pan, he is sick and I am the only one that back him up

    – Reggiem
    9 hours ago
















Do you have access to a steamer or do you have to use a pan on the stove?

– MikeTheLiar
9 hours ago





Do you have access to a steamer or do you have to use a pan on the stove?

– MikeTheLiar
9 hours ago













no steamer, usually the cook uses large round deep pan, he is sick and I am the only one that back him up

– Reggiem
9 hours ago





no steamer, usually the cook uses large round deep pan, he is sick and I am the only one that back him up

– Reggiem
9 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















4
















I highly recommend using a steamer if you have access to one, but if you don't have it, you don't have it. The good news is that the process for making scrambled eggs on the stove is about the same no matter how many eggs you're making - add as much beaten eggs as you're comfortable stirring in the pan, cook over low heat stirring occasionally.



The major tips/gotchas that I can think of:



  1. Open all your egg cartons at once before you start cooking. The last thing you want to be doing is fighting with packaging material when you need eggs quickly

  2. Low heat, be patient, stir frequently but not constantly. Once every couple minutes should be fine depending on the size of your pot - it shouldn't be hard to figure out if you need to be stirring more or less frequently. However, don't forget to stir. This is probably the biggest way for things to come out less than perfectly. If you get distracted and forget to stir the eggs for too long, the ones at the bottom of the pot can start to develop the same green off-color as overcooked hard boiled egg yolks. It's perfectly safe to eat but who wants to eat green eggs?

  3. You mention butter but unless you're adding it for flavor it's honestly not necessary. When you're done there's going to be eggs stuck to the pan no matter what you do. Don't stress yourself out about it.

  4. One tip - if your eggs are cooked more than you want them to be but not at the turning green stage, you have some wiggle room in whisking in uncooked beaten eggs into the overcooked eggs. The heat from the cooked eggs and further hot holding will cook the raw eggs and it will distract somewhat from the overcooked bits. It's not perfect but it's "good enough" and it can help you save a chafing dish of eggs that you'd otherwise have to throw out.

That's really all there is too it. If you have more eggs than you can comfortable fit in the pot, you'll have to do it in batches but all that means is "cook eggs, dump into chafing dish/hotel pan, start cooking more eggs."






share|improve this answer



























  • One other tip: if you're starting with whole eggs (and the OP seems not to be) breaking over 100 eggs takes longer than you think, and the yolks tend to stay whole once you're dropping them into a pan with lots in already. Then you end up chasing them round the pan to break them up.

    – Chris H
    8 hours ago











  • If you're breaking whole eggs, break all of them into a china cap over a bucket before cooking anything.

    – MikeTheLiar
    8 hours ago











  • I used a small pan, tipping into the big pan every 10 or so eggs - second time I cooked bulk scrambled eggs. The first time was when I had trouble breaking them, though I didn't break them at the stove, I took the pan elsewhere

    – Chris H
    7 hours ago











  • stirring is important, but you also don't want to lose your curds. If you stir too much, you'll have an egg sauce rather than scrambled eggs. You need to let the eggs setup on the heat, then stir them off the heat so new liquid egg can be cooked.

    – Escoce
    6 hours ago











  • @Escoce yeah I meant just to stir frequently, not constantly. I'll clarify.

    – MikeTheLiar
    5 hours ago


















0
















As MikeTheLiar mentioned, a steamer would help for this:



If you have more than one pan to cook them in of the same width & length by different depths, and they're not thin disposable containers, you might try making your own bain marie (double boiler) :



Place the larger one across the burner or two, and put an inch or so of water in it. (you should try for an inch (2.5cm), but you might need less if the depth of the containers is too similar, and placing the top container on forces water out of the lower container).



Put the other container on top.



Once the water is boiling, and you have steam, adjust the temperature so the water is staying hot and generating steam, but not a rolling boil.



Add your oil or butter, let it coat the pan well, then cook the eggs in the top vessel, stirring constantly 'til it's not quite to the consistency you want (as there will be a little bit of carry over-cooking)



...



