Which Eggs Should You Buy? | Fine Print | Epicurious

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2024
  • Free-range, cage-free, organic, certified humane: there are plenty of different terms thrown at you while scanning the egg selection at your local market these days. Food scientist Topher McNeil returns to Epicurious to fully explain what each and every claim and certification on an egg carton means, which ones affect the final product, and how. Depending on where your priorities lie, Topher breaks down what matters (and what doesn't) when deciding which eggs are right for you.
    Director: Dan Siegel
    Director of Photography: Charlie Jordan
    Editors: Jared Hutchinson & Misa Qu
    Talent: Topher McNeil
    Producer: Christie Garcia
    Line Producer: Jen McGinity
    Associate Producer: Amy Haskour
    Production Manager: Janine Dispensa
    Production Coordinator: Elizabeth Hymes
    Camera Operator: Jake Robbins
    Audio: Nick Dalessio
    Production Assistant: Erica Palmieri
    Post Production Supervisor: Stephanie Cardone
    Post Production Coordinator: Scout Alter
    Supervising Editor: Eduardo Araujo
    Assistant Editor: Justin Symonds
    Graphics Supervisor: Ross Rackin
    Graphics & Animations: Lea Kichler
    --
    0:00 Introduction
    0:31 Outdoor Access
    2:54 Organic
    3:44 Certified Humane
    4:39 Conventional
    5:31 What Hens Eat
    8:37 Grade, Color, and Size
    10:34 ‘Best By’ Date
    Start your free trial and access over 50,000 expertly-tested recipes from Epicurious, Bon Appétit and more on the Epicurious app. apps.apple.com/app/apple-stor...
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Komentáře • 242

  • @dave0351
    @dave0351 Před rokem +30

    I did some audit work for a major chicken producer that required on-site visits to ranches. I got firsthand insight into what "free range", "organic", and other buzz words actually translate to. We as consumers have a much rosier view of the industry than what is reality.

  • @kaitov5
    @kaitov5 Před rokem +95

    thanks for mentioning how hard it is to buy humanely for low-income families. as much as an individual might want to, you have to realize that being able to buy from farms that treat their animals humanely is honestly sort of a privilege for those who can afford to do so. I do hope there comes a day when the humane treatment of farm animals becomes a standard everywhere 💗

    • @childofwaterandstars
      @childofwaterandstars Před rokem +7

      Came here to say this myself! It’s really hard not to feel shame when purchasing conventionally raise animal products, but it’s SO much harder for low income families.

    • @kingschill23
      @kingschill23 Před rokem +5

      You should see if you have a natural grocers around you, if you sign up for their free rewards program they sell certain eggs for a lot cheaper. Wife and I like these soy free eggs they sell, very nice orange yolk. Otherwise try to find a local farmer that lets their chickens roam, you’ll honestly probably find a great deal for buying directly with farmers

    • @kaitov5
      @kaitov5 Před rokem +2

      @@kingschill23 thanks for the advice! sounds like something that I could actually do :)

    • @corneliussnow8215
      @corneliussnow8215 Před rokem +8

      Oh my God, I was so damn happy to see him mention that because I would love to eat more organic, humanely raised or cared for products from my local grocery store but, that stuff can be so damn expensive. As someone who grew up in a lower middle class household, buying and owning cheap has just always been my way of doing things. Spending so much on myself just makes my wallet cry

    • @cantsay2205
      @cantsay2205 Před rokem +3

      Exactly what I was thinking.

  • @Thediydog
    @Thediydog Před rokem +296

    The "100% vegetarian fed" thing drives me crazy. Chickens are omnivores! Their natural diet includes bugs and sometimes even rodents or small reptiles.

    • @ptrinch
      @ptrinch Před rokem +60

      I always imagined a bunch of farmers running around yelling at the chickens to stop eating the bugs.

    • @paytonchristoff8611
      @paytonchristoff8611 Před rokem +33

      @@ptrinch as a person with about 70 chickens in my 3 acre property, if we didnt let them eat bugs it would be utterly miserable come sunset

    • @errhka
      @errhka Před rokem +11

      I think it was originally intended to communicate that there's no animal meal or byproduct fed to the chickens - thus preventing any disease transfer risk between the food and the chickens.

    • @pattyofurniture694
      @pattyofurniture694 Před rokem +9

      @@errhka it still is intended as that. The industry does a bad job explaining it though.

    • @Warrmachine137
      @Warrmachine137 Před rokem +6

      While some are obsessed with feeding chickens only vegetation, meanwhile others are obsessed with humans eating bugs and synthetic meats lol

  • @Jhud69
    @Jhud69 Před rokem +28

    Eggs can last a surprisingly long time. We just keep ours in the fridge and sometimes they’re still good after several months, honestly I don’t recall ever having a bad egg. Once we got one but it was from a brand new batch which can happen. I’m pretty sure the eggs we get aren’t washed since they do tend to be dirty at times so maybe that’s why they last so long.

