Dirty Eggs for Sale!?

I'm not sure if anyone has mentioned the walk to the nest box...

Since having some trouble with dirty eggs this spring, I began keeping bales of wheat straw handy. I keep straw everywhere the chickens are enclosed. When there is much rain, I liberally sprinkle additional straw in the area around the approach to the nest boxes. I have also tried to dry in as much of the run as I can with a tarp. I have two old sets of aluminium comercial banks of nest boxes. If they were hung up higher and had their perches still intact on them I feel that I'd have less problem as the chickens would wipe their feet somewhat by grasping the perch right before entering the box. The welcome mat so to speak. I think the more nest boxes the better too, because I think there are always messier eggs in a batch than a single...they step on the previous eggs, not their own.

I am under the impression (from reading online) that store bought eggs are actually washed. Sometimes I wash mine in antibacterial soap if they are really bad (so shoot me!) I'm not marketing commercially, giving most to friends and family. I tell people to eat them soon if I wash them. I also put washed eggs in a separate carton and mark it. Even when the eggs aree pristine clean, I tell them they are unwashed (and why) and they need to wash them before using. It grosses people out even if the eggs are clean to think they are unwashed.

Interesting to read that you actually tested the theory of washing vs not!! Cool!

I once kept eggs in a refrigerator (probably unwashed...I try not to wash them or if I do I wash and use them quick) for months and months...just had alot and had an extra fridge. I cracked them, cooked them and fed them to my dogs. They seemed fine to me (smelled fine, looked fine) and the dogs lived (and appreciated it!)!

I had an old book that said to store eggs for long periods (months?) in a barrel. You first dip the eggs in "isinglass" whatever that is, I think you can still maybe get it at a drug store. then you layer eggs in sawdust, small end down, layer by layer fill the thing. Never tried it but wanted to! Back when the fear was the 9-9-99 thing, we were checking out all the possibilities for food preservation. Now with everything going crazy, gas prices up, food prices up, we all need to be thrifty...I'm looking up all my old info!
 
Mother Earth News has an article about storing eggs. Don't have the link handy though, sorry.

Not all the states are the same but in Illinois if you sell eggs anywhere besides out of your yard you have to clean the eggs, grade them, size them, and put them in new cartons.

To bloom or not to bloom. It's up to you.

Bacteria growth in eggs. It happens but my food sanitation training taught us to keep hot foods hot, cold foods cold, avoid cross contamination, cook foods to a certain temperature to kill the nasty little critters that are waiting to use your body.

Yep, you're going to get poopy eggs.

Believe it or not but in some industrialized countries (fancy word for modern or developed) they don't refrigerate eggs.
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I just picked up on old book, "Backyard Poultry Raising," by John F. Adams (1977) that talked about storing eggs from summer to winter using water glass. It's supposed to be sodium silicate that is dissolved in water and sets up like gelatin. Apparently if kept in a cool place the eggs will last till spring and will loose some of their liquid content but be otherwise fine and fit for eating. In the old days people could even do that system of layering and preserving eggs for long time with warm lard (and as the eggs were used the lard was too) but I wouldn't like to try that.
 
One of my girls is really bad about removing the nesting material, too. The main issue I have with this, however, is cracked eggs. All of those get cooked immediately and fed to the animals. As for cleaning eggs, all of mine are left unwashed and generally on the counter (unless I plan to keep them more than a few days). But I ALWAYS wash every egg (no matter how clean it looks) right before I use it. I can't imagine using an unwashed egg because the contents DO touch the shell on their way into the bowl/skillet/whatever. I would say about 95% of my eggs look super clean. The rest are some variation of dirty. The way I see it, we are good, just not perfect (yet
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Here is a idea that is used for commercially produced, washed eggs, that any of us could use. Seems simple enough, and must work, as we all know how old commercial eggs sometimes are before they hit the consumers frying pan. For the millions of eggs that are consumed every week, many probably cooked lightly, you sure don't hear about sickness associated with them.

http://www.georgiaeggs.org/pages/bloom.html
 
I am confused if the purpose of the eggs is to eat . They need to be washed not wiped - We wipe hatching eggs - NO matter how "clean" an egg appears if it is meant to be food there are tons of micocrobes etc.. - if it is a hatching eggs the coating is protective - "The Not Dead Yet Club"
We did it like that 50 years ago and it didn't hurt us. Very common but we know more now.
 
I get my farm fresh eggs from a lady I met doing a freecycle deal one day...she has a sign posted on a fridge she keeps on her porch "eggs are NOT washed so wash them before using" When I get the eggs home they do have some dirty spots here and there along with even a feather or two once in a while. That doesn't bother me at all. I prefer that they not be washed before hand and then right before using I wash them well under very warm water and dry them. We have been doing that for a LONG time now and no one has ever gotten ill from it
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If you shop at a grocery store and use their carts your probably touching more germs then what is on those shells after rinsing/drying them. I'm not too worried...now, if I had a person living here who had a bad immune system I would be a little more cautious.
 
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was just reading it in wonder last week, so i bookmarked it.here it is.

fascinating stuff. and it looks like waterglass and lard just can't hold a candle to the lovely refrigerator.
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