Summary: Chicken eggs can be brown, white or even blue-green. The color of an egg is determined by the breed of the hen that lays it.
Summary: There is no nutritional difference between brown and white eggs. However, a hen’s diet and environment can affect an egg’s nutrition.
Summary: Brown and white eggs generally taste the same. But eggs can taste different depending on how fresh they are, the way they’re cooked and the diet of the hen.
Summary: Brown eggs used to cost more because brown-laying hens produced less and weighed more. While that’s no longer true, brown eggs still come with a higher price tag.
Summary: The color of an egg isn’t important, but there are many other factors to consider when selecting eggs.
Eggs come in many colors, depending on chicken breed.
However, there is no nutritional difference between brown and white eggs. In the end, the only real difference is shell color and maybe price.
Nevertheless, other factors do affect the flavor and nutrition of eggs, including the hen’s diet and housing conditions.
So the next time you reach for a carton of eggs, make sure you’re taking these other factors into account. Shell color won’t tell you the whole story.
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