  • @skullglaze8755
    @skullglaze8755 Před rokem +5

    I love this man, I will personally pay for this series to be more than 3 episodes.

  • @briannabryan2014
    @briannabryan2014 Před rokem +200

    More of these series please!

  • @lightningblender
    @lightningblender Před rokem +17

    In Europe the eggs aren’t washed and keep fresh for weeks unrefrigerated and in the fridge for a whole longer still

    • @aviendha1154
      @aviendha1154 Před rokem

      Yeah its so weird that they unessisarily wash their eggs therfore ruining the integrity of the shell meaning that they HAVE to be refrigerated. It started thanks to the horrific practice of facrory farming and caging birds. The eggs were getting so dirty due to the poor living conditions that a work around had to be found. And instead of not forcing a living creature to live in its own filth for its entire life they decided to spend billions of dollars adding a whole other completely avoidable step to the process. Washing the eggs. Which then need to be refrigerated and STAY refrigerated. Because if they warm up samonella could contaminate the egg. Isn't the US marvelous? Eggs would be cheaper and safer if they just ensured that conditions were clean. Most hens don't like to poop on the nest anyways. I've had chickens my whole life and worst thing I've seen on an egg was some straw or a feather.

  • @danieltuckercatholic
    @danieltuckercatholic Před rokem +2

    Please make more "Fine Print" videos - I love this series!

  • @Morbutt
    @Morbutt Před rokem +8

    Great video. I had no idea there was much difference between "Cage Free" and "Open Range" chickens. I guess I'll need to start buying the $9/dozen eggs afterall...

  • @ssl3546
    @ssl3546 Před rokem +13

    The size of the egg absolutely matters because recipes are made assuming a certain egg size. Recipes used to be made assuming medium eggs but unfortunately that has shifted to large eggs over time and it's usually not clear what size a recipe uses. There is little reason to ever buy extra-large or jumbo.

    • @leovelez
      @leovelez Před rokem +3

      That depends in what you're making, if i''m baking a cake only large/medium eggs, if i'm making scrambled eggs,jumbo size is welcomed.

    • @SevenHunnid
      @SevenHunnid Před rokem

      I’m just a young 21 year old Mexican tryna get out the wicked Hood by 25 😞i smoke weed on my CZcams channel and i also did a burger king Mukbang inside target 🦈🤨

    • @jc3drums916
      @jc3drums916 Před rokem

      The American Egg Board has a substitution chart, if you're really worried. However, it suggests that it only matters in large quantities (as does an article at Kitchn, which led me to the chart). For home baking, if you're using jumbo eggs, just adjust your baking time to cook out the excess water. Also, there's actually little difference between large and extra large, in terms of both weight and volume (large eggs tend to be at the upper end of their range).

    • @hellkitty1442
      @hellkitty1442 Před rokem

      As already stated, there isn't that much off a difference. But, if you really want to be on the safe side: There's still recipes out there that state: Take twice the weight of flour of your eggs. (Yes, I do have a recipe book that states something like that in a recipe). Dunno if it's twice the amount, the same or depending on the recipe. But you could start measuring and try to find the right ratio.

  • @MossyMozart
    @MossyMozart Před rokem +7

    People in the supermarket are always amazed when I explain the Julian date to them. And no, you don't need to do math to see what the Julian date is (unless you want to) - just buy the eggs with the highest Julian number on the carton. They will be the freshest.

  • @adama1294
    @adama1294 Před rokem +16

    Love the info on marketing regs and gimicks.

  • @hesherette
    @hesherette Před rokem +15

    this is very helpful, thank you! I love eggs so much + like to ensure I'm buying eggs from decent sources at the very least. however no store-bought eggs have ever come close to how delicious the eggs from my parent's 5 hens are, the difference is pretty drastic!

  • @victoria_6477
    @victoria_6477 Před rokem +11

    Thank you for such an informative and nuanced video. I’ve been trying to support more ethical farming practices when shopping but cost consideration is a significant factor for many, and I appreciate that you mentioned it.

  • @Ben-Carr
    @Ben-Carr Před rokem +10

    My grandma said that if you are making hard boiled eggs, you want to use older eggs so that the shells are easier to remove. fresh eggs are tough to peel, but older eggs are not.

    • @ritammukherjee8623
      @ritammukherjee8623 Před rokem

      I heard peeling boiled eggs after cooling makes it easier, haven't tried it.

  • @lekwanduh
    @lekwanduh Před rokem +4

    So helpful. Need more of these, Epicurious!

