I am unsure about how long an egg will last in the ice box but others on this forum have reported sealing the shells with a thin layer of lard and then keeping them in the fridge for 9 months or more without a noticeable drop in quality. Water glass also preserves eggs without refrigeration and this was once commonly used to keep fresh eggs more or less fresh without refrigeration. With refrigeration I am clueless on how long an egg stored in water glass will remain eatable. Look to your local pharmacy for water glass. Water glass plus refrigeration should also yield as long a storage life as lard and refrigeration, but with modern conveniences like a refrigerator, your own flock, or a Safeway I fail to see the need for long term egg storage unless you are looking for the end of the world. In which case having the ingredients at hand with which to whip up a souffle seems to me to be the least of your worries.
French farmers are politically active and I have heard that in France it is against the law to sell refrigerated eggs, the reason being they go bad quicker sitting out on the counter. That means that the French poultry farmers can sell many more eggs at a much higher price because of the shorter shelf life.
Depending on where you live, keeping eggs on the counter for 90 days will eventually yield some interesting results when you crack one for breakfast.
http://www.aeb.org/foodservice-professionals/egg-products#5
French farmers are politically active and I have heard that in France it is against the law to sell refrigerated eggs, the reason being they go bad quicker sitting out on the counter. That means that the French poultry farmers can sell many more eggs at a much higher price because of the shorter shelf life.
Depending on where you live, keeping eggs on the counter for 90 days will eventually yield some interesting results when you crack one for breakfast.

http://www.aeb.org/foodservice-professionals/egg-products#5
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