Hi, all,
This weekend I debuted my eggs to the outside world by giving packaging and giving my mom a dozen, and a half dozen to my brother and grandma (they all live about 2 hours from me and don't eat "farm fresh" eggs).
As I was packing them in their little cartons, I found myself looking at each egg and holding back any that had little waves, were slightly bi-colored, or, in the case of my sky blue eggs out of a potential EE hen, the gritty shelled ones. (She consistently lays gorgeous baby blue eggs with little gritty bumps on them...like sand paper.)
If you sell eggs, do your buyers accept the imperfections of these fabulous farm fresh eggs over the standard white cookie cutter eggs we normally see at the grocery store? Do you give folks whatever you have, or are you selective about what you sell? If you get the occasional gritty egg, do you sand it or anything, sell as is, or keep it for your own eating pleasure?
We're getting about half a dozen eggs per day at this point, and given it's just my husband and me at home, I really need to start putting my eggs out there for friends, co-workers, etc., or I might be over run very shortly.
Thanks for any "egg sharing" advice you may have!
--Amy
This weekend I debuted my eggs to the outside world by giving packaging and giving my mom a dozen, and a half dozen to my brother and grandma (they all live about 2 hours from me and don't eat "farm fresh" eggs).
As I was packing them in their little cartons, I found myself looking at each egg and holding back any that had little waves, were slightly bi-colored, or, in the case of my sky blue eggs out of a potential EE hen, the gritty shelled ones. (She consistently lays gorgeous baby blue eggs with little gritty bumps on them...like sand paper.)
If you sell eggs, do your buyers accept the imperfections of these fabulous farm fresh eggs over the standard white cookie cutter eggs we normally see at the grocery store? Do you give folks whatever you have, or are you selective about what you sell? If you get the occasional gritty egg, do you sand it or anything, sell as is, or keep it for your own eating pleasure?
We're getting about half a dozen eggs per day at this point, and given it's just my husband and me at home, I really need to start putting my eggs out there for friends, co-workers, etc., or I might be over run very shortly.
Thanks for any "egg sharing" advice you may have!
--Amy