An egg is the ovum produced by a female animal for reproduction, often prepared as food.
Most edible eggs, including bird eggs and turtle eggs consist of a a hard, oval outer eggshell, the "egg white," or albumen, the egg yolk, and various thin membranes. Every part of these eggs is edible, although the eggshell is generally discarded.
Roe and caviar are edible eggs produced by marine animals.
Bird eggs are a common food source. The most commonly used bird eggs are those from the chicken, duck, and goose, but smaller eggs such as quail eggs are occasionally used as a gourmet ingredient, as are the largest bird eggs, from ostriches.
Chicken eggs are widely used in many types of cooking. Dishes that use eggs range from both sweet to savoury dishes. Eggs may be pickled; hard-boiled and refrigerated; or eaten raw, though the latter is not recommended for people who may be susceptible to salmonella, such as the elderly, the infirm, or pregnant women.
Common cooking techniques for eggs are:
Some common egg dishes in Western cuisine are:
Eggs are easily separated by cracking the shell and pouring off the egg white while carefully holding the egg yolk in the shell. The egg yolk and the albumen behave quite differently when cooked, so recipes often require separating the egg white from the yolk.
When eggs become rotten, the yolk will turn green, and the egg will emit a pungent sulfurous odor when broken.
The shape of an egg is an oval with one end larger than the other end. The egg has cylindrical symmetry along the long axis. The larger end contains the air cell that forms when the contents of the egg cool and contract after it is laid.
The yolk in a newly laid egg is round and firm. As the yolk ages it absorbs water from the albumen which increases its size and causes it to stretch and weaken the vitelline membrane(the clear casing enclosing the yolk). The resulting effect is a flattened and enlarged yolk shape.
Yolk color is dependent on the diet of the hen; if the diet contains yellow/orange plant pigments known as xanthophylls, then they are deposited in the yolk, coloring it. A colorless diet can produce an almost colorless yolk. Farmers may enhance yolk color with artificial pigments, but in most locations, this activity is forbidden.
It is also possible for a young hen to produce an egg with no yolk at all. Yolkless eggs are usually formed about a bit of tissue that is sloughed off the ovary or oviduct. This tissue stimulates the secreting glands of the oviduct and a yolkless egg results.
Chicken eggs are the most commonly eaten eggs, and are highly nutritious. They supply a large amount of complete, high-quality* protein (which contains all essential amino acids for humans), and provide significant amounts of several vitamins and minerals, including vitamin A, riboflavin, folic acid, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, choline, iron, calcium, phosphorous and potassium. They are also one of the least expensive single-food sources of complete protein.
All of the egg's vitamin A, D and E is in the yolk. The egg is one of the few foods which naturally contain vitamin D (although this nutrient is naturally produced in humans when their skin is exposed to sunlight). A large egg yolk contains approximately 60 calories (250 kilojoules); the egg white contains about 15 calories (60 kilojoules). A large yolk contains more than two-thirds of the recommended daily intake of 300 mg of cholesterol (although it has been shown that your body does not absorb much cholesterol from eggs). The yolk makes up about 33% of the liquid weight of the egg. It contains all of the fat in the egg and slightly less than half of the protein.
Recently, chicken eggs that are especially high in Omega 3 fatty acids have come on the market. These eggs are made by feeding laying hens a diet containing polyunsaturated fats and kelp meal. Two brands available in the UK are "Columbus Eggs"and "The Hearty Egg"[http://www.theheartyegg.com. Nutrition information on the packaging is different for each of the brands.
Some people try to avoid eggs in their diet because they are high in cholesterol, which is concentrated in the yolk. This issue is sometimes addressed by eating only some or none of the yolk. People sometimes remove the yolk themselves, or may use prepared egg substitutes such as Egg Beaters.
There is debate over whether egg yolk present a health risk. Some research suggests it may lower total Low density lipoprotein ("bad" cholesterol) while raising High density lipoprotein ("good" cholesterol) levels. Some people advocate the eating of raw eggs and egg yolks for this reason, claiming that uncooked cholesterol in the yolk is healthier than when it is cooked.
The United States egg industry launched its continuing "Incredible Edible Egg" campaign, which touts eggs as a healthy part of a balanced diet. The American Egg Board publicizes modern research which shows that dietary cholesterol has less effect on blood cholesterol than previously thought.
Most health experts advise people to cook their eggs thoroughly before eating them, as the heat is necessary to kill any infectious micro-organisms that may be present. Raw and undercooked eggs have been associated with salmonella infection. As with meat, containers and surfaces that have been used to process raw eggs should not come in contact with ready-to-eat food.
The risk of infection from raw or undercooked eggs is dependent in part upon the sanitary conditions under which the hens are kept. Some smaller egg producers make a point of keeping their hens in cleaner (and, in their view, more humane) conditions, and observe few or no cases of salmonella in the birds themselves.
A USDA study showed that only .003% of eggs produced in the US were shown to contain salmonella, so roughly one in 30,000 eggs produced will contain the bacteria.
Egg shells act as Hermetic seals which guard against bacteria entering, but this seal can be broken through improper handling or if laid by unhealthy chickens. Most forms of contamination enter through such weaknesses in the shell.
One of the most common food allergies is eggs. Infants usually have the opportunity to grow out of this allergy during childhood, if exposure is minimized. Generally, physicians will recommend feeding only the yolk to infants because of the higher risk of allergic reaction to the egg white.
Chicken eggs are graded by size, for the purpose of sales.
| Size | Mass |
|---|---|
| Very Large (XL) | Greater than 73g |
| Large (L) | 63g-73g |
| Medium (M) | 53g-63g |
| Small (S) | less than 53g |
| Size | Mass |
|---|---|
| Size 0 | Greater than 75g |
| Size 1 | 70g-75g |
| Size 2 | 65g-70g |
| Size 3 | 60g-65g |
| Size 4 | 55g-60g |
| Size 5 | 50g-55g |
| Size 6 | 45g-50g |
| Size 7 | less than 45g |
Commercial factory farming operations often involve raising the hens in small crowded cages, preventing the chickens from engaging in activities such as wing-flapping, dust-bathing, scratching, pecking, perching and nest-building. Laying hens are often slaughtered after twelve months when their egg productivity starts to decline. Some hens may be force molted to increase egg quality and production level after the moltingDue to modern selective breeding, laying hen strains differ from meat production strains. As male birds of the laying strain do not lay eggs and are not suitable for meat production, they are generally killed at one to three days old[http://www.vegsoc.org/info/laying.html#male.
Many animal welfare advocates object to the factory farming conditions, such as those stated above, under which laying hens are raised. Animal welfare advocates claim that the resulting frustration and stress on the hens can lead to aggressive behaviour such as feather-pecking and cannibalism.
Free-range eggs are considered by some advocates to be an acceptable substitute to factory farmed eggs. Free range laying hens are given outdoor access instead of being contained in crowded cages. Questions on the actual living conditions of free range hens have been raised as there is no legal definition or regulations for eggs labeled as free range*.
Syɛfan | Ou (aliment) | Hühnerei | Huevo (alimento) | Kananmuna | Œuf (cuisine) | Uovo#Economia ed alimentazione | 계란 | Ei (voeding) | Jajko (kulinaria) | Яйцо (еда) | Ägg
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