My family loves eggs and they’re often at the center of our quick and easy weeknight dinners. Sometimes when making things like poached or fried eggs for a crowd – whether it be just enough for a family dinner, or a really large amount for a luncheon or party- you are really limited by the touchy nature of eggs and cooking time. It’s hard to cook that many at a time in a pan and get them all finished at the right time and manage to serve everything while it’s still warm.
Many of my family’s most requested dinners involve fried or poached eggs and after getting frustrated with babysitting eggs on the stove top, I started experimenting cooking them in the oven and had fantastic results. These Large Batch Poached Eggs and Fried Eggs are a game changer when you have a lot of mouths to feed or like to prep ahead!

Ingredients and Equipment Needed
This is just a preview of ingredients and method, keep scrolling for full printable recipe.
Ingredients
- Eggs
- Butter – Always use real butter if you can! I’ve found butter works better than non-stick spray.
- Water
- Salt and pepper
Equipment
- Muffin tin – You’ll need a regular or jumbo sized muffin tin. I prefer using a jumbo muffin tin because I like the finished size of the eggs more than I do from a standard tin, but either will work. A muffin top pan could also work if you have one of those! I prefer a non-stick or silicone pan. Even with nonstick, the edges can still stick to the pan.

How to Make Large Batch Poached and Fried Eggs
- Start by preheating your oven and rubbing a little butter in each muffin tin well. Even with my nicest non-stick pans I get egg stuck to the side, so this is necessary step to ensure each egg releases well once cooked.
- Add a little water to each well for poached eggs, or skip that step for fried. Crack an egg in each well.
- Pop the pan in the oven for about 10 minutes and you have a whole pan of perfectly poached or fried eggs, ready to use as desired!

Storing and Other Tips
- If you have leftovers, store in an airtight container in the refrigerator and enjoy within 2-3 days for best results.
- Reheat eggs gently, on low power in the microwave, or add to hot dishes like ramen or soup and allow to broth to warm them.
Poached Vs. Fried
The difference between a poached egg and a fried egg here is just a tablespoon of water. If you’d like to make poached eggs, after buttering the muffin tin, add a tablespoon of water to each one and then add your cracked egg. The water will rise to the top and gently surround your egg mimicking that water bath on the stove top. If you want to make “fried” eggs, simply skip the water and add the egg directly to the buttered muffin tin. Technically these aren’t “fried” and they won’t get those buttery-crisp edges that a traditionally fried egg gets, but it’s close and looks similar.

Frequently Asked Questions
Just check on them! Around 8-9 minutes you’ll see softer whites and very runny yolks, which is perfect if you want them similar to a soft poach on the stovetop. Around 10 minutes you’ll notice firmer whites and soft, but not super runny yolks. At 10-11+ minutes whites will firm up significantly and yolks will be thicker and mostly cooked through. All pans and ovens cook differently, so these are just guidelines!
Sure! I would cook them on the same oven rack, if possible, for the most even heat distribution.
Yep! Cook the eggs to your desired doneness, keeping in mind they will cook a little more if you plan on reheating later. Cool the eggs completely, then store in an airtight container in the fridge until ready to use. When ready to eat, reheat gently in the microwave (13-20 second bursts, preferably at 50% power) or over low heat in a buttered pan on the stovetop.

Large Batch Poached Eggs and Fried Eggs
Equipment
Ingredients
- 12 eggs
- butter
- water
- salt and pepper
Instructions
Poached Eggs:
- Preheat oven to 350. Coat each well of a muffin tin (standard or jumbo, I prefer jumbo) with butter. Add 1 tablespoon water to each one. Crack each egg and add 1 egg per muffin cup. Do not salt and pepper (it will wash away with the water!) . Bake for about 10 minutes, but watch them a few minutes before and after that in order to cook to desired doneness. Keep in mind the water on top will be discarded- sometimes it makes it look like uncooked egg white on top, when it’s really just water.
“Fried” Eggs:
- Follow steps above, only omit water and sprinkle each egg with salt and pepper before baking.
Notes
- If you have leftovers, store in an airtight container in the refrigerator and enjoy within 2-3 days for best results.
- Reheat eggs gently, on low power in the microwave, over low heat in a little butter on the stovetop, or add to hot dishes like ramen or soup and allow to broth to warm them.
Nutrition












Questions & Reviews
What is the best way to remove the poached eggs from the muffin pan and not get the water too? My slotted spoon is too big, any ideas? I’m going to try this for a big crowd, but want a system in place. Thank you!
Make sure you butter the cups well ahead of time and then use a small, flexible rubber spatula!
This worked great when I was making Egg McMuffins sandwiches for 7 people, most of which who wanted more than one. I used a standard size muffin pan so the cook time was a little longer (since the mixture is thicker). Very happy with the results!
Have you tried using white vinegar instead of water?
I haven’t!
Do you preheat the muffin tin or do everything from cold straight in the oven?
I do everything cold!
Worked beautifully. Great was to poach eggs. Thank you.
When rubbing butter around each well does it make a difference if you butter them with coldish butter like in baking, or can you melt the butter like when you make popovers.
Can’t wait to try this!!!
nope, shouldn’t matter!
I just tried this but my egg yolk partially sunk in the middle when I removed the pan from the oven . Any idea why this happened. Thanks in advance.
I’m not sure, but I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that either, sounds like it’s just part of the cooking process!
I tried this last night when I made Egg McFuffins for my crew–it worked perfectly!
Thank you for posting this!! I tried this tonight for dinner. We had eggs Benedict. I think the part I love the most is that every egg comes out so easily and they are all uniform in size. I baked the eggs, Canadian bacon and then toasted the English muffins in my oven on the broiler setting on a big sheet pan. No more toasting four slices at a time! It all came together fast and we could all eat together without me tending the frying pan. Thanks again!
Oh wow, thank you SO much for this! Can’t wait to try it-maybe this weekend! I consider myself a fairly accomplished “home cook” but I truly suck at eggs!!