  • @brandubh74
    @brandubh74 Před rokem +54

    My family has had chickens as far back as I can remember. When I first made eggs for my wife, who was raised in the city, she thought the eggs were bad because of the color. She thought egg yolks were supposed to be pale yellow. However, I assured her that the eggs were just fine. After tasting free range pasture raised eggs, she now refuses to eat anything else!

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před rokem +2

      @Debonair Dragon- The fresher the egg, the better the poached egg turns out.

    • @wolfie5135
      @wolfie5135 Před rokem

      I've honestly never seen pale orange eggs even though I live in a city and buy normal eggs I guess it depends on your country

  • @_Toxicity
    @_Toxicity Před rokem +35

    Size might matter when it comes to baking, depending on how many ounces of egg a recipe needs versus how much the egg actually has.
    Or, more generally, how much any one person can eat in one setting.

    • @thaliafaudith9387
      @thaliafaudith9387 Před rokem +1

      True. I once read that the base standard for eggs in Indonesian baking recipes is "50 grams per egg" and is *never* stated otherwise (no "large eggs", "medium eggs", etc.). I also found out long time ago that there's around 5 grams difference between egg sizes, so... it might mess up with the ratio in baking recipes.

    • @zatannazatara552
      @zatannazatara552 Před rokem +3

      that's why he said nutritionally! in terms of bigger eggs, they don't have more nutritional value than smaller eggs for example

    • @FrancesBaconandEggs
      @FrancesBaconandEggs Před rokem +1

      @@thaliafaudith9387 I actually weigh my egg yolks and whites when I’m doing a really precise recipe (especially French baking)! It’s useful because it means I can use various sizes and even stored egg whites.

  • @KayLoo202
    @KayLoo202 Před rokem +7

    More of this please!!!! I missed it!

  • @Djuntas
    @Djuntas Před rokem +12

    So much marketing BS on egg cartons in the USA lol. Here in Denmark we started to also phase out "cage eggs".

  • @rodrigul3
    @rodrigul3 Před rokem +3

    I love this segment. This dude does a nice job and is honest! That’s all we ask.

  • @jwillisbarrie
    @jwillisbarrie Před rokem +3

    Thanks for adding actual captions for the Deaf - easier to follow

  • @nataliecanpaintandprocrast1504

    I do taste a great deal of difference between the egg yolks of caged hens vs free range/pasture raised eggs. If I’m making something that eat yolk forward, I will go and grab the more expensive eggs, but when the recipe mixes the egg yolk with the egg whites I just use the cheap eggs.

  • @eyeballs306
    @eyeballs306 Před rokem +12

    Thanks for this video! Vital farms is typically my go to in my local market and now I feel better about supporting them and their chickens!

  • @OmegaMTG
    @OmegaMTG Před rokem +1

    10:35 Part of the reason people may think brown eggs are better is that old jingle "Brown eggs are local eggs and local eggs are fresh". I'm sorry if I just got that stuck in anyone else's head.

  • @DBLDQ
    @DBLDQ Před rokem +18

    I could have eggs for every meal of the day. So glad dinosaurs turned to chickens.

  • @polarberri
    @polarberri Před rokem

    I'd always wondered! Another great video!

  • @eroshiyda
    @eroshiyda Před rokem +4

    thank you, this is extremely educational 👍

  • @SHyoutube.
    @SHyoutube. Před rokem

    So nicely and professionally done! Great account, I just subscribed

  • @KyleBaran90
    @KyleBaran90 Před rokem +5

    That's the most polite way of saying "organic doesn't matter" that I've ever seen lol

    • @hellkitty1442
      @hellkitty1442 Před rokem

      didn't he say it may matter if you personally care for the complete chain, like production of the chickens food? So, it's a personal choice if it matters or not, but doesn't really matter in a quality aspect?

    • @KyleBaran90
      @KyleBaran90 Před rokem

      @@hellkitty1442 So if it doesn't matter and comes down to personal choice, you're effectively paying more for nothing.

    • @hellkitty1442
      @hellkitty1442 Před rokem +2

      @@KyleBaran90 not exactly. You are paying more for less artificial fertilizers, use of certain chemicals etc. so that the envirommet is taken care off more. So, if you want that, than organic is your choice.
      At least in Germany and Europe, there's regulations what you are allowed to use to call things organic. As an example: pestizides. They may help to protect a crop, but also harm useful insects like bees, which we need to survive as without them, theres not fertilization of crop etc. And to use alternative, less harmful methods, you pay more.
      As said: it doesn't change the quality of the egg itself. But the background is different and thus a personal choice. Organic does matter, just not for the quality of the egg, because that has to do with the hens also eating bugs etc outside, which they can also do with pasture raised.

