Submitted by trailing-edge t3_11dk88v in explainlikeimfive
Automatic egg cookers come with a water measuring cylinder that is marked based on how many eggs you want to cook. You pour the water into the cooker, and it heats the water until it all boils off.
The amount of water is used as a timer somehow.
The part I don’t understand is: why you use more water for 1 egg than you do for 6 eggs? That seems backwards.
therealdilbert t1_ja9aoio wrote
The cooker is done once all the water is boiled off
Since the cooker heats the combined mass of eggs and water, with more eggs it takes longer to before the water boils off, so you need less water to cook for the same time