I've also heard that you can do large batches of scrambled eggs in the oven (350°F/175°C), stir after 10 minutes, then every 5 minutes 'til they're done (technically, not quite done) ... most recipes claim it takes 20-25 minutes.






share|improve this answer
































    0
















    From personal experience, I have baked scrambled eggs for large numbers of people (100+ in some instances). I used a recipe similar to this. I have used steamers in the past but found the oven easier for consistency sake, without having to seek out new equipment.






    share|improve this answer

























    • While linking to an off-site recipe may be helpful in the short-term, off-site links tend to go dead. Thus, it's likely that at some point in the future the link here will be useless. When that happens, all readers will know is that you found using the oven easier when cooking for large numbers of people, but they won't know how to do it. So, please quote the most important portions of your off-site link.

      – Makyen
      11 secs ago













    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "49"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader:
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/"u003ecc by-sa 4.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    ,
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );







    Reggiem is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









    draft saved

    draft discarded
















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fcooking.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f102409%2fmaking-eggs-for-50-people%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    4
















    I highly recommend using a steamer if you have access to one, but if you don't have it, you don't have it. The good news is that the process for making scrambled eggs on the stove is about the same no matter how many eggs you're making - add as much beaten eggs as you're comfortable stirring in the pan, cook over low heat stirring occasionally.



    The major tips/gotchas that I can think of:



    1. Open all your egg cartons at once before you start cooking. The last thing you want to be doing is fighting with packaging material when you need eggs quickly

    2. Low heat, be patient, stir frequently but not constantly. Once every couple minutes should be fine depending on the size of your pot - it shouldn't be hard to figure out if you need to be stirring more or less frequently. However, don't forget to stir. This is probably the biggest way for things to come out less than perfectly. If you get distracted and forget to stir the eggs for too long, the ones at the bottom of the pot can start to develop the same green off-color as overcooked hard boiled egg yolks. It's perfectly safe to eat but who wants to eat green eggs?

    3. You mention butter but unless you're adding it for flavor it's honestly not necessary. When you're done there's going to be eggs stuck to the pan no matter what you do. Don't stress yourself out about it.

    4. One tip - if your eggs are cooked more than you want them to be but not at the turning green stage, you have some wiggle room in whisking in uncooked beaten eggs into the overcooked eggs. The heat from the cooked eggs and further hot holding will cook the raw eggs and it will distract somewhat from the overcooked bits. It's not perfect but it's "good enough" and it can help you save a chafing dish of eggs that you'd otherwise have to throw out.

    That's really all there is too it. If you have more eggs than you can comfortable fit in the pot, you'll have to do it in batches but all that means is "cook eggs, dump into chafing dish/hotel pan, start cooking more eggs."






    share|improve this answer



























    • One other tip: if you're starting with whole eggs (and the OP seems not to be) breaking over 100 eggs takes longer than you think, and the yolks tend to stay whole once you're dropping them into a pan with lots in already. Then you end up chasing them round the pan to break them up.

      – Chris H
      8 hours ago











    • If you're breaking whole eggs, break all of them into a china cap over a bucket before cooking anything.

      – MikeTheLiar
      8 hours ago











    • I used a small pan, tipping into the big pan every 10 or so eggs - second time I cooked bulk scrambled eggs. The first time was when I had trouble breaking them, though I didn't break them at the stove, I took the pan elsewhere

      – Chris H
      7 hours ago











    • stirring is important, but you also don't want to lose your curds. If you stir too much, you'll have an egg sauce rather than scrambled eggs. You need to let the eggs setup on the heat, then stir them off the heat so new liquid egg can be cooked.

      – Escoce
      6 hours ago











    • @Escoce yeah I meant just to stir frequently, not constantly. I'll clarify.

      – MikeTheLiar
      5 hours ago















    4
















    I highly recommend using a steamer if you have access to one, but if you don't have it, you don't have it. The good news is that the process for making scrambled eggs on the stove is about the same no matter how many eggs you're making - add as much beaten eggs as you're comfortable stirring in the pan, cook over low heat stirring occasionally.



