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Do we all know this about eggs.

mikeygrubs

New member
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Oct 15, 2012
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This was interesting to me. Hope you all find it to. And new to me maybe I've been living under a rock. But i definitely didn't know this pretty sure most of you did since eggs are a big part of diet.

By J. Mercola, D.O.

As many of you know, I am a fond proponent of using raw eggs as a major food in your diet.

Raw whole eggs are a phenomenally inexpensive and incredible source of high-quality nutrients that many of us are deficient in, especially high-quality protein and fat.

Eggs generally are one of the most allergic foods that are eaten, but I believe this is because they are cooked. If one consumes the eggs in their raw state the incidence of egg allergy virtually disappears. Heating the egg protein actually changes its chemical shape, and the distortion can easily lead to allergies.

So, if you have not been able to tolerate eggs before you will want to consider eating them uncooked.

But when one discusses raw eggs, the typical reaction is a fear of salmonella. So let me begin this update, my first that comprehensively addresses the immediate concern of nearly everyone who hears this recommendation.

Salmonella is a serious infection, and it is believed that in the US over two-thirds of a million cases of human illnesses a year result from eating contaminated eggs. If you want more information on salmonella the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has an excellentpage on this disease.

So why on earth would any competent health care professional ever recommend eating uncooked eggs?

When you carefully analyze the risk of contracting salmonella from raw eggs, you will find that it is actually quite low. A study by the U.S. Department of Agriculture earlier this year (Risk Analysis April 2002 22(2):203-18) showed that of the 69 billion eggs produced annually, only 2.3 million of them are contaminated with salmonella.

So simple math suggests that only 0.003 percent of eggs are infected. The translation is that only one in every 30,000 eggs is contaminated with salmonella. This gives you an idea of how uncommon this problem actually is.

While it is likely that I will consume more than 30,000 eggs in my lifetime, most of you will not. However, inevitably someone out there will find a salmonella-contaminated egg, so it is important to understand how to seriously decrease your risk of infection.

Salmonella infections are usually present only in traditionally raised commercial hens. If you are purchasing your eggs from healthy chickens this infection risk reduces dramatically. Remember, only sick chickens lay salmonella-contaminated eggs. If you are obtaining high quality, cage-free, organically fed, omega-3 enhanced chicken eggs as recommended above, the risk virtually disappears.

But let's say that for some reason, even after following that advice, you still obtain an egg that is infected. What do you do? Well, before you eat eggs - raw or not -- you should thoroughly examine them for signs of infection. I have provided some guidelines at the bottom of this section for you to use in this process.

You might still be a bit nervous and say, "What if I follow these guidelines and still get an infection?"

The major principle to recognize here is that if you are healthy a salmonella infection is not a big deal. You may feel sick and have loose stools, but this infection is easily treated by using high-quality probiotics that have plenty of good bacteria. You can take a dose every 30 minutes until you start to feel better, and most people improve within a few hours.

Earlier this summer, I posted an article that suggested that one should not eat raw egg whites. This is the traditional nutritional dogma as raw egg whites contain a glycoprotein called avidin that is very effective at binding biotin, one of the B vitamins. The concern is that this can lead to a biotin deficiency. The simple solution is to cook the egg whites as this completely deactivates the avidin.

The problem is that it also completely deactivates nearly every other protein in the egg white. While you will still obtain nutritional benefits from consuming cooked egg whites, from a nutritional perspective it would seem far better to consume them uncooked.

Since making the recommendation in July, I have more carefully studied this issue. Two groups brought me to back this: pet owners who feed their pets raw foods and Aajonus Vonderplanitz, who wrote the raw food book We Want to Live. Both feel quite strongly that raw eggs are just fine to eat.

After my recent studies it became clear that the egg's design carefully compensated for this issue.

It put tons of biotin in the egg yolk. Egg yolks have one of the highest concentrations of biotin found in nature. So it is likely that you will not have a biotin deficiency if you consume the whole raw egg, yolk and white. It is also clear, however, that if you only consume raw egg whites, you are nearly guaranteed to develop a biotin deficiency unless you take a biotin supplement.

The following tables list the amounts of biotin in some common foods, as well as recommended daily amounts:

Liver, cooked3 ounces*27Egg, cooked1 large25Yeast, bakers active1 packet (7 grams)14Wheat bran, crude1 ounce14Bread, whole wheat1 slice6Cheese, camembert1 ounce6Avocado1 whole6Salmon, cooked3 ounces*4Cauliflower, raw1 cup4Chicken, cooked3 ounces*3Cheese, cheddar1 ounce2Pork, cooked3 ounces*2Raspberries1 cup2Artichoke, cooked1 medium2
Life Stage AgeMales (mcg/day)Females (mcg/day)Infants 0-6 months55Infants 7-12 months66Children 1-3 years88Children 4-8 years1212Children 9-13 years2020Adolescents 14-18 years2525Adults 19 years and older3030Pregnancy all ages -30Breastfeeding all ages -35

There is a potential problem with using the entire raw egg if you are pregnant. Biotin deficiency is a common concern in pregnancy and it is possible that consuming whole raw eggs would make it worse.

If you are pregnant you have two options. The first is to actually measure for a biotin deficiency. This is best done through urinary excretion of 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid (3-HIA), which increases as a result of the decreased activity of the biotin-dependent enzyme methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase.

It might take you some time to get used to using raw eggs. I personally have shifted to consuming them "Rocky style" one egg with the yolk intact and swallowing them whole. Usually two eggs at one sitting.

Alternatively, you could have your raw eggs in a protein shake or Whey Healthier or take a biotin supplement.