    • @KyleBaran90
      @KyleBaran90 Před rokem

      @@hellkitty1442 How dare you post a well-written and thoughtful counterpoint on CZcams comments

    • @hellkitty1442
      @hellkitty1442 Před rokem

      @@KyleBaran90 Why would that be daring? 😉

  • @Hathur
    @Hathur Před rokem +21

    An important note always overlooked about "Organic" food. It refers to the type of pesticides used on the food - in that, no man-made chemical pesticides are supposed to be used on the product in question. HOWEVER, what is NEVER mentioned is that most naturally occurring pesticides are proven to be more harmful to human health than man-made chemical pesticides. That was the whole reason we started making our own pesticides over 100 years with chemical science - to get it in large quantities at cheaper cost and also to eliminate many of the dangerous / harmful components of naturally occurring pesticides. If you are eating "organic" food, you are likely consuming food with more harmful natural pesticides than the non-organic chemical pesticides.

    • @delavidaebella
      @delavidaebella Před rokem

      From what I read, the myth busting about organic food has also been busted.

    • @Hathur
      @Hathur Před rokem

      ​@@delavidaebella Straight from USDA, the governing body of the term: "It’s important to note that labeling a food ‘organic’ does not mean that the product is nutritious, healthy, or safe; the labeling standards are based solely on agricultural field or farm practices." It just means the pesticides and fertilizer are not man-made. Nature creates equally dangerous pesticides and fertilizers as mankind does.
      Anyone paying more for "organic" food thinking it is in any way better than non-organic is delusional and a fool.

    • @dantethunderstone2118
      @dantethunderstone2118 Před rokem +1

      Literally what difference does it make, wether I die at 85 or 84 doesn’t really make a difference to me. I grab whatever’s cheapest. Not to mention most of the organic stuff looks like it’ll go bad by the time it goes from the store to my fridge

    • @Hathur
      @Hathur Před rokem

      @@dantethunderstone2118 You have a child's comprehension of health. It's like dummies who used to argue "Who cares if smoking shortens your life? It shortens the end of your years, I don't want those years where I'm old and feeble anyway". Quality of life is far more important than length of life. Who cares if you live to 84 vs 85? Well, what if you spent the ages of 60 to 84 in utter misery and suffering from cancer or other ailments due to the poisons you eat, vs living to 85 but having a greatly reduced chance of living in agony due to cancer or other terrible health problems caused by chemicals?
      I'm a cancer survivor, I know all too well about pain and misery. I would rather die by age 60 never having had cancer than live to 85 in constant misery and agony caused by cancer. The quality of life matters more than how long you live.

    • @jc3drums916
      @jc3drums916 Před rokem +1

      Do you work for Monsanto?

  • @OldSchool-dr5ql
    @OldSchool-dr5ql Před rokem

    Excellent information and thorough explanation on eggs.

  • @RichardCano
    @RichardCano Před rokem +3

    Holy moley. Eggs are way more complicated than I ever realized.

  • @doumanseiman2645
    @doumanseiman2645 Před rokem

    Also this video is great. Very informative. All these are always interesting to watch

  • @iamcaptainahab
    @iamcaptainahab Před rokem +2

    Thanks for making useful educational content! I like being an informed consumer. I have been buying vital farms eggs for a while. I don't know if it's all in my head, but they just seem to have consistently better flavor and texture than other eggs I've purchased in the past.

  • @moredish
    @moredish Před rokem

    Great video! I learn a lot🥚😳💕Thank you!

  • @fraucarrar2812
    @fraucarrar2812 Před rokem

    loved this! thx!

  • @D1ndo
    @D1ndo Před rokem +39

    I'd love some commentary on how all of this differs from Europe.

    • @FelitusDE
      @FelitusDE Před rokem +13

      Every country in Europe has different regulations. In Germany e.g. caging is completely forbidden since 2009. The lowest possible standard is cage-free and there have to be less then 9 chickens per qm². The next one is free range where every chicken gets at least 4qm² outdoors and the same space indoors as in cage-free. Best is organic and there get chickens also more space and organic food. We also have the weight classes of eggs, of course, but aside from that there ist not often additional marketing trash on the egg cartons. Only two more notes: In Germany eggs aren't washed to prevent what was said in the video. And germany is one of the few countrys where it is forbidden to kill every young male chick like they do in most other countrys.

    • @michaelgates991
      @michaelgates991 Před rokem

      The thing that stuck out to me the most is how expensive eggs are in the US. I'd be willing to bet EU regulations are more stringent regarding the requirements for different labels.

    • @Crazyasian123456
      @Crazyasian123456 Před rokem +2

      @@michaelgates991 Wouldn't that have the same issue as anywhere else regarding localized pricing and transport costs/inflation impact? At least here in the USA the more expensive eggs generally are the higher-end grocery. Lived in Ireland for a bit and my eggs cost was just about the same barring the washing thing.