    The major tips/gotchas that I can think of:



    1. Open all your egg cartons at once before you start cooking. The last thing you want to be doing is fighting with packaging material when you need eggs quickly

    2. Low heat, be patient, stir frequently but not constantly. Once every couple minutes should be fine depending on the size of your pot - it shouldn't be hard to figure out if you need to be stirring more or less frequently. However, don't forget to stir. This is probably the biggest way for things to come out less than perfectly. If you get distracted and forget to stir the eggs for too long, the ones at the bottom of the pot can start to develop the same green off-color as overcooked hard boiled egg yolks. It's perfectly safe to eat but who wants to eat green eggs?

    3. You mention butter but unless you're adding it for flavor it's honestly not necessary. When you're done there's going to be eggs stuck to the pan no matter what you do. Don't stress yourself out about it.

    4. One tip - if your eggs are cooked more than you want them to be but not at the turning green stage, you have some wiggle room in whisking in uncooked beaten eggs into the overcooked eggs. The heat from the cooked eggs and further hot holding will cook the raw eggs and it will distract somewhat from the overcooked bits. It's not perfect but it's "good enough" and it can help you save a chafing dish of eggs that you'd otherwise have to throw out.

    That's really all there is too it. If you have more eggs than you can comfortable fit in the pot, you'll have to do it in batches but all that means is "cook eggs, dump into chafing dish/hotel pan, start cooking more eggs."






    share|improve this answer



























    • One other tip: if you're starting with whole eggs (and the OP seems not to be) breaking over 100 eggs takes longer than you think, and the yolks tend to stay whole once you're dropping them into a pan with lots in already. Then you end up chasing them round the pan to break them up.

      – Chris H
      8 hours ago











    • If you're breaking whole eggs, break all of them into a china cap over a bucket before cooking anything.

      – MikeTheLiar
      8 hours ago











    • I used a small pan, tipping into the big pan every 10 or so eggs - second time I cooked bulk scrambled eggs. The first time was when I had trouble breaking them, though I didn't break them at the stove, I took the pan elsewhere

      – Chris H
      7 hours ago











    • stirring is important, but you also don't want to lose your curds. If you stir too much, you'll have an egg sauce rather than scrambled eggs. You need to let the eggs setup on the heat, then stir them off the heat so new liquid egg can be cooked.

      – Escoce
      6 hours ago











    • @Escoce yeah I meant just to stir frequently, not constantly. I'll clarify.

      – MikeTheLiar
      5 hours ago













    4














    4










    4









    I highly recommend using a steamer if you have access to one, but if you don't have it, you don't have it. The good news is that the process for making scrambled eggs on the stove is about the same no matter how many eggs you're making - add as much beaten eggs as you're comfortable stirring in the pan, cook over low heat stirring occasionally.



    The major tips/gotchas that I can think of:



    1. Open all your egg cartons at once before you start cooking. The last thing you want to be doing is fighting with packaging material when you need eggs quickly

    2. Low heat, be patient, stir frequently but not constantly. Once every couple minutes should be fine depending on the size of your pot - it shouldn't be hard to figure out if you need to be stirring more or less frequently. However, don't forget to stir. This is probably the biggest way for things to come out less than perfectly. If you get distracted and forget to stir the eggs for too long, the ones at the bottom of the pot can start to develop the same green off-color as overcooked hard boiled egg yolks. It's perfectly safe to eat but who wants to eat green eggs?

    3. You mention butter but unless you're adding it for flavor it's honestly not necessary. When you're done there's going to be eggs stuck to the pan no matter what you do. Don't stress yourself out about it.

    4. One tip - if your eggs are cooked more than you want them to be but not at the turning green stage, you have some wiggle room in whisking in uncooked beaten eggs into the overcooked eggs. The heat from the cooked eggs and further hot holding will cook the raw eggs and it will distract somewhat from the overcooked bits. It's not perfect but it's "good enough" and it can help you save a chafing dish of eggs that you'd otherwise have to throw out.

