Even though she’s not a “professionally trained” chef, we can all agree that Ina Garten is a go-to resource for indispensable cooking tips—whether you’re not sure what to make for dinner (roast chicken, silly) or you can’t figure out why said roast chicken tastes like sh*t. (It’s because you used sh*tty olive oil, silly!)
But there’s one specific thing she does in all her baking recipes—we’ll call it a rule—that I, a former pastry cook, am telling you to break.
Ina Garten uses extra-large eggs. In baking, cooking—all of them. She’s even gone on the record to say it. But according to the American Egg Board, large eggs are the most common size in recipe development. In my lifetime, I’ve only ever purchased large eggs. Yet when I sit down to make Beatty’s Chocolate Cake, the Barefoot Contessa is telling me to go to the store and buy a dozen extra-large eggs, of which I’ll use three?
Ina, love ya, but I’m not doing that. Here’s why: In a baking recipe that calls for one or two eggs, you can pretty much use any size interchangeably. Look at this conversion chart: