Silly farmers, putting all their pullet eggs on the compost heap because they're too stupid to know to eat them. For shame. 

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I doubt they put them in compost heap. I like small eggs, bantam eggs for pickled eggs. You can fit a lot more in a jug. I wonder how many quail eggs will fit in a qt or gallon jug...Quail eggs for scotch eggs, perfect bar snack...
For those of you in warm areas, how do you store your hatching eggs? I've read they need to be at 50-60F, but even at this time of year, no where in my house is near that - best I can do is 68-70. I have a wine fridge at 55, but am worried about humidity (and it would need to be thoroughly cleaned, had used it for a "root cellar" this past year).
(Sorry for the multiple sequential posts...)
- Ant Farm
Quote:
I have some people that I give eggs to and they, and their friends & family they share with, have told me that our eggs have a much richer, "meatier" quality to them compared to store bought eggs. They don't make a differentiation between pullet eggs or full size hen eggs, they just tell me how much they love our eggs. Sometimes I get a huge yolk in a pullet egg but usually they are proportional to their size. My husband no longer takes eggs to work (in the city) to give to coworkers after they started complaining that the free eggs they were getting had too many small ones in the carton.
I like smaller eggs, but it was more for being able to dial in smaller amounts of egg for breakfast if I wanted. The farmer I got them from had trouble selling them a bit, though that may be changing. Maybe it's just me, but I've noticed that for my pullets, as their eggs get larger and larger, it's often yolk that gets bigger, not the white.
But I bet you could totally get people to buy smaller pullet eggs (that they may not otherwise choose) by renaming and calling them "rare" and having a "limited season". People are funny...
- Ant Farm