How to Dye Easter Eggs with Whipped Cream
A tastier alternative to the popular Shaving Cream Easter Eggs, these Whipped Cream Easter Eggs are a more sensible and edible way to dye your eggs this year. Just four ingredients, one of them being hard boiled eggs, and you have a less messy way to dye your Easter Eggs with Whipped Cream.
My favorite holiday of the year is right around the corner and I couldn’t be more excited! Easter is on it’s way and with it comes all my favorite foods besides my beloved Honey Baked Ham.
And who can forget the vibrantly colored Easter Eggs with the messy task of dying them so the Easter Bunny can hide them the night before. After he’s had a couple glasses of wine waiting for everyone to fall asleep….and then forgetting the next day where all the eggs are hidden so when one or two are still missing you know you’re in for a smelly situation in a few weeks when those eggs decide to ripen. No? Just our house?
Well, anyway, we LOVE dying easter eggs and I’m always looking for new ways to get the task done. We’ve dyed eggs with rice and transferred patterns by dying eggs in silk ties. It’s fun to test out something new but when the shaving cream dyed eggs hit the internet I had to shun that one for sure.
I like to eat the hard boiled eggs later….making egg salad or just eating them for a snack so the idea of eating an egg that’s been dyed with shaving cream made me shutter a bit. Since the shell of an egg is porous so the ingredients of shaving cream can get into the egg itself making it inedible. What a waste!
So, I later realized whipped cream was an amazing substitute and soooooo fun to use…..AND if you accidentally lick your fingers while dying Easter Eggs in Whipped Cream you’re not going to gag because whipped cream is amazing.
How to Dye Eggs with Whipped Cream
Dying easter eggs with whipped cream is exactly the same as dying easter eggs with shaving cream except you’re swapping out the shaving cream for the whipped cream. It’s a safer alternative to using a non food item to dye your hard boiled eggs.
Here’s how you dye easter eggs with whipped cream:
- Soak your hard boiled eggs in vinegar for 5-10 minutes. The vinegar is essential in helping the colors adhere to the shell. You can skip this step but your colors will be more muted.
- Dry your eggs and set aside.
- Spread the whipped cream, whipped topping or Cool Whip evenly in the wells of a muffin tin.
- Using gel food color, drop dots of your favorite colors on top of the whipped cream.
- Swirl the colors slightly with a knife.
- Roll the eggs around in the whipped cream and let stand for 5-10 minutes.
- Wipe dry with a paper towel. Do Not Rinse under water as the dye needs more time to set.
- Enjoy!
So, soooooo easy to do and this is super fun for the kiddos to do, too!
My BEST Tips for Dying Easter Eggs
Want a mess free easter egg dying experience? Follow these easy tricks!
- Cover your workspace with a disposable plastic tablecloth to keep surfaces clean and dye free!
- Disposable plastic gloves are great for keeping little fingers stain free!
- Cook your eggs in an Instant Pot using this recipe!
- Soak your eggs in vinegar before you start to give your colors an extra boost!
How long do Hard Boiled Eggs last?
- Hard Boiled eggs will last in the refrigerator up to 7 days.
- Hard Boiled Eggs can stand at room temperature, safely, for up to 2 hours.
- I do not recommend freezing hard boiled eggs because the egg whites do not thaw well.
Can you use Brown Eggs to dye easter eggs with whipped cream?
You can definitely use brown eggs instead of white eggs to make this cool whip easter egg recipe but know that brown eggs produce earthier colors than white which, sometimes, end up even more beautiful that the tie dyed easter eggs in the pictures. Less hippie, 70’s Flower Girl and more bohemian in my opinion.
What can you make with Dyed Easter Eggs?
Here are our favorite recipes to make using hard boiled eggs:
- The Very Best Deviled Egg recipe
- Egg Salad Recipe
- Pimento Cheese Deviled Eggs…OMG…so good.
- Red Beet Pickled Eggs
- Salmon Nicoise Salad
- Barbecue Chicken Cobb Salad
And if you’re looking for even MORE SUPER FUN EGG DYING IDEAS….check out THESE EASY TIPS!
For more easy recipe ideas and behind scenes fun, follow us on Instagram!
Get the Recipe: How to Dye Easter Eggs with Whipped Cream Recipe
Ingredients
- 12 hard boiled eggs, large
- 2 cups vinegar
- 8 ounces whipped cream
- Gel food coloring
Instructions
- Place the eggs in a bowl and pour the vinegar over the eggs. Allow the eggs to soak in the vinegar for 5-10 minutes.
- Carefully dry the eggs with a paper towel. Set aside.
- Fill the wells of a standard muffin tin with the whipped cream and add drops of food coloring to the whipped cream.
- Using a knife, carefully swirl the food coloring into the whipped cream.
- Add one egg to each well and roll the egg in the whipped cream to coat. Allow the egg to sit in the whipped cream for 5-10 minutes.
- Remove the egg from the whipped cream and wipe clean with a paper towel. Do Not Rinse under water. The dye needs time to dry.