    • @michaelgates991
      @michaelgates991 Před rokem +3

      @@Crazyasian123456 Here in Finland I can get "cage free" eggs for less than the battery farmed ones presented in this video. Maybe there are government subsidies involved, who knows.

    • @Crazyasian123456
      @Crazyasian123456 Před rokem +3

      @@michaelgates991 Probably to some extent. Corn and soy bean subsidies are pretty high here in the states so the result is cheap sweeteners, ethanol fuel, and lots of animal feed corn production. I imagine there is at least some form of subsidies depending on the primary industry for each state.

  • @pynn1000
    @pynn1000 Před rokem +3

    I'm in France where eggs aren't washed, but I still refrigerate them at home. They're not usually refrigerated in professional settings, turnover of eggs is too high to have any benefit and bringing them to room temperature is needed for some dishes.

    • @JohnPMiller
      @JohnPMiller Před rokem +1

      Also, in France, almost all eggs are brown, and the date is stamped directly on each egg (in addition to on the box). The eggs sometimes have a little caca on the shell, but they do keep fresh longer.

    • @pynn1000
      @pynn1000 Před rokem +1

      @@JohnPMiller I'd never noticed the date stamped on the egg. It's there all right, but in red on brown Marans eggs so hard to see.

    • @JohnPMiller
      @JohnPMiller Před rokem +1

      @@pynn1000 I heard that the Easter Bunny has a hard time finding white eggs (try looking in refrigerated section at Auchan), and when he does find them, they have the date on them.😉

  • @Sonicfan138
    @Sonicfan138 Před rokem +2

    Great video! I remember having to research all of this information myself a couple years ago (which has led me to buying Vital Farms ever since), so it's great to have this all condensed into one simple video.

  • @Dodl1
    @Dodl1 Před rokem +21

    Yessss, finally some informed information from food scientists like me - get the informations out there 😁👍 Well done!

  • @YouPlague
    @YouPlague Před rokem +1

    Suh an awesome series, please keep it going.

  • @xenopanda1
    @xenopanda1 Před rokem +1

    Super informative!

  • @dydanimumskycrusher
    @dydanimumskycrusher Před rokem +4

    Epicurious : upload a video about egg
    Howtobasic : EGG!

  • @nomadicroadrat
    @nomadicroadrat Před rokem +1

    some years ago we and a few neighbors bought some chickens. The kids distribute the eggs and get an collective allowance. We haven't bought eggs for quite a few years.

  • @neozerox1121
    @neozerox1121 Před rokem

    Good info.

  • @evb1601
    @evb1601 Před rokem

    The color of the shell is determined by the color of the legs and beak of the hen. I raised egg-laying hens for years. My kids grew up watching them and learning all about hens and eggs. That is why Araucana Hens lay "easter eggs" which range from blues to greens. Wonderful! Duck eggs are most delicious.

  • @StormCrusher94
    @StormCrusher94 Před rokem +11

    Lucky for me, we have 6 hens at home. We haven't really bought eggs in years, only occasionally during the winter/colder months , when there wasn't enough sun and even then rarely.
    The eggs have really yellow yolks and have a smaller yolk to eggwhites ratio than the store bought ones. Also how to say, they seem less watery?

    • @ptrinch
      @ptrinch Před rokem +1

      I bought 6 hens (well... one turned out to be a rooster) just last April. Expecting to get some eggs by October. Can't wait. Now to figure out what to do with the rooster. My kids won't let me eat it.

    • @StormCrusher94
      @StormCrusher94 Před rokem +1

      @@ptrinch Good luck with your hen endeavor. And just wait a bit with the rooster, kids tend to loose interest in a lot of stuff, depends on the age though. If they are older just explain it to them and ease them into it.

    • @ptrinch
      @ptrinch Před rokem +1

      @@StormCrusher94 LOL. I should have explained better... my daughters are 16, 21, and 23. And the rooster has recently learned to make his presence known at sunrise. I'll be figuring out something soon.

    • @aviendha1154
      @aviendha1154 Před rokem

      @@ptrinch you could try a crow collar. Some roosters get so embarrassed by how it muffels the sound of their crow that they barely crow at all. Your best bet is probably rehoming it to farm. Although if your daughters insist that that farm also don't kill the bird that may be difficult if it isn't an exceptionally beautiful and big rooster. Roosters can be pretty nasty and r@pey to their hens. That might change your daughters minds a little about preserving his life. All my roosters get planted under a tree as soon as I notice they're boys. Its a little less brutal than turning them into dog food (and none of mine ever escape notice to get big enough to be eaten).

