Which Eggs Should You Buy?



Tasting expert Jack Bishop shares tips for buying eggs and answers our most commonly asked egg questions.

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34 Comments

  1. WOW that smile. Thanks I knew all of this but one point. That egg carton can say what ever it wants inspections a few if any at times, and 99% of time a date is set before an inspection. In the end profit and greed rule. This time around they price gauged all of us. God will judge them.

  2. Is grading of eggs mandatory?

    The United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA) grading service is voluntary; egg packers pay for it. The USDA grade shield at carton means eggs were graded for quality and checked for weight (size) under supervision of trained USDA grader. USDA monitors compliance, quality standards, grades, and weights. State agencies monitor egg packers compliance for egg packers who don't use USDA grading service. Cartons will bear a term such as Grade A on cartons without the USDA shield. There are three consumer grades for eggs: United States Grade AA, A and B. Grade is determined by interior quality of egg appearance and condition of egg shell. Eggs of any quality grade may differ in weight (size).

  3. What a joke. He quickly and without proper explanation makes free range, cage free, and organic sound like decent options. If you look closely you can see the puppet hand in action. All of those options are really misleading and absolutely factory farmed/tortured. “Everything you wanted to know” what a joke. He never tells you the best options and sells you on the worst (besides the completely lowest grade no one should buy)

  4. Organic farms are not allowed to give their animals antibiotics. I once asked a large scale farmer in my home state his opinions about organic. He said that he would rather humanely help his animals when needed rather than let them suffer just to maintain the USDA organic certification. IMO pasture raised eggs, from responsible owners, are far superior to large scale commercial eggs in both taste, and texture.

  5. I can barely get a week out of a dozen eggs. I hard boil 6 for snacking. I kind of got hooked on squirting a little Huy Fong Siracha for every bite. The other six are either over easy soft-boiled or a french omelet if I am in an adventurous mood. That's a tough one, but like all things the more you do the better you get. Nothing like two soft-boiled eggs some siracha and a nice toasted English muffin to start the day with. Of course a couple of slices of bacon and maybe a light serving of home fries.

  6. On fast attack submarines we didn’t have the space to refrigerate our eggs. We would secure cases of them and throughout the sub and they would last about 4 weeks un-refrigerated until they started to go bad. Then we would switch to powered eggs.

  7. Sorry, but I can't agree….some egg producers, use fish meal to feed their chickens, it's cheap, hence this is how they sell cheap. You can taste the fish meal in the eggs, just like anything else, otherwise we wouldn't have grass fed, silage fed, corn fed and so on. There is a difference. If you fed them a lot of garlic you would also taste it in the eggs.

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