- Jun 15, 2008
- 4,654
- 94
- 251
So i hear all the time about birds laying double/triple yokers on here
how come we don't get any at the grocery store?
They sort them out. Commercial layers have been bred specifically to lay as uniform of eggs as possible. Then the eggs are weighed, candled, and inspected. They are graded and put into cartons. Any eggs that don't make the lowest grade from double yolks, far too big or small, too porous of shell, meat spots, etc... Gets put into other things instead of being sold whole. If you buy any liquid egg products or boxed baking items it likely contains these less than perfect eggs. Alot of people don't want random sized eggs or surprise double yolkers. It would mess with their baking. Have you seen how hard it can be to take your own eggs and follow a recipe? "2 large eggs" hmm.... is this one large? I had to start out putting eggs on a postal scale and looking up egg size standards for the US. Then I have to break them in a seperate bowl not only in case there is something wrong with them but in case I get double yolks because it would mess up the recipe. Some people even fail to find the benefits of farm fresh eggs to be greater than the potential problems while trying to cook things. So long ago the commercial egg industry start to make standards so every egg you buy is the same.
how come we don't get any at the grocery store?
They sort them out. Commercial layers have been bred specifically to lay as uniform of eggs as possible. Then the eggs are weighed, candled, and inspected. They are graded and put into cartons. Any eggs that don't make the lowest grade from double yolks, far too big or small, too porous of shell, meat spots, etc... Gets put into other things instead of being sold whole. If you buy any liquid egg products or boxed baking items it likely contains these less than perfect eggs. Alot of people don't want random sized eggs or surprise double yolkers. It would mess with their baking. Have you seen how hard it can be to take your own eggs and follow a recipe? "2 large eggs" hmm.... is this one large? I had to start out putting eggs on a postal scale and looking up egg size standards for the US. Then I have to break them in a seperate bowl not only in case there is something wrong with them but in case I get double yolks because it would mess up the recipe. Some people even fail to find the benefits of farm fresh eggs to be greater than the potential problems while trying to cook things. So long ago the commercial egg industry start to make standards so every egg you buy is the same.
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