SC - don't cringe too bad....
Philip & Susan Troy
troy at asan.com
Fri Mar 24 04:09:54 PST 2000
Stefan li Rous wrote:
>
> From: Mbatmantis at aol.com
> > Eggs today are sold in grades. The lower the grade, the lower the clarity
> > of the whites. ( the grade is determined by the size and if the white has
> > those little stringies in them ) Since they would have no such system in
> > period, my guess is the reason is to separate the stringies.
>
> Interesting. Now that you mention it, I do remember seeing a grade
> indication on egg cartons. I've never thought to look to see what the
> actual grade was. I imagine that most (all?) eggs sold in the grocery
> are the same grade. I guess I'll have to take a look next time I'm
> shopping.
Mostly what we get in the supermarkets are AA, if I recall the grading
system correctly. Or at least they started out that way on packing. How
many grades they've lost in shipping and storage can be an interesting
philiosophical question... .
> So, since the eggs are sold "unopened", how do they grade the eggs,
> since you can't see these white stringies? Do different grades pass
> different amounts of light? I thought size just determined "small",
> "medium", "large" and "jumbo".
Don't forget SuperColossal ; ) . I believe a bright light is used to
determine whether the eggs are fertile or not ("What _is_ that little
speck there?"). Other than that, I think grade is largely a function of
age. I had never heard about grade being a function of the clarity of
the white, but that may be related to age as well.
Adamantius
- --
Phil & Susan Troy
troy at asan.com
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