Eggsactly

I’m on my way to work soon, having breakfast as I type. When I go diving I need a good breakfast to get me going. It’s a high energy job that gives your entire body a workout. My usual diving day breakfast is a couple of eggs over medium, and a bowl of oatmeal. Lunch is often a ham n cheese sandwich and a snack.

I’m dropping an egg into the skillet this morning, and the yolk is barely as big as a quarter, the white didn’t spread very far either! WTF? I’ve had Banty* eggs that were bigger. So, this got me to wondering who, and how the hell, do they grade eggs anyway? Well, I used our monopolized friend Google to investigate.

Eggs are graded not by size, as one might assume. But by weight per dozen. Of course one will make the other, but I did not know this.

Also as it turns out, USDA has a standard for “wholesomeness and safety.” (how and what exactly makes an egg wholesome?) While grading of size is, get this, voluntary! Unless your package has a USDA shield on it, the eggs within were “voluntarily” graded for size. With the USDA shield, that means the company paid to have USDA oversee the grading process. The carton my eggs came in actually does have a USDA shield, and labeled Grade A, Large.

But, I still got to say, I have a funny feeling someone is voluntarily taking my money for what is actually a medium egg, that is packaged and priced, as large. And they have been doing it as long as I can remember. I also remember when Big Macs were big, when Reeses peanut butter cups seemed to be over 2.5″ across, when a bar of soap was 30% bigger than it is now, and when just about everything we bought and consumed was of a larger size than we see today. But those things AFAIK, aren’t regulated, as eggs presumably are.

I don’t have a scale in the range for testing this theory, but I’ll be looking for one. Maybe I’m wrong. Perhaps my suspicious nature is acting up. But something here doesn’t seem right. Wal Mart is the business from which these eggs were acquired. That alone does nothing to alleviate my suspicions. In fact that makes it worse. When I find a suitable scale, I’ll investigate and update.

There is another store in town that sells eggs that do not have the USDA shield on the package, and we will get our eggs there more often, because when you look them over, they certainly seem to be larger eggs, and consistently so. Having the USDA shield on the package is apparently not the be-all, end-all way to determine the size of the eggs inside. I’ve been complaining about Wal Mart’s Banty eggs for a long time, but never thought to look into this and see if I can figure out what’s going on.

I’m heading out, wish me luck. What was supposed to be a N wind @ 5-10 turned into a N wind @ 15+ yesterday. Resulting in me getting blown off the lake. My next internet investigation will be why the hell can’t the forecast get the wind right?

*A Banty, or Bantam, is a small chicken.

** I’m aware that bird flu has devastated egg production, but that does not mean I’m ok with medium eggs in a large container.

11 thoughts on “Eggsactly

  1. I’ve suspected they’ve been selling medium sized eggs as large for some time now. I have 2, one dozen packages in the fridge at the moment, one from Walmart and the other is from Humpty Dumpty, which is a local egg producer about 4 miles from here. Both are labeled as “large” but the Walmart branded eggs are significantly smaller in physical size than the ones from Humpty.

    Liked by 1 person

    • I’m going to call that a data point 😉 It matches my exact same observations. I just don’t have a sufficient scale to test it yet.

      Ain’t got time to do squat for working, or being exhausted from working. I’ve only been out for a good ride a couple times… I’m already seeing signs of fall being upon us, that means winter is right behind it. Got to gather my acorns now if I’m gonna.

      Liked by 1 person

    • A lot of chickens are what we call dead. Bird flu keeps infesting the chicken populations. Causing large swings in the price of eggs. So, I suspect they are sending out eggs from the new bunch of young chickens before they are mature enough to lay large eggs.

      If that is the case, I get it. But don’t sell me Medium eggs in a package that says Large on it.

      The other plausible scenario is they have been cheating us for years and are getting away with it.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Hi. In the US profit is king. The goal is to less product for the same amount of money so people don’t see the price going up and complain. It is called shrinkflation. Hugs. Scottie

    Like

    • Well don’t think we haven’t noticed mothereffers!

      Yes, we see it in a lot of places, with unregulated foodstuffs. Eggs are supposedly regulated.

      So while shrinkflation is maddening with most things, it should be illegal with eggs. Unless of course they have the rules setup by R’s who know how to screw us good, where no repercussions apply in the fine print.

      Which wouldn’t surprise me in the slightest.

      Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to shelldigger Cancel reply