Sounds like you answered your own question
Cheers!
Quote:
This is exactly why I said in my original post that I already knew about the bloom and all of the arguments against washing eggs.......you are going to get so many different opinions that you wind up still not knowing what to do. My decision to wash certain eggs is a personal one, and as for how it effects the eggs, you can rest assured that every egg you will buy at the grocery store
has been washed. All I asked for was some constructive criticism about my method, and what I get of course is all of the reasons I shouldn't wash eggs at all, and even why it won't work for some people because it takes too long and they have too many chickens. Fine....what do you do with an egg that has poop on it if you have a gazillion chickens? NOT wash it? Throw it away? Sell it with poop on it? If you say "wipe it off" I can assure you that my method is not only quicker but more thorough and the result is a beautiful, shiny, perfect egg.
It actually takes about twenty seconds per egg. I have nine hens and pick up anywhere from five to eight eggs a day, so it fits my circumstances very well.
My method is taken from this guide on egg-washing from the Nebraska Agricultural Extension Service, and it is very specific.
http://www.ianrpubs.unl.edu/epublic/live/g1724/build/g1724.pdf
This bulletin mentions a disinfecting "dip" of one tablespoon (three teaspoons) of bleach to a gallon (16 cups) of water. My solution is a little bit weaker at 1tsp/6cups, and it stays on the egg surface no more than a few seconds during the process. Add to the fact that positive pressure inside the egg has already been achieved by the hot running water during the scrubbing phase, then you can conclude that no bleach can get inside the egg, and that even if it could, the solution I use is not toxic and breaks down very quickly. If egg shells were so porous as to have the ability to draw the bleach solution into the egg in the course of maybe five seconds, and with positive pressure inside the egg, well, forget about it.........the poop is probably in the egg, too. Then there are those say they simply brush off the poop.....that's fine, but good luck brushing off e.coli...and those who don't wash their eggs until they are about to use them..again, that's your business but if you do have a contaminated egg and you put it in the basket you are now contaminating other eggs as well.
So, like I said...it's just my choice when I have poopy eggs, and I think it's a quick, convenient, and effective solution.
DD