    • @nancygs4555
      @nancygs4555 Před rokem

      @@aviendha1154 that’s terrible

  • @jjunture
    @jjunture Před rokem +3

    Vital Farms eggs are dope. If you can’t get farm eggs, I go with Vital.

  • @syntaxerorr
    @syntaxerorr Před rokem +1

    Interesting video. Didn't know that washing an egg can reduce it's shelf life.

  • @jpbaley2016
    @jpbaley2016 Před rokem +7

    Hens, which lay brown eggs, on average tend to lay less eggs over the year. The number of eggs is not truly significant. It comes down to the breed. In the US, over the last few decades, preference had been for white eggs so white chicken breeds had undergone more intense breeding programs to develop a chicken that lays more eggs. Brown chicken breeding has not quite caught up. And then of course you have your Silkies, which are unique birds in a variety of colors producing fewer and smaller white to cream colored eggs.

    • @aviendha1154
      @aviendha1154 Před rokem

      As a non American I find it so odd that white eggs are the norm for you. I have litterally NEVER seen a white egg that wasn't from one of my own chickens. To the point where if an egg isn't brown then I almost don't trust it lol.

    • @jpbaley2016
      @jpbaley2016 Před rokem

      @@aviendha1154 LOL, for the longest time, we had multiple choices of white eggs and then maybe only one choice in brown. Now there are so many choices between white and brown. The cheapest eggs (those raised in deplorable factory farm cages) are white eggs. I, myself, can afford to buy eggs from humanely raised chickens so I have done so for years. They are usually brown eggs.

  • @Chimpey
    @Chimpey Před rokem

    Thank you :)

  • @PoppyCorn144
    @PoppyCorn144 Před rokem

    One about the UK would be great.

  • @kianahill3202
    @kianahill3202 Před rokem +2

    Okay I’m not sure if I misunderstood what he said but he said that the Best Buy date shouldn’t be more than 30 days after it was packed but if the packing date was 111 days which is somewhere around the end of April and the expiration date is jun 04 isn’t that more than 30 days? Or did I misunderstand him

    • @Kloudee
      @Kloudee Před rokem +2

      I just looked it up. Apparently the 30 day rule only applies to eggs with a USDA logo. Eggs without the logo go by whatever state rules apply 🤷‍♀️

  • @jondoe2960
    @jondoe2960 Před rokem +2

    I WISH pasture-raised eggs here in New York cost $6.49 a dozen. I consider that to be a sale, I've seen some pasture-raised eggs cost $8-$9 regular price! At the very least, I go for organic. Pasture-raised also aren't as readily available as organic.

  • @tylerhanley1409
    @tylerhanley1409 Před rokem

    here in the uk we have a charity called RSPCA which is the UK's version of PETA that amongst other things certifies animal products, generally if I were to see that id assume that while they maybe aren't 'pasture raised' they're at least looked after decently and humanely

    • @bleh329
      @bleh329 Před rokem

      Do they also go around murdering pets? That's, like, one of PETA'S favorite pastimes.

  • @wititititful
    @wititititful Před rokem +4

    Eggs one of the best source of protein 🤍

  • @nyandakun
    @nyandakun Před rokem +1

    I would like to find out more on milks

  • @edhunt6814
    @edhunt6814 Před rokem

    Nellies and Pete & Gerry’s are my go to

  • @WingsHype
    @WingsHype Před rokem

    Size doesn't matter, phew that's a relief!

  • @tejagorantla4238
    @tejagorantla4238 Před rokem +2

    Can a large concrete slab qualify as pasture raised if it is technically "outdoors"?

    • @AdarshKumar-nj7rp
      @AdarshKumar-nj7rp Před rokem

      Most of these brands sell an idealised image to consumers while getting these tags on technicality.

  • @marthazaragoza4385
    @marthazaragoza4385 Před rokem +1

    More videos like this! So informative and interesting

  • @Avvura
    @Avvura Před rokem +2

    I like how the sizing scale is normal until large. What's bigger than large Timmy?
    Extra large? no! JUMBO

  • @nathanielcooper9908
    @nathanielcooper9908 Před rokem +1

    He kinda looks like the main character from 'Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs'

  • @thaliafaudith9387
    @thaliafaudith9387 Před rokem +5

    For some reason, I kinda wish this guy would do a collab video with Ann Reardon from How to Cook That channel in the future

  • @codyprocak6098
    @codyprocak6098 Před rokem

    Nature's organic free range my go to..when I'm strapped 4 cash egglands best

  • @pachanas703
    @pachanas703 Před rokem

    This series is such a godsend.

  • @l.tc.5032
    @l.tc.5032 Před rokem +1

    They're a bit more expensive but I buy the vital farm eggs they taste better and the hens were better treated.

  • @amylee7277
    @amylee7277 Před rokem

    my granpa used to raise hens back in my country. and they were all natural and white 👌 that's true it's depending on the hens.