    That's really all there is too it. If you have more eggs than you can comfortable fit in the pot, you'll have to do it in batches but all that means is "cook eggs, dump into chafing dish/hotel pan, start cooking more eggs."






    share|improve this answer















    I highly recommend using a steamer if you have access to one, but if you don't have it, you don't have it. The good news is that the process for making scrambled eggs on the stove is about the same no matter how many eggs you're making - add as much beaten eggs as you're comfortable stirring in the pan, cook over low heat stirring occasionally.



    The major tips/gotchas that I can think of:



    1. Open all your egg cartons at once before you start cooking. The last thing you want to be doing is fighting with packaging material when you need eggs quickly

    2. Low heat, be patient, stir frequently but not constantly. Once every couple minutes should be fine depending on the size of your pot - it shouldn't be hard to figure out if you need to be stirring more or less frequently. However, don't forget to stir. This is probably the biggest way for things to come out less than perfectly. If you get distracted and forget to stir the eggs for too long, the ones at the bottom of the pot can start to develop the same green off-color as overcooked hard boiled egg yolks. It's perfectly safe to eat but who wants to eat green eggs?

    3. You mention butter but unless you're adding it for flavor it's honestly not necessary. When you're done there's going to be eggs stuck to the pan no matter what you do. Don't stress yourself out about it.

    4. One tip - if your eggs are cooked more than you want them to be but not at the turning green stage, you have some wiggle room in whisking in uncooked beaten eggs into the overcooked eggs. The heat from the cooked eggs and further hot holding will cook the raw eggs and it will distract somewhat from the overcooked bits. It's not perfect but it's "good enough" and it can help you save a chafing dish of eggs that you'd otherwise have to throw out.

    That's really all there is too it. If you have more eggs than you can comfortable fit in the pot, you'll have to do it in batches but all that means is "cook eggs, dump into chafing dish/hotel pan, start cooking more eggs."







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 5 hours ago

























    answered 8 hours ago









    MikeTheLiarMikeTheLiar

    2,2621 gold badge13 silver badges22 bronze badges




    2,2621 gold badge13 silver badges22 bronze badges















    • One other tip: if you're starting with whole eggs (and the OP seems not to be) breaking over 100 eggs takes longer than you think, and the yolks tend to stay whole once you're dropping them into a pan with lots in already. Then you end up chasing them round the pan to break them up.

      – Chris H
      8 hours ago











    • If you're breaking whole eggs, break all of them into a china cap over a bucket before cooking anything.

      – MikeTheLiar
      8 hours ago











    • I used a small pan, tipping into the big pan every 10 or so eggs - second time I cooked bulk scrambled eggs. The first time was when I had trouble breaking them, though I didn't break them at the stove, I took the pan elsewhere

      – Chris H
      7 hours ago











    • stirring is important, but you also don't want to lose your curds. If you stir too much, you'll have an egg sauce rather than scrambled eggs. You need to let the eggs setup on the heat, then stir them off the heat so new liquid egg can be cooked.

      – Escoce
      6 hours ago











    • @Escoce yeah I meant just to stir frequently, not constantly. I'll clarify.

      – MikeTheLiar
      5 hours ago

















    • One other tip: if you're starting with whole eggs (and the OP seems not to be) breaking over 100 eggs takes longer than you think, and the yolks tend to stay whole once you're dropping them into a pan with lots in already. Then you end up chasing them round the pan to break them up.

      – Chris H
      8 hours ago











    • If you're breaking whole eggs, break all of them into a china cap over a bucket before cooking anything.

      – MikeTheLiar
      8 hours ago











    • I used a small pan, tipping into the big pan every 10 or so eggs - second time I cooked bulk scrambled eggs. The first time was when I had trouble breaking them, though I didn't break them at the stove, I took the pan elsewhere

      – Chris H
      7 hours ago











    • stirring is important, but you also don't want to lose your curds. If you stir too much, you'll have an egg sauce rather than scrambled eggs. You need to let the eggs setup on the heat, then stir them off the heat so new liquid egg can be cooked.

