Pumpkin pie
Almost any cookie (Gingersnaps, Gingerbread, cut-out cookies that you frost, etc.)
Most custards or puddings (rice pudding, custard pie, tapioca pudding, etc.)
Quiche
Dip food in beaten egg, then dip in flour or bread crumbs, then fry it.
Meatloaf
Muffins, cornbread
cupcakes, cakes
You can cook things like waffles or pancakes and store them in the freezer for later (good if you expect to have fewer eggs later, but less helpful if they keep laying at the same rate.)
You can mix up cookie dough, then freeze it to bake later. This can be a good way to get a head-start on thing you want to serve for Thanksgiving or Christmas. For many cookies, you can freeze the dough in a log-shape, wrapped in waxed paper, and later cut slices to bake. This works instead of rolling it out and using cookie cutters, and it also works with things like peanut butter cookies that would normally be rolled into balls and then flattened with a fork.
You can also look through your cookbook or recipe box at each recipe and see if it contains eggs. Especially focus on the ones you like at this season or the ones you haven't cooked in a while.