Use Rice to Make DIY Speckled Easter Eggs (It’s Mess-Free!)
If you love trying Easter egg ideas, these easy speckled Easter eggs are super fun to create using rice and food coloring!
Are you ready to learn a unique and mess-free method to color eggs!!
Try dying dried rice using food coloring and then shaking your hard-boiled eggs with the rice! It’s so easy and is one of the least messy ways I have tried when coloring eggs. The result is a very pretty speckled dyed egg you’ll be proud of!
I want to confess something. When my kids were young, we skipped dying eggs for a few years or maybe many years. LOL, It was because I couldn’t handle the dyed fingers and mess that ultimately ensued. I have a feeling I am not alone in this struggle.
I am happy to report that this Easter craft is excellent for all ages!
Young kids can have fun shaking up the rice container with the egg. You can just stick with one color or add the egg to a different container with another color of rice to make pretty color onlinebinations. I love how adorable these turned out, and it’s perhaps a less messy alternative to the Easter egg kits in which you dunk eggs into dye.
You will be left with some leftover dyed rice, but maybe consider using it in another craft or to create a DIY sensory bin.
Speckled Easter Eggs Using Rice
PrintSupplies Needed
Directions
1
Add about 1/4 cup rice to a small plastic container or storage bag.
2
Add about 10-15 drops of food coloring to the rice. Place the lid on tightly, and shake to coat the rice.
3
Add a hard-boiled egg to the container with the rice, and put the lid on again tightly. Shake the egg in the container a few times and even flip the container over. (This is where you can have small kids help shake!)
4
Remove the egg from the container let it dry. You can also add it to another container with a different color.
5
Stand back and admire your beautiful speckled Easter eggs!
More tips for dying eggs with rice:
- Keep your eggs as is, or consider embellishing them further using a paint pen or stickers.
- Wear gloves if you’d like to keep your fingers from touching any food coloring. I noticed that when you remove the egg from the rice, you can get some on your fingers.
- If you find the rice beonlinees too dry to dye an egg, simply remove the egg and add a few more drops of food coloring.
- Small plastic containers worked out well for me. I have seen others use plastic storage bags. You can also use two plastic cups and tape the tops together before shaking. Maybe a plastic cup and cling wrap on the top could work as well. Also worth noting, the food coloring washed out onlinepletely of my containers.
- Can you dye brown easter eggs? I would try to stick with white so there is more of a contrast.
- Do I need to soak eggs in vinegar first? I did not, and the color was vibrant enough for me. I don’t think it would hurt to soak for 5-10 minutes first if you’d like.
- Want perfect hard-boiled eggs? Put your eggs in a pot on the stove and fill it with water just above the eggs. Turn on the heat to medium/high until it boils. Cover the pot with a lid, take it off the heat, and let eggs stand with the lid on for about 14 minutes for extra large eggs. Soak the eggs in an ice bath to cool.
These speckled Easter eggs are a definite winner!
What a fun, easy craft to do with the family. These turn out so pretty displayed on a plate. Just remember if you plan on eating them to refrigerate them within two hours. Hard-boiled eggs can last up to 7 days in the fridge.
Will you be dying eggs this Easter? What is your favorite method?