  • @TheseHDGamers
    @TheseHDGamers Před rokem

    nice

  • @cynot71
    @cynot71 Před rokem

    Home-raised > pasture-raised!

  • @doumanseiman2645
    @doumanseiman2645 Před rokem

    In my country we sell eggs with its protective crap layer

  • @briannabryan2014
    @briannabryan2014 Před rokem

    What Do you do with all the eggs used for props? Just curious

    • @Brendon1106
      @Brendon1106 Před rokem

      I bet they use them in the BA test kitchen

  • @ellingtonlilly
    @ellingtonlilly Před rokem

    I really wasn’t expecting the expensive eggs to be 5-6 bucks. I only ever get eggs that are 6-7 and not because I’m choosing to get more expensive eggs. They’re just what’s in my area…in all fairness I don’t buy eggs super often because I don’t have a lot of money…maybe I should check the prices at the stores though to see how big the difference is. Either way this was an interesting video about chickens and companies.

    • @vyvyanne
      @vyvyanne Před rokem +1

      do you live in a food desert? / what area do you live in? prior to the crazy inflation we're experiencing now, I used to be able to regularly find a dozen eggs on sale for $1.

    • @ellingtonlilly
      @ellingtonlilly Před rokem

      @@vyvyanne I live somewhere expensive I guess. A dozen at the store is maybe like 4 bucks here. We probably live in different countries too

    • @aviendha1154
      @aviendha1154 Před rokem

      Keep in mind that this is US dollars. So unless your also in the US the price could be that low because your comparing apples to oranges dollar wise!

    • @ellingtonlilly
      @ellingtonlilly Před rokem

      @@aviendha1154 yeah I’m aware of that. It may be close but I still think where I’m at is inherently a little more expensive too

  • @emilyknight5179
    @emilyknight5179 Před rokem +1

    Could you rate them from worst to best choice?

  • @gazzaandhenri
    @gazzaandhenri Před rokem +1

    Is there a reason eggs are stored in fridges in the States? Here in the UK they are stored at room temperature.

    • @lenagraham2093
      @lenagraham2093 Před rokem +1

      Once they are washed (and usually bleached too) at the factory, they no longer have their natural protective coating and have to be refrigerated.

    • @AGJ117
      @AGJ117 Před rokem

      11:45

  • @naomipalmer7565
    @naomipalmer7565 Před rokem

    This was interesting but I live in the uk so we have ‘the lion standard’ for our quality eggs

  • @abhishekkumarsahu4356

    Costco organic kirklank egg OR wilcox pasture raised egg. Confused

  • @XHypergamerX
    @XHypergamerX Před rokem +16

    If you will excuse me, I have to go out to buy my AA grade, flaxseed fed, high in omega 3, pasture raised, double yolked, organic non gmo, certified humane and extra large jumbo eggs for 20 bucks a pop to brush them over my pigs in a blanket.

  • @josephdantes1605
    @josephdantes1605 Před rokem

    Interesting. I always thought that red eggs were more nutritious than white eggs.

  • @HoHkennels
    @HoHkennels Před rokem

    As I go to the back yard and grab a dozen of eggs

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 Před rokem +2

    I buy Eggland's Best. Yeah, the vegetarian feed may be a gimmick, but they seem to taste better, smell better and last longer than run of the mill eggs. I don't go through that many eggs so its worth it to me to get good quality ones.

  • @06Crf250rider
    @06Crf250rider Před rokem

    If you live outside the city and know someone that keeps chickens, they’ll probably have more eggs than they need. They’re so much better and keep longer than the store bought ones.

  • @limalicious
    @limalicious Před rokem

    Yeah, I found out the hard way that chickens are omnivorous by watching a coworker's flock eat a mouse.

  • @shogun2215
    @shogun2215 Před rokem +6

    As far as I'm concerned, the whole ideology behind 'Organic' is ridiculous. Just because something is organic does not mean its free of pesticides or harmful chemicals, it just means the ones that are used are naturally derived; some of which are MORE toxic to humans than artificial ones.

    • @idbpr
      @idbpr Před rokem

      That is not true, at least in Europe.
      There is ton of evidence that organic farming is way less harmful for insects due to pesticide bans.

    • @AdarshKumar-nj7rp
      @AdarshKumar-nj7rp Před rokem

      @@idbpr rating system varies from country to country.

  • @tmlawson751
    @tmlawson751 Před rokem +4

    Hot take: certified humane is better than certified organic.

    • @aviendha1154
      @aviendha1154 Před rokem +1

      100% organic is mostly a corporate marketing term. Also its so boujey. I don't trust people who only buy organic lol.

