May 15, 2024

VIDEO: 🍳 Water Glass Eggs & The Truth About Them 🍳


🍳 My thoughts & experience with Water Glass Eggs and preserving them.
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25 thoughts on “VIDEO: 🍳 Water Glass Eggs & The Truth About Them 🍳

  1. Just saw this so probably too late to save the jar. Waterglassing eggs "SEALS" them. This means 1 yuck egg does not destroy the batch. Wash them and check for floaters. Once washed, keep in the refrigerator. You can also hard boil them and grind them up for chicken treats.(shell and all) Poke a tiny hole in the large end or they will break open.

  2. I would think maybe a thin shell and cracked easier. I will be trying preserving eggs this year and plan on using 1 quart jars. So if one goes bad it dosnt ruin the whole supply.

  3. I water glassed last Summer. We have gone through most of them already I rinse them under warm water before cracking them to create a bit of temperature change. I had one crack while doing this. I figured that one was going bad so I got rid of it. I also found a couple with a hair line crack in them and cooked them for the dogs. Other than that they have been fabulous to have this winter. I crack one at a time in a small bowl and smell it before adding to the big bowl. I will be doing this again this summer. I also stored them under the counter and left them alone till we need to use them. If I were you I wouldn't just throw out the whole jar of eggs. I would check each one and cook the ones that seemed good and feed them back to the chickens.

  4. I have a new flock of 7 for my backyard. They just started laying and I’m so excited. I usually buy organic layer 18% protein feed. The price has gone up so I will be checking other small towns around for family owned feed stores. God bless you and yours.

  5. I appreciate you pointing out failures in your storage. It demonstrates honesty. Listening to others, one would think water glassing is a perfect solution. It's not. The only truth here is that it was the only viable method during the 19th century.

    I am not being entirely dismissive. I understand why some might opt to utilize that preservation technique today due to need and volume of egg harvest. I couldn't.

  6. I don’t see any broken in my jars. We don’t move the jars. And we’re careful in choosing the eggs to water-glass. Must be clean, good solid shells, fresh, etc. I’ve read not to reuse solution.

    My first time. We’ll see how it goes.

  7. I just did my first half-gallon jar! I was able to fit 16 of my freshest eggs into that jar. I'm excited to have them for this winter when my girls stop laying. Thank you for sharing!

  8. I've raised chickens for 58 years. I've been cooking for about 56 years. One thing I learned from my Grandma was to always break each egg seperately into a small bowl before combining either with other eggs or into baking or cooking. This prevent having to toss a whole batch of anything. I cannot recommend this strongly enough. It takes a few seconds more. But so worth it.
    Since I have ducks, guineas and chickens, I also candle my eggs before I rinse them to use them. I do not wash or rinse them until I use them. Nor do I refrigerate my eggs and they last for months.

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