How many do you use when baking a cake?
Same question for bantam eggs, duck eggs, double yolked eggs. How many when baking? I'd suggest go by weight.
As far as not eating them, that has to be an old wives tale. How you eat them may be the question.
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How many do you use when baking a cake?
I've seen a few first eggs with meat spots, blood spots, no yolks, etc. Could be part of the reasoning?
Could be but I crack into a bowl so can easily discard unacceptable eggs.
Same question for bantam eggs, duck eggs, double yolked eggs. How many when baking? I'd suggest go by weight.
As far as not eating them, that has to be an old wives tale. How you eat them may be the question.
The "Don't eat it" rule is probably just a holdover from earlier times, when superstitions guided pretty much everything. In a time when no one really knew where sickness came from, it seems logical to attribute it to something strange - and a new layer's eggs can definitely be strange. Some "first eggs" are yolk-less, malformed or - heaven forbid - tiny. Not many people would eat anything that had an abnormality - or worse, possibly a hex- on it, so they just threw it out.Yeah, that makes sense...but why 'not eating' them?
It would definitely ruin my stomach for dessert, anyway!I always crack mine in bowls first. I have too many broodys, and if I happen to collect a slightly developed one, I think that might ruin a cake.![]()