Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About Eggs
ADVERTISEMENT
A red eared chicken can lay a blue or green egg. White ears=white eggs, red ears=colored eggs. They can be all the way from peachy pink to light blue, olive green and dark brown.
An Egg-cellent read; Happy Spring!!!
All Christians know that the chicken came first.
The large poultry houses have NEVER given hormones to any birds. Over 70 years of selective genetics, the birds have changed due to the consumers wishes. The consumer likes more white meat. The industry found males and females that by nature had larger breasts, they bred them together, and their offspring had larger breasts. Many hundreds of generations later the birds are much larger and have larger breasts. Laying hens are kept in a cleaner housing, and up off the ground so they don't walk in each others manure causing disease to spread, than any small home barn. Because they are low on the food chain, they are less stressed when kept close together. A stressed hen will retain a yolk up in their oviduct, when she relaxes the next day, the next yolk being released from the cluster will catch up with the on being held. They both move down, creating the double yolked egg. Since the profit on the "entire dozen" is between 2 and 3 cents, the producer will do everything to not stress the hens. Disease, loud noises, predators. So more often than not, the majority of the house will stress, they have to send those eggs to bakers. But don't make more for them when it takes two days production time. The white twisted tissue attached to the end of the yolk is the chaleaze and yes it hold the yolk steady inside the shell. Today we have "emotional consumers" due to the marketing. The leading poultry scientists agree, "the best egg to buy is the cheapest egg, they are all the same". Everything else you have heard is "perceived value". They have to make you believe their eggs are better. There are 6000 air pores on the shell of an egg. They will absorb odor and bacteria. Eggs are not refrigerated around the world, no refrigerators, The gather for each days use. Bacteria grows. In the stores, the eggs have a thin layer of glycerine to slow absorption. Until the eggs reach the store, no human has touched the eggs.
That's their belief system talking though, it's not actual facts, because they were not actually there to witness it.
It's everyone's right to believe whatever you need to, but to say only "you" know is just ridiculous and untrue (and just a bit arrogant). Who cares which came first anyway...they both taste good!
Our neighbor has chickens and I love her birds鈥 eggs..they are brown but vary in shades of brown. She feeds them organic foods and only made in the USA, not China or elsewhere. Shell color doesn鈥檛 matter...the egg itself is so flavorful. Grocery store eggs make my stomach hurt after (additives given to birds?). Eggs are a 鈥減erfect鈥 food...give it some thought...the myth of cholesterol has been put to rest. Eggs are great for brain and body!
I have at least 2 eggs a day and for a while I was up to 9 a day without any ill effects. I find I prefer white eggs because he brown shells are stronger and harder to crack. I worked at a farm store for a while and when asked I personally recommended the brown eggs to anyone traveling to their cottege. I felt they would have less breakage. I can't tell the difference in taste in chicken eggs but do like duck and turkey eggs for their stronger taste.
Martha Eggs can be stored for very long periods of time in refrigeration. If they float, it's merely a sigh of dehydration, which happens when refrigerated...desiccation is loss of fluid which makes them lighter and therefore have more air and more bouyancy. while floaters may not be as good as non-floaters it is not a sign that they are inedible. Only to be sure is crack the egg...if the yolk is mixing with the white or if it is obviously spoiled then toss it. I have hens who always want to be mammas so I always crack o egg at a time in a separate container to make sure I don't crack a bad egg in with the rest.
We have stood eggs on their wider rounded ends many, many times. It takes patience, but it also helps if the eggs are at room temp, so the contents settle easily. Try it any day of the year!
When you check eggs for freshness, you don't need salt water. Just fill a pan with water higher than a standing egg and it will lie flat if very fresh or float if it is old. Throw away the floating eggs. Use the eggs that are upright, but still on the bottom in baking within a day or two. Eat the rest.