      – Escoce
      6 hours ago











    • @Escoce yeah I meant just to stir frequently, not constantly. I'll clarify.

      – MikeTheLiar
      5 hours ago
















    One other tip: if you're starting with whole eggs (and the OP seems not to be) breaking over 100 eggs takes longer than you think, and the yolks tend to stay whole once you're dropping them into a pan with lots in already. Then you end up chasing them round the pan to break them up.

    – Chris H
    8 hours ago





    One other tip: if you're starting with whole eggs (and the OP seems not to be) breaking over 100 eggs takes longer than you think, and the yolks tend to stay whole once you're dropping them into a pan with lots in already. Then you end up chasing them round the pan to break them up.

    – Chris H
    8 hours ago













    If you're breaking whole eggs, break all of them into a china cap over a bucket before cooking anything.

    – MikeTheLiar
    8 hours ago





    If you're breaking whole eggs, break all of them into a china cap over a bucket before cooking anything.

    – MikeTheLiar
    8 hours ago













    I used a small pan, tipping into the big pan every 10 or so eggs - second time I cooked bulk scrambled eggs. The first time was when I had trouble breaking them, though I didn't break them at the stove, I took the pan elsewhere

    – Chris H
    7 hours ago





    I used a small pan, tipping into the big pan every 10 or so eggs - second time I cooked bulk scrambled eggs. The first time was when I had trouble breaking them, though I didn't break them at the stove, I took the pan elsewhere

    – Chris H
    7 hours ago













    stirring is important, but you also don't want to lose your curds. If you stir too much, you'll have an egg sauce rather than scrambled eggs. You need to let the eggs setup on the heat, then stir them off the heat so new liquid egg can be cooked.

    – Escoce
    6 hours ago





    stirring is important, but you also don't want to lose your curds. If you stir too much, you'll have an egg sauce rather than scrambled eggs. You need to let the eggs setup on the heat, then stir them off the heat so new liquid egg can be cooked.

    – Escoce
    6 hours ago













    @Escoce yeah I meant just to stir frequently, not constantly. I'll clarify.

    – MikeTheLiar
    5 hours ago





    @Escoce yeah I meant just to stir frequently, not constantly. I'll clarify.

    – MikeTheLiar
    5 hours ago













    0
















    As MikeTheLiar mentioned, a steamer would help for this:



    If you have more than one pan to cook them in of the same width & length by different depths, and they're not thin disposable containers, you might try making your own bain marie (double boiler) :



    Place the larger one across the burner or two, and put an inch or so of water in it. (you should try for an inch (2.5cm), but you might need less if the depth of the containers is too similar, and placing the top container on forces water out of the lower container).



    Put the other container on top.



    Once the water is boiling, and you have steam, adjust the temperature so the water is staying hot and generating steam, but not a rolling boil.



    Add your oil or butter, let it coat the pan well, then cook the eggs in the top vessel, stirring constantly 'til it's not quite to the consistency you want (as there will be a little bit of carry over-cooking)



    ...



    I've also heard that you can do large batches of scrambled eggs in the oven (350°F/175°C), stir after 10 minutes, then every 5 minutes 'til they're done (technically, not quite done) ... most recipes claim it takes 20-25 minutes.






    share|improve this answer





























      0
















      As MikeTheLiar mentioned, a steamer would help for this:



      If you have more than one pan to cook them in of the same width & length by different depths, and they're not thin disposable containers, you might try making your own bain marie (double boiler) :



      Place the larger one across the burner or two, and put an inch or so of water in it. (you should try for an inch (2.5cm), but you might need less if the depth of the containers is too similar, and placing the top container on forces water out of the lower container).



      Put the other container on top.



      Once the water is boiling, and you have steam, adjust the temperature so the water is staying hot and generating steam, but not a rolling boil.