- Use to decorate or enjoy as a snack!
45 Comments on “How to Dye Easter Eggs with Whipped Cream”
That looks like you used liquid food coloring not gel… which is it?
It is gel food coloring but you can use liquid if you can’t find gel.
I wish you would name the brand of eggs that don’t work- a lot of time and money and effort goes into these to have them be a disappointment.
Hi Susie, I haven’t used a brand that didn’t work except for brown eggs just because they’re brown. Any egg should work if soaked in the vinegar.
Just to be safe I soaked them for 15 min in vinegar and had them set in the muffin tins for 20 min, I used a toothpick to swirl instead! They came out great. I’ve done this with a sheet pan the last few years but this year did half with the muffin tin and half with a sheet pan and I feel like the muffin tin ones came out bolder. I used warmer water when I rinsed as well not sure if that makes a difference and some dye did go but most stayed. 🙂
We did try the sheet pan but the colors do start to run together a bit. And when you do rinse with water the color will wash off a bit, as well.
The idea of using real whipped cream as a healthy alternative to using non-edible shaving cream is great. However, if you really want to be healthy, I would NOT use Cool Whip, or any similar product. Those fake whipped creams are pretty much made with sugar and soy bean oil. No, you won’t exactly get food poisoning with them, but they are far from healthy. The soybean oil in these products are GMO. In other words, the soybean plants used in production have been genetically altered to be able to take in a whole lot of pesticides while the plant still survives and produces. It’s expensive to eat non – GMO, much less organic. I for one can’t afford to eat that way entirely, but there are certain products which I’ve made a point not to use anymore, like fake whipped cream. Also most vinegar is GMO, unless you go organic. That’s one organic product which isn’t too expensive. Personally, I’m going to try this with whipped cream. The eggs look really pretty this way!
You’re not EATING the cool whip, though. And you’re not eating the vinegar. So, this is perfectly fine for dying eggs unless you end up eating the cool whip after you dyed the eggs then you may have issues and some really vibrantly dyed teeth.
These look gorgeous and so vibrant! We’re going to try it this weekend. Will this work with Reddi Wip from the can?
Hi Sara, No, you will need to buy cool whip in a tub. The Reddi Whip will get watered down too quickly.
I stumbled upon your article on “How to Dye Easter Eggs with Whipped Cream” and I must say, it’s a unique and creative approach to egg dyeing. I’ve never thought of using whipped cream as a dyeing agent, but the results you shared are truly impressive.
I appreciate that this method is not only fun and easy for kids to participate in but also uses natural ingredients that are safe and easy to find. It’s also great that you provided tips and tricks to make the process go smoothly and get the best results.
Thank you for sharing this idea with us. I’m looking forward to trying this out with my family this Easter and seeing the beautiful, marbled designs that we can create.
Thank you for your comment!
We loved doing these but also found most of the color washed away. There was more on their faces from eating whipped cream than was left on the eggs. Wonder if using regular food color instead of gel would make a more colorful egg.
Oh boy! :-). They are a little messy….I did find the longer you soak them in the vinegar and then leave them in the whipped cream for a little longer the more vibrant the colors. the regular food coloring will cause the whipped cream to break so I don’t recommend it but you could use the food color paste instead. Or just use more of the gel. Last year, my batch of eggs didn’t hold any color at all but I later found out it was the brand of eggs and some type of processing they use that didn’t allow the color to stick.
I made them with yogurt
Perfect!
This looks great but as i was reading i thought you meant real whipped cream , not cool whip or other non-dairy whipped topping. Would real whipped cream (that is, heavy cream whipped to soft peaks) work in this recipe, or is there something about the whipped topping that real whipped cream doesn’t do? Thanks! Cool recipe!
Hi Theresa! Yes, real whipped cream will work, too! I just did this for a news segment this morning and didn’t have Cool Whip so I made my own whipped cream and it worked perfectly.
This looks delicious and easy to make. I’m going to try it this weekend. Thanks a lot for your time.
Thank you so much!
These are so bright and colorful, my daughter is looking at the computer and telling me we have to make these!
My girls did this last weekend. Forgot to wear gloves LOL!!!
This is such a fun idea! I bet my kids would really enjoy seeing their designs unfold!
It really is so much fun to make!
This is really a great idea! My kids enjoyed making them!!
These did not work for us. I’m not sure what we did wrong. We soaked the eggs in vinegar for 10 minutes and followed all of the instructions, but when we rinsed the eggs, the color just rinsed right off. When we tried to redo them, it ended up taking off what little color remained from the first round. Any thoughts on why they didn’t work?
Thanks!
Hi Lauren!
I’m sorry this didn’t work out for you. It’s funny you wrote this because we used this recipe before easter with a certain brand of eggs and it did the same thing that happened to you! I won’t name the brand but it sounds like it may have been the brand of eggs for us. I hope you had a great easter in spite of the egg dying fail. Again, my apologies!
WOW this is so fun! Thank you so much for sharing!
You’re very welcome!