  • @pqrstsma2011
    @pqrstsma2011 Před rokem

    10:52 how does Julian date work in a Leap Year?

  • @carmenneumann9479
    @carmenneumann9479 Před rokem +1

    Now do different quality of pasta on shelf...

  • @rbgsista9236
    @rbgsista9236 Před rokem

    So basically Pasture raise

  • @Mira-qs3bj
    @Mira-qs3bj Před rokem

    Bon Soweto Tamontio Come Looks...

  • @Kuzon9
    @Kuzon9 Před rokem +11

    I'm glad this dude brought up how low income houses rely on cheap eggs. It may suck, but not everyone can afford pasture raised eggs!

  • @ThePandaWarrior
    @ThePandaWarrior Před rokem

    removing the protective layer just for aesthetics

  • @studyroom3185
    @studyroom3185 Před rokem +2

    He compresses the word, "SIZE DOESN'T MATTER"🤭

  • @deemo8578
    @deemo8578 Před rokem +4

    Buy the most expensive eggs you can afford - by the most expensive chicken you can afford.
    When it comes to steak and eggs, go to your local farm and get them fresh and amazing eggs :)
    We should all do what we can do at the times we can do it.

    • @daltigoth3970
      @daltigoth3970 Před rokem +2

      I am absolutely NOT going to buy the most expensive things I can afford, because all that does is tell producers that people are willing to pay more for things. You vote just as much with your dollars as you do with your ballot - if people refuse to buy things because they are overpriced, the producers are forced to bring the prices down or get out of the business. Someone will have the sense to meet the price demands of consumers, so long as they are reasonable.
      As someone that works for a large corporation, I can tell you that prices go up on products when consumers show that they are willing and able to pay higher prices, and corporations only care about their bottom line. There is a range of prices now because most people aren't willing to spend three times as much to buy those high-end eggs when there is so little practical difference between them and the cheapest option, but some people are willing to pay a little more for one or more of the labels presented in this video. Every farm in the country will gladly switch to pasture-raised organic chickens if it means they can sell every egg with a 1000% markup over their cost to produce an egg, but if every farm is selling eggs at that price, most of the eggs aren't going to be sold because most people can't afford it. Nothing should ever be sold at that high of a markup, yet stupid people like you will pay ridiculous prices for things because you don't really understand economics or know what it is like to be poor.
      And for what its worth, many stores purchase eggs and other perishables from local farms already.

    • @aviendha1154
      @aviendha1154 Před rokem

      Eggs are one of those foods where I absolutely taste the difference. The few times where I haven't been able to keep my own hens I've always had a bit of an egg shock when I had to go back to buying my eggs! Caged eggs taste NOTHING like pasture raised eggs. And barn raised eggs usually taste a bit better than cage eggs but only marginally. And thats presumably because farmers who care enough to not cage their birds also feed them a higher quality pellet. Hell ive noticed a seasonal difference in my chickens eggs! The few eggs that they lay in winter aren't as tasty as the ones in spring and summer. And if I change their feed the taste of the egg changes too.

    • @NadiaSeesIt
      @NadiaSeesIt Před rokem

      @@daltigoth3970 jeez, chill out! I'm going to buy the most expensive eggs just to spite you now. Frankly, taste and quality increase with increased price for eggs. AND despite inflation, my Vital Farms eggs are the only food item that is still the same price. Get over yourself and come up with solutions instead of mocking others, corpo

  • @Erik_Swiger
    @Erik_Swiger Před rokem +2

    My eggs were packaged on Julian date 366, so they should last 4 times as long.

  • @milliesnyder7548
    @milliesnyder7548 Před rokem +3

    Not all white chickens lay white eggs, and not all brown chickens lay brown eggs.... there are so many colors and breeds of chickens, and other egg colors. Those just happen to be the 2 most common chickens bred for eggs. Generally, most white egg layers are thinner bodied and have a better food to egg making ratio than most brown eggs layers.

    • @lanaj1107
      @lanaj1107 Před rokem

      And all brown cows give chocolate milk! 😄😆

    • @Nin10do0014
      @Nin10do0014 Před rokem +2

      Someone who says "generally, x happens when y" already know it's already not the case 100% of the time. That's why they specifically included the word "generally"

  • @onedelish
    @onedelish Před rokem +1

    Yummy

  • @Queenie-the-genie
    @Queenie-the-genie Před rokem

    Organic means they were fed organic corn. Only eggs from free range, pastured chickens that eat bugs and worms. I discovered real eggs when I had chickens and there is no comparison.

  • @xinlingfritz9952
    @xinlingfritz9952 Před rokem

    I just get eggs from the chickens my mom got. (Not calling them mine due to allergies)

  • @_Toxicity
    @_Toxicity Před rokem +3

    I miss the Experts Guess Cheap/Expensive series.