      Add your oil or butter, let it coat the pan well, then cook the eggs in the top vessel, stirring constantly 'til it's not quite to the consistency you want (as there will be a little bit of carry over-cooking)



      ...



      I've also heard that you can do large batches of scrambled eggs in the oven (350°F/175°C), stir after 10 minutes, then every 5 minutes 'til they're done (technically, not quite done) ... most recipes claim it takes 20-25 minutes.






      share|improve this answer



























        0














        0










        0









        As MikeTheLiar mentioned, a steamer would help for this:



        If you have more than one pan to cook them in of the same width & length by different depths, and they're not thin disposable containers, you might try making your own bain marie (double boiler) :



        Place the larger one across the burner or two, and put an inch or so of water in it. (you should try for an inch (2.5cm), but you might need less if the depth of the containers is too similar, and placing the top container on forces water out of the lower container).



        Put the other container on top.



        Once the water is boiling, and you have steam, adjust the temperature so the water is staying hot and generating steam, but not a rolling boil.



        Add your oil or butter, let it coat the pan well, then cook the eggs in the top vessel, stirring constantly 'til it's not quite to the consistency you want (as there will be a little bit of carry over-cooking)



        ...



        I've also heard that you can do large batches of scrambled eggs in the oven (350°F/175°C), stir after 10 minutes, then every 5 minutes 'til they're done (technically, not quite done) ... most recipes claim it takes 20-25 minutes.






        share|improve this answer













        As MikeTheLiar mentioned, a steamer would help for this:



        If you have more than one pan to cook them in of the same width & length by different depths, and they're not thin disposable containers, you might try making your own bain marie (double boiler) :



        Place the larger one across the burner or two, and put an inch or so of water in it. (you should try for an inch (2.5cm), but you might need less if the depth of the containers is too similar, and placing the top container on forces water out of the lower container).



        Put the other container on top.



        Once the water is boiling, and you have steam, adjust the temperature so the water is staying hot and generating steam, but not a rolling boil.



        Add your oil or butter, let it coat the pan well, then cook the eggs in the top vessel, stirring constantly 'til it's not quite to the consistency you want (as there will be a little bit of carry over-cooking)



        ...



        I've also heard that you can do large batches of scrambled eggs in the oven (350°F/175°C), stir after 10 minutes, then every 5 minutes 'til they're done (technically, not quite done) ... most recipes claim it takes 20-25 minutes.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 6 hours ago









        JoeJoe

        63k12 gold badges111 silver badges323 bronze badges




        63k12 gold badges111 silver badges323 bronze badges
























            0
















            From personal experience, I have baked scrambled eggs for large numbers of people (100+ in some instances). I used a recipe similar to this. I have used steamers in the past but found the oven easier for consistency sake, without having to seek out new equipment.






            share|improve this answer

























            • While linking to an off-site recipe may be helpful in the short-term, off-site links tend to go dead. Thus, it's likely that at some point in the future the link here will be useless. When that happens, all readers will know is that you found using the oven easier when cooking for large numbers of people, but they won't know how to do it. So, please quote the most important portions of your off-site link.

              – Makyen
              11 secs ago















            0
















            From personal experience, I have baked scrambled eggs for large numbers of people (100+ in some instances). I used a recipe similar to this. I have used steamers in the past but found the oven easier for consistency sake, without having to seek out new equipment.






            share|improve this answer

























            • While linking to an off-site recipe may be helpful in the short-term, off-site links tend to go dead. Thus, it's likely that at some point in the future the link here will be useless. When that happens, all readers will know is that you found using the oven easier when cooking for large numbers of people, but they won't know how to do it. So, please quote the most important portions of your off-site link.

