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  2. Keep the eggs but replace 5 bad-for-you breakfast foods ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/keep-eggs-replace-5-bad-100041778.html

    Eggs have gotten a bad rap in the nutrition space over time for being potential contributors to high cholesterol levels. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), however, recently classified eggs ...

  3. It's healthy to eat eggs for breakfast every day if you ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/healthy-eat-eggs-breakfast...

    Eggs are a great source of protein, healthy fats, vitamins and minerals. And these are the healthiest ways to eat eggs for breakfast, dietitians say.

  4. Should you or shouldn't you be eating the yolk of eggs?

    www.aol.com/article/lifestyle/2016/09/19/should...

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  5. Scrambled eggs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrambled_eggs

    Scrambled eggs is a dish made from eggs (usually chicken eggs), where the whites and yolks have been stirred, whipped, or beaten together (typically with salt, butter or oil, and sometimes water or milk, or other ingredients), then heated so that the proteins denature and coagulate, and they form into "curds".

  6. Poached egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poached_egg

    The egg is cracked into a cup or bowl of any size, and then gently slid into a pan of water at approximately 62 °C (144 °F) and cooked until the egg white has mostly solidified, but the yolk remains soft. The ideal poached egg has a runny yolk, with a hardening crust and no raw white remaining. In countries that mandate universal salmonella ...

  7. Eggs as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eggs_as_food

    Eggs contain multiple proteins that gel at different temperatures within the yolk and the white, and the temperature determines the gelling time. Egg yolk becomes a gel, or solidifies, between 61 and 70 °C (142 and 158 °F). Egg white gels at different temperatures: 60 to 73 °C (140 to 163 °F).

  8. The Way You Eat Your Eggs May Be Seriously Impacting ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/way-eat-eggs-may-seriously-174500083...

    Eggs pack a lot of nutrients into a tiny package. Each large egg contains six grams of complete protein. Compared to meat and fish, they're one of the most economical protein sources.

  9. Does the color of an egg's yolk mean anything?

    www.aol.com/does-color-eggs-yolk-mean-100011542.html

    Fox News Digital spoke to an egg expert based in Maine to find out why egg yolks come in different colors — and if these different colors mean anything significant in terms of nutrition.