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

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

    You encounter eggs in just about every breakfast food, which means many of us eat them on the daily. Nutrition experts herald the humble egg as one of the best things you can eat in the morning.

  3. What Is That Stringy White Stuff in Eggs? Here’s Your Answer

    www.aol.com/stringy-white-stuff-eggs-answer...

    Hash Brown Quiche Cups. Quiche cups are my showstopper potluck dish. Hash browns and Asiago cheese make up the crusts. Eggs, spinach and bacon do the rest.

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

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

    One of the most highly debated topics in the world of nutrition at the moment is if you should or shouldn't eat the yolk of an egg.For years, we've been told that the yolk is detrimental to our ...

  5. 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 ...

  6. List of allergens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_allergens

    Egg: Anaphylaxis, swelling, sometimes flatulence and vomiting An allergic individual may not have any reaction to consuming food only prepared with egg yolk and not egg white, or vice versa. [10] Due to high protein content, egg white allergy is more common than the reverse. [11] The majority of children with this allergy become tolerant by ...

  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. Are eggs dairy? The answer isn’t totally clear to everyone

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/eggs-dairy-answer-isn-t...

    Also, milk, cheese, butter and eggs are often all sold next to each other in the grocery store, many times in what is deemed the dairy section. And lastly, here’s where it gets complicated—vegans.

  9. Egg allergy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_allergy

    People with an allergy to chicken eggs may also be allergic to other types of eggs, such as goose, duck, or turkey eggs. [2] In cooking, eggs are multifunctional: they may act as an emulsifier to reduce oil/water separation (mayonnaise), a binder (water binding and particle adhesion, as in meatloaf), or an aerator (cakes, especially angel food ).