Easter Eggs the Natural Way
Easter Eggs the Natural Way
This Easter Sunday why not perk up the holidays with some beautiful Easter eggs dyed naturally. This is a fun experiment for parents and kids alike. The results are amazing; you will be surprised at the rainbow of color you can get from nature. Plus you get the bonus of no added chemicals or artificial dyes.
Wash Your Eggs
To start off, if you are using store bought eggs, you might want to wash them off with mild dish soap. Store eggs have a coating of oil on them that farm eggs do not. Washing the oil off allows them to hold the color better. But if you choose to skip this step it will still work.
Gather Your Supplies
Now gather your supplies. Here is a list of natural ingredients and the colors they make.
- Red Onion Skins – soft lavender to red, depending on how long you boil them or how many skins are in the pot.
- Red Cabbage Leaves – a lovely shade of robin’s egg blue (yep, blue not red).
- Beet Juice or Cranberry Juice – different shades of pink.
- Dill seeds – brown – gold color
- Grape juice – lavender
- Strong coffee – different shades of brown
- Yellow onion leaves, Turmeric, orange and lemon peels, cumin, carrot tops- yellow eggs
- Paprika – orange eggs
- Spinach – green eggs
- Yellow Delicious apple peels – green/gold color
- Blueberries – blue
- Grass – green
To dye eggs that you can eat you will need:
- White vinegar
- Eggs
- Water
- Your choice of natural dye item
Here’s what you do:
Hard-boil your eggs.
- Add 2 – 3 tablespoons of vinegar to a quart of water along with your natural ingredients. If it is a solid, like spinach you can use up to 4 cups. For spices you will need about 4 tablespoons. Bring to a boil and simmer for 30 minutes. Let cool then strain.
- Dip the hard-boiled eggs into the dye. The longer they are in the more colorful they will be. Turn the eggs every so often so the color will come out even.
- Allow to dry in egg cartons. Refrigerate eggs you intend to eat.
Belinda J. Mooney is a veteran homeschool mom of 7. She loves incorporating all types of learning from cooking to crafts into her children’s learning. Her kids, ages 25 down to 7, can often be seen wearing togas (or other strange clothing) to dinner, doing school outside or leaping fences to get a picture of a strange bug. her husband has threatened to eat the science projects.



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I know parents that have been concerned about dying Easter eggs with their ADD/ADHD/Autistic children because the kids are on dye restricted diet. One bite of something with certain dyes, particularly red, they notice a huge difference in behavior. This is perfect for them and contains ingredients for every color of the rainbow.
I love it so much I stumbled this post!
If parents are really concerned about the ‘dye’ in the Easter eggs, they could put rubber gloves on their child. Also, why do eggs need to be just dyed? Markers, stickers, and other objects could just as easily be used.
The experiment is really interesting. I will try this with my kids this Easter…..
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Ok these are all great ideas but you know kids and smells what should we do about that I bet when we brew the coffee for the brown color huh never mind very cool ideas Thanks.
These natural dyes are fun. It makes a great pioneer project for dyeing cloth as well.
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Happy Easter!
Belinda