Honestly? If I canât get pastured, this is my fallback. Still better than the next groupâŠDairy & Eggs
Dairy & Eggs
Caged or Factory Eggs (The Usual Supermarket Fare)
These are the pale yellow ones. Hens raised indoors, fed a steady diet of grain, corn, and not much else. Their lives are pretty confinedâand you can taste that limitation in the egg.
Theyâre cheap. Theyâll work in a pinch. But nutritionally? Theyâre kind of a snooze.
Wanna Know What Youâre Really Eating?
Think about it this way: whatever a chicken eats ends up in the egg. And then it ends up in you.
So if sheâs getting a varied dietâgreens, bugs, seedsâyouâre reaping the benefits. But if all sheâs eating is wheat and corn all day long? Well, your yolkâs gonna look like it.Livestock
And hey, Iâm not saying you need to go Full homestead and raise chickens in the backyard (though if you do, please invite me over). But just paying attention to that yolk? Thatâs a start.
What the Labels Donât Tell You (But Should)
Those words on the carton? They can be sneaky. So hereâs a cheat sheet:
âPasture-raisedâ = Best of the bunch. Real outdoor time, real variety in the diet.
âFree-rangeâ = Not too shabby. Some outdoor access, slightly better nutrition.
âCage-freeâ = Donât be fooled. It might just mean a big barn full of chickens who still never see daylight.
âOrganicâ = Could be helpful, but doesnât automatically mean outdoor space.
Your best bet? Farmersâ markets. Small local farms. Or if youâve got a neighbor with hens and a soft spot for banana bread, maybe make a little trade.
Livestock
Little Extras That Can Affect Yolk Color
Just in case youâre wondering, âWell what if itâs a weird fluke?âBaked Goods
Sure, sometimes farmers add marigold petals or peppers to chicken feedâtotally natural, and it does deepen the yolk color. But thatâs still better than a lifeless, pale yolk from a stressed-out hen whoâs never seen the sun.
And seasons play a part, tooâspring and summer eggs tend to be brighter because the hens are eating fresh stuff. Winter yolks might lighten up a bit.
How to Store and Love Those Fancy Eggs
If youâre shelling out (pun totally intended) for good eggs, treat âem like the little nutritional gems they are:
Store them pointy-end downâkeeps the yolk centered.Livestock
Donât wash them if theyâre straight from the farm; that bloom on the shell protects them.
Use âem fresh for fried or poached eggs. Older ones? Perfect for hard-boiling.
Got extras? Crack and freeze in ice cube trays for later.
Oh, and those shells? Crush them up and toss them into your garden. Tomatoes love âem. Itâs a full-circle moment.
So⊠What Color Was Your Last Yolk?
Iâll leave you with this: we get so used to the ânormalâ way things look and taste, we donât even question it. But that bold orange yolk? It woke me up. It reminded me that food is supposed to come from somewhere. Not just a shelf.
So next time youâre cracking an eggâpause. Take a look. Think about the chicken behind it.
And if youâve got yolk stories, or a favorite farm you swear by, tell me in the comments. I could talk eggs all day.Dairy & Eggs
Food
Go on, crack one open and see what you find.