              – Makyen
              11 secs ago













            0














            0










            0









            From personal experience, I have baked scrambled eggs for large numbers of people (100+ in some instances). I used a recipe similar to this. I have used steamers in the past but found the oven easier for consistency sake, without having to seek out new equipment.






            share|improve this answer













            From personal experience, I have baked scrambled eggs for large numbers of people (100+ in some instances). I used a recipe similar to this. I have used steamers in the past but found the oven easier for consistency sake, without having to seek out new equipment.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 6 hours ago









            J CrosbyJ Crosby

            73117 bronze badges




            73117 bronze badges















            • While linking to an off-site recipe may be helpful in the short-term, off-site links tend to go dead. Thus, it's likely that at some point in the future the link here will be useless. When that happens, all readers will know is that you found using the oven easier when cooking for large numbers of people, but they won't know how to do it. So, please quote the most important portions of your off-site link.

              – Makyen
              11 secs ago

















            • While linking to an off-site recipe may be helpful in the short-term, off-site links tend to go dead. Thus, it's likely that at some point in the future the link here will be useless. When that happens, all readers will know is that you found using the oven easier when cooking for large numbers of people, but they won't know how to do it. So, please quote the most important portions of your off-site link.

              – Makyen
              11 secs ago
















            While linking to an off-site recipe may be helpful in the short-term, off-site links tend to go dead. Thus, it's likely that at some point in the future the link here will be useless. When that happens, all readers will know is that you found using the oven easier when cooking for large numbers of people, but they won't know how to do it. So, please quote the most important portions of your off-site link.

            – Makyen
            11 secs ago





            While linking to an off-site recipe may be helpful in the short-term, off-site links tend to go dead. Thus, it's likely that at some point in the future the link here will be useless. When that happens, all readers will know is that you found using the oven easier when cooking for large numbers of people, but they won't know how to do it. So, please quote the most important portions of your off-site link.

            – Makyen
            11 secs ago











            Reggiem is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









            draft saved

            draft discarded

















            Reggiem is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












            Reggiem is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











            Reggiem is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














            Thanks for contributing an answer to Seasoned Advice!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid


            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fcooking.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f102409%2fmaking-eggs-for-50-people%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Canceling a color specificationRandomly assigning color to Graphics3D objects?Default color for Filling in Mathematica 9Coloring specific elements of sets with a prime modified order in an array plotHow to pick a color differing significantly from the colors already in a given color list?Detection of the text colorColor numbers based on their valueCan color schemes for use with ColorData include opacity specification?My dynamic color schemes

            Invision Community Contents History See also References External links Navigation menuProprietaryinvisioncommunity.comIPS Community ForumsIPS Community Forumsthis blog entry"License Changes, IP.Board 3.4, and the Future""Interview -- Matt Mecham of Ibforums""CEO Invision Power Board, Matt Mecham Is a Liar, Thief!"IPB License Explanation 1.3, 1.3.1, 2.0, and 2.1ArchivedSecurity Fixes, Updates And Enhancements For IPB 1.3.1Archived"New Demo Accounts - Invision Power Services"the original"New Default Skin"the original"Invision Power Board 3.0.0 and Applications Released"the original"Archived copy"the original"Perpetual licenses being done away with""Release Notes - Invision Power Services""Introducing: IPS Community Suite 4!"Invision Community Release Notes

            François Viète Contents Biography Work and thought Bibliography See also Notes Further reading External links Navigation menup. 21Google Bookspp. 75–77Google BooksDe thou (from University of Saint Andrews)ArchivedGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle booksGoogle Bookscc-parthenay.frL'histoire universelle (fr)Universal History (en)ArchivedAdsabs.harvard.eduPagesperso-orange.frArchive.orgChikara Sasaki. Descartes' mathematical thought p.259Google BooksGoogle BooksGoogle Bookspp. 152 and onwardGoogle BooksGoogle BooksScribd.comGoogle Books1257-7979Google BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGoogle BooksGallica.bnf.frGoogle BooksGoogle Books"François Viète"Francois Viète: Father of Modern Algebraic NotationThe Lawyer and the GamblerAbout TarporleySite de Jean-Paul GuichardL'algèbre nouvelle"About the Harmonicon"cb120511976(data)1188044800000 0001 0913 5903n82164680ola2013766880073431702w6vt1sb70287374827140948071409480