Egg price watch
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wrote on 3 Mar 2025, 15:27 last edited by
Bought a dozen last evening. Plenty in stock, but the price was 60¢ higher than 2 weeks ago.
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 04:46 last edited by
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 05:25 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in Egg price watch:
I’d rather learn to code.
Oh good lord, please don’t encourage Karla…
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 05:26 last edited by
She’ll be approaching the HOA about a communal chicken pen next…
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 11:35 last edited by Doctor Phibes 30 days ago
@jon-nyc said in Egg price watch:
I’d rather learn to code.
She says it's a silver lining. More guano than silver, maybe.
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 12:34 last edited by
I’d have them if I lived where I could. The eggs are better and the meat of a pasture raised bird is a lot better.
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 13:37 last edited by
Yeah, but slaughtering and cleaning chickens is a nasty job. But...It's easier if you don't want the skin. Instead of scalding and plucking, you just skin and gut.
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 13:38 last edited by
Take em to a processor.
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wrote on 4 Mar 2025, 13:47 last edited by
How do you know you're getting your chickens back?
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wrote on 5 Mar 2025, 01:53 last edited by
https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/cheap-egg-replacement-for-baking/
What is the magical egg replacement?
I’m talking about a “flax egg.” This is an egg substitute that vegans and people with egg allergies have used for a long time. You mix flaxseed with water to get an “eggy” texture, then use it as you would an egg in any baking recipe.
Flaxseed is a handy egg substitute because it’s shelf-stable and extremely cheap. You can buy a bag of ground flaxseed at pretty much any grocery store. It will probably be in the baking aisle. I buy mine at Aldi, where it retails for $3.85 a bag. Each bag of Aldi’s flaxseed contains 60 tablespoons, which is equivalent to 60 eggs. Therefore, each flax egg costs about six cents. It’s amazingly budget-friendly!
and
For each egg you want to replace, combine 1 tablespoon of ground flaxseed with 3 tablespoons of water and let it sit for about five minutes. If you’re making a recipe that calls for two eggs, then you would use 2 tablespoons of flaxseed and 6 tablespoons of water. (Don’t replace more than two eggs with flax in a recipe, though.)
I think you can also use yoghurt as a substitute.
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wrote on 5 Mar 2025, 01:55 last edited by
Hard boiled yogurt???
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wrote on 5 Mar 2025, 02:08 last edited by
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wrote on 11 Mar 2025, 22:57 last edited by jon-nyc 3 Nov 2025, 22:57
Two stores, no eggs.
I hate shortages. Shortages are always and everywhere a policy choice and an unnecessary one at that.
Give me $18 eggs if you need to, but have them on the goddam shelf when I come.
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wrote on 11 Mar 2025, 23:00 last edited by
I guess the stores don't want to be accused of price gouging.
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wrote on 12 Mar 2025, 00:42 last edited by
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wrote on 13 Mar 2025, 22:55 last edited by
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wrote on 13 Mar 2025, 23:07 last edited by
Overall rate of inflation has slowed.
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wrote on 14 Mar 2025, 00:07 last edited by
True, inflation has gone down 0.2%. Nest egg has gone down 10.0% SAD
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wrote on 14 Mar 2025, 00:20 last edited by
@Jolly said in Egg price watch:
Overall rate of inflation has slowed.
Due to President Trump or President Biden?
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wrote on 14 Mar 2025, 00:22 last edited by
@89th said in Egg price watch:
True, inflation has gone down 0.2%. Nest egg has gone down 10.0% SAD
Just think of it as a 10% off…
Seriously? I get the concern and I don’t see the logic in what he’s doing other than setting a madman baseline. And I think my income is probably more current economy based than most of yours. But I’m not going to rush to conclusions and am a little more willing to wait and see. Maybe I’m wrong, but what am I going to do either way? Buckle up and hope that I’m right, and that if I’m wrong the United Stated relationships and the global economy can take it.
IT DOES HELP THAT I’ve sent Luke’s final tuition bill in…