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  2. Yolk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yolk

    Three similarly sized eggs in a hot frying pan. Each of the two yolks in the double-yolked eggs are smaller than typical for that size of egg. Double-yolk eggs occur when ovulation occurs too rapidly, or when one yolk becomes joined with another yolk. These eggs may be the result of a young hen's reproductive cycle not yet being synchronized. [16]

  3. Eggs as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eggs_as_food

    Double-yolk eggs, when an egg contains two or more yolks, occurs when ovulation occurs too rapidly, or when one yolk becomes joined with another yolk. [ 29 ] Yolkless eggs , which contain whites but no yolk, usually occurs during a pullet's first effort, produced before her laying mechanism is fully ready.

  4. Yes, the Color of Your Egg Yolk Matters — Here’s What It Means

    www.aol.com/yes-color-egg-yolk-matters-143000262...

    Here’s what the shade of your egg yolk might mean: Pale yellow: This color suggests the hen had a diet heavy in wheat, ... Related: Your Questions About Double-Yolk Eggs, Answered.

  5. 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.

  6. Egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg

    The term is derived from the diminutive meaning "little egg". Oviparity is where fertilisation occurs internally and so the eggs laid by the female are zygotes (or newly developing embryos), often with important outer tissues added (for example, in a chicken egg, no part outside of the yolk originates with the zygote). Oviparity is typical of ...

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

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

    "Yolks contain all of the fat of the egg—part of which is unsaturated—making a whole egg both filling and delicious," says Alpert. "The yolk provides slightly less than half of the egg's ...

  8. Boiled egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boiled_egg

    Boiled eggs are typically from a chicken, and are cooked with their shells unbroken, usually by immersion in boiling water. Hard-boiled or hard-cooked eggs are cooked so that the egg white and egg yolk both solidify, while soft-boiled eggs may leave the yolk, and sometimes the white, at least partially liquid and raw.

  9. This is the secret meaning behind the numbers on your egg carton

    www.aol.com/article/lifestyle/2019/04/02/this-is...

    As an egg ages, it loses moisture and carbon dioxide, making the whites thinner and the yolk more susceptible to breaking. And when you eat old, expired eggs, your risk of getting a food-borne ...