Gauteng Smallholder November 2015 | Page 45

IN THE KITCHEN From page 42 bought kept in waterglass was very definitely bad. By 120 days after the experiment was begun, all the supermarket and all the smallholder control eggs had gone completely rotten. The dry sand groups (both fertile and unfertile) were also terminated at that time, as were the store-boughts that had been coated with Vaseline (the Vaseline-coated smallholder eggs were only marginally better). The fertile and unfertile eggs packed in lard were getting pretty "iffy", the ones coated with lard were doing a lot better, the lime water groups were still edible (although, in the case of the supermarket eggs, barely edible), the refrigerated eggs seemed to have firmed up and were nearly as good as fresh, and ~ while the waterglassed groups were, in general, doing far better than average ~ one of the fertile eggs covered with Eggs stored in mineral oil is another old method waterglass was very definitely bad. The ranks of the still-good eggs began to thin considerably 150 days into their test. The supermarket eggs packed in lard weren't making it anymore, while the fertile eggs packed in lard were runny but edible. Likewise the waterglassed eggs. The lime water store-boughts, on the other hand, were still "good" (except for the one they didn't even open, since it floated), while the lime water plot eggs were only "edible". All eggs coated with lard were "good enough to eat for breakfast". While ~ maybe just by contrast ~ the storebought refrigerated eggs were "good, like fresh" and the smallholder refrigerated eggs were "excellent". At the end of seven months they had drawn these conclusions about their egg preservation experiment: K Unwashed, fertile small- 43 www.sasmallholder.co.za holder eggs seem to store much better than washed, unfertile eggs. Why? Probably for the simple reason that they're unwashed, and not because they're fertile. An egg, as it comes from the chicken, is coated with a light layer of a natural sealing agent called "bloom". And, while a good wash may make a batch of eggs look more attractive, it also removes this natural protective coating, leaving the eggs more subject to ageing and attack by bacteria in the air. K The very best way to store eggs for long periods is in a sealed container at a Continued on page 44