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13 votes
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Egg Innovations first US company to commit to in-ovo sexing
9 votes -
Meet the bug you didn't know you were eating; Cochineal
7 votes -
Make perfect eggs every time with Sohla | Cooking 101
8 votes -
Japan's secret french fry obsession | Street Eats
8 votes -
Testing starch slurries in eggs, to enable cooking omelettes all the way through while still keeping them moist
14 votes -
I got to meet culinary legend and personal inspiration Jacques Pépin
14 votes -
Is the egg market collapsing?
I just saw eggs at $3.06 for a 36 pack at my local Walmart. Not too long ago a 12 pack was pushing close to $7.00 in my area. What’s up with that? Is the greedy egg price gouging catching up with...
I just saw eggs at $3.06 for a 36 pack at my local Walmart. Not too long ago a 12 pack was pushing close to $7.00 in my area.
What’s up with that? Is the greedy egg price gouging catching up with the farms or something?
Wasn’t sure where to put this one.
21 votes -
Japanese Jidori chicken is perhaps the world's best, but how good is it? We'll visit a Jidori "free range" chicken farm and then visit my favorite restaurant in Miyazaki
4 votes -
Duck eggs
I bought a dozen duck eggs from the farmers market this week, hoping to add some pizazz to any dishes with egg this week. Was wondering if anyone had recommendations for dishes where duck eggs...
I bought a dozen duck eggs from the farmers market this week, hoping to add some pizazz to any dishes with egg this week. Was wondering if anyone had recommendations for dishes where duck eggs really shine or take it up a notch? Scrambled eggs will be on the menu this weekend. I have heard baking with these eggs is recommended as they have more yolk and are richer.
12 votes -
How to keep my cake from getting crumbly
The month of May brings my birthday and wedding anniversary, so we usually end up making a cake or two. We don't usually do anything fancy. Usually a store-made cake. But this year with the...
The month of May brings my birthday and wedding anniversary, so we usually end up making a cake or two. We don't usually do anything fancy. Usually a store-made cake. But this year with the pandemic, we ended up just getting some boxed cakes - Betty Crocker, Duncan Hines. Those sorts of things.
The problem is that they call for eggs and I'm allergic to egg yolks. (Not egg whites, oddly enough - just egg yolks.) So I've found some egg substitute. It works pretty well considering there's no egg in it. But I've found that when I use it in cakes, sometimes they turn out just fine, and other times they end up falling apart.
I know that eggs can be used for flavor, as a rising agent, as a binder, etc. but it's not clear to me how to tell which thing it's being used for in a given recipe. So my question is, in the case of a cake, are there other things I could substitute for egg yolks? The stuff I'm using has potato starch, baking powder, and psyllium husks. I guess the baking powder handles the rising aspect and the psyllium husks are probably like a binder? Are there other things I could be using?
6 votes -
What's the difference between... cage-free, pasture-raised, free-range, organic, and other labels on eggs?
8 votes -
Every way to cook an egg (fifty-nine methods) | Bon Appétit
8 votes -
Australian restaurants scramble to get their hands on emu eggs
4 votes -
Super quick video tips: How to make pickled beet eggs
4 votes