Guidelines To Ensure That You Are Consuming Fresh High- Quality Eggs

You can go to the American Egg board for a great overview of eggs.

Always check the freshness of the egg right before you consume the yolk.

If you are uncertain about the freshness of an egg, don't eat it. This is one of the best safeguards against salmonella infection.

If there is a crack in the shell, don't eat it. You can easily check for this by immersing the egg in a pan of cool, salted water. If the egg emits a tiny stream of bubbles, don't consume it as the shell is porous/contains a hole.

If you are getting your eggs fresh from a farmer it is best to not refrigerate them. This is the way most of the world stores their eggs; they do not refrigerate them. To properly judge the freshness of an egg, its contents need to be at room temperature. Eggs that are stored in the fridge and opened immediately after taking them out will seem fresher than they actually are. Eggs that you want to check the freshness of should be kept outside the fridge for at least an hour prior to opening them.

First, check all the eggs by rolling them across a flat surface. Only consume them if they roll wobbly.

Open the egg. If the egg white is watery instead of gel-like, don't consume the egg. If the egg yolk is not convex and firm, don't consume the egg. If the egg yolk easily bursts, don't consume the egg.

After opening the egg you can put it up to your nose and smell it. If it smells foul you will certainly not want to consume it.

If you are not used to eating fresh raw egg yolks or fresh raw fish, you should start by eating just a tiny bit of it on a daily basis, and then gradually increase the portions.

For example, start by consuming only a few drops of raw egg yolk a day for the first three days. Gradually increase the amount that you consume in three-day increments. Try half a teaspoon for three days, then one teaspoon, then two teaspoons. When you are accustomed to that amount, increase it to one raw egg yolk per day and subsequently to two raw egg yolks per day. Eventually, you can easily eat five raw egg yolks daily.

Fresh raw egg yolk tastes like vanilla and is best combined with your vegetable pulp. You can also combine it with avocado. Only stir it gently with a fork, because egg protein easily gets damaged on a molecular level, even by mixing/blending



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Nice read, it makes sense. I love eggs, but didn't eat raw eggs due to hearing about salmonella in raw eggs.
 
From what I've heard (and I dn't know how accurate it is) but only about 50% of the protein is absorbed when the eggs are raw.. is this factually incorrect or do ppl just think "well then I'll do twice as many eggs then!"...?

rather than cooking them..
 
Unfortunately you can't tell if an egg has salmonella by smelling it, rolling it, looking at it, putting it in a pan of water to see if there is bubbles coming out of it.
 
Unfortunately you can't tell if an egg has salmonella by smelling it, rolling it, looking at it, putting it in a pan of water to see if there is bubbles coming out of it.

Consider it "front loading" a cut. Turns a 12 week cut into only 8 :D
 
From what I've heard (and I dn't know how accurate it is) but only about 50% of the protein is absorbed when the eggs are raw.. is this factually incorrect or do ppl just think "well then I'll do twice as many eggs then!"...?

rather than cooking them..

looking forward to the final verdict on this

what I know so far is that the quoted 50% applies to egg whites,not the yolks

eat 6 raw eggs on wake up
sometimes add a 2nd portion throughout the day

gotta say I got poisoned by salmonella once and I could not leave the house for 2 days due to diarrhea and I even could not drink water as it goes through the back end.

currently buying eggs that I've been told are not commercially raised and do look a bit orange-the yolks . so far not a problem with these

I believe I've read before that eating the yolk makes its protein content absorb 100% but 50% for the white

waiting for someone to clarify
10x
 
I love eggs to much to not eat them cooked. Though I always cook them on low heat
 
If youre worried about salmonella, buy pastured or free range eggs..which will greatly reduce the risk. Bottom line is cook the yolk as LITTLE as possible or eat raw for best assimilation and no oxidation.
 
I just been. cooking them sunny side up and not cooking white all the way threw. Actually not that bad but this is only one study here I'm looking to see if there are more. To agree with this

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I just been. cooking them sunny side up and not cooking white all the way threw. Actually not that bad but this is only one study here I'm looking to see if there are more. To agree with this

Sent from my SPH-L720 using Tapatalk

You want the WHITE cooked.
 
If you start feeling like you've been infected with salmonella start eating nothing but yogurt, kefir or other fermented foods and you'll recover fast.
 
What about the guy in 2012 that made a bey with his friend and died shortly after ingesting 28 raw eggs
 
I drink a carton Egg Beaters sometimes instead of plain eggs. I also will take 1/2 cup oatmeal, 2 scoops protein powder and a carton of egg beaters blend then drink.

I thought the majority of the salmonella issues were from outside of the egg shell?
 
I've been eating raw eggs for a long time. Whenever I throw them back into my diet I make signigicant gains.
 
a convo regarding eating raw whites here last year, they were saying raw egg whites depletes your biotin du to avidin. cooking the whites deactivates the avidin so this depletion wont occur.
softboiling would be the best bet.
 
i got seperated

article went from cooking the egg whites causes all proteins to be lost to just eating yokes.
did I miss something? does it end up saying just eat yokes?
 
a convo regarding eating raw whites here last year, they were saying raw egg whites depletes your biotin du to avidin. cooking the whites deactivates the avidin so this depletion wont occur.
softboiling would be the best bet.

Softboiling is a great option... I am trying to perfect doing that. Eating whites raw is fine when accompanied by the raw yolk.

Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk
 
article went from cooking the egg whites causes all proteins to be lost to just eating yokes.
did I miss something? does it end up saying just eat yokes?

I got the same idea after reading this article.

A bb without eggs will have a hard time, but eating 28 at once is too much even for an egg-lover. Everything needs measure.
 

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