December 28, 2014
The yolk’s on me
Another eggcerpt from an eggcellent duet.
If you ever wondered about my mental state as a nature-loving worker-bee new-music composer (I’m sure you haven’t), you may find the following post to be illuminating. In a, “gee, maybe it’s better that I don’t know her in person” kinda way.
Perhaps I chose a solitude-intensive career because from early childhood onward I’ve always been adept at amusing myself. As you will now witness, this task demands very little of the world around me.
I am neither a creative, nor a good cook. I suppose I could say that I’m a creative bad cook, because in blazes of random artistic inspiration, I often throw ingredients together in bizarre combinations just because… well, because they’re sitting in the fridge or pantry, and if they taste pretty good by themselves, then surely they’re gonna be awesome together.
Um, not necessarily.
Somehow, the principles of reckless abandon that make my music popular, utterly fail me the kitchen.
The need to keep my brain functioning (or whatever one would call what it does, which is open for debate) means I fill my house with fresh, non-processed, organic-when-possible foodstuffs. I often make a decent lunch for myself in between tearing my hair out at the composing desk. Sometimes I even use the stove.
Which brings us to eggs. They are among the very few food thingys I know how to cook. As with music, I can even come up with many engaging variations on the theme. Fried. Omelet. Fried omelet. Scrambled. Frittata. Hard boiled. Freeform. Onions. Cheese. Avocado. Spinach. Salmon. Pineapple (oh-oh, random artistic inspiration trouble ahead). You name it. Almost anything goes well in an egg dish, except maybe chunky peanut butter (which, when paired with an island-grown apple, is another favorite that I can manage if the jar lid isn’t too tight).
So there I was, standing in my kitchen, making my lunch.
Step 1: melt a big pad of organic butter into the frying pan.
Step 2: crack open an egg.
No problem; I got this.
Well looky here: Siamese twins!
This doesn’t happen often. As in, virtually never. I know, because I crack open a lot of eggs; as I said, that feat is on the very short list of “things I know how to do in a kitchen (involving food)”.
I couldn’t recall ever seeing this phenomenon before. Being the investigative person I am (aka, nerd), I looked it up.
My suspicions were confirmed:
“Roughly one in every thousand eggs (about .1%) is double-yolked. Since commercially-sold eggs in the United States are sold by weight and also candled prior to packaging, any double-yolkers are discarded… and you could go an entire lifetime eating store bought eggs and never encounter one.”
Frankly, I’m hoping that I’ve only gone roughly half a lifetime so far. It would be painfully unfortunate if the dumb luck of having cracked open one of these gems signals the end of the game. Just to be on the safe side, I’m getting my will in order.
Gazing in amazement at my frying pan (which, stupefied by the mysterious effect of heat beneath food, I’m often found doing regardless of what’s in there), I grabbed my camera and snapped a picture (mental state clue #1: what kind of weirdo takes a picture of an egg?).
I’m a three-egg kinda gal, so having quickly done the math, I thought to myself, “well, this carton will last a little longer, since now I only need to crack one more egg.”
I may be weird, but I’m also pragmatic and budget-minded.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I present you: Egg Number Two:
Whoa! Another twin. Oh my. What are the chances of this?
100 percent, apparently.
Good thing I got my camera out.
The resulting meal tasted fine. I was not poisoned by any noxious egg-twin bacterial goo (I had briefly considered the possibility. Hunger won out). My lunch was identical to that made from normal, single eggs, just… more yellow on the plate. Much more.
The next day, being entirely unimaginative about my dining choices, I opted for eggs once again.
The first egg (#3 on our scorecard):
Wow! Twins again! My mother is an identical twin. Maybe this is genetic.
And, the next:
Aha! A normal, single egg! I broke the streak!
Still, I fetched my camera.
I also fetched my Sharpie, and began a tally on the end of the egg carton.
Because this is the way a weirdo-nerd nature-loving worker-bee new-music composer gets her thrills.
I mean, really: who knows what the next crack will bring?
Suddenly, lunchtime became very eggciting.
And so it went, for the rest of the carton, lunch after lunch over a ten-day period (I did eat salads and other moron-proof things in between egg days).
I never entered the kitchen without my camera, imagining that maybe I’d halve a pistachio and find two nuts inside. Or that upon splitting open a peach from a neighbor’s tree, 50 earwigs would cascade wildly from the now-eaten pit, their shiny, wriggly, pincer-armed black thoraxes streaming outward in all directions.
The pistachio thing has never happened.
The peach thing DID, this past summer.
And damn, I didn’t have my camera handy. I was just relieved that I happened to slice the peach open over the sink. Bye bye nasty earwigs. But seriously, EWWWW. I was lucky I didn’t happen to bite into that fruit. Oh, the horror. EwwwwwwwWW!
So, back in my kitchen, another lunchtime that week:
Egg 5:
Soon accompanied by egg 6:
Ok, someone’s messing with me. This is unbelievable.
Egg 7:
But surprise! Behold egg 8, in its monk-like solitude:
By this point, my mind is going all Stephen King on me and I’m envisioning some lone, demented egg-packer whose job is to “candle” the eggs (see link above) and toss out the twins. In a spiteful fit of renegade insubordination to a cruel supervisor, or possibly an enraged response to an unrequited crush, s/he goes rogue and crouched in a dark corner of the warehouse, quietly fills a carton with these ovo-dyads. For added effect, s/he carefully places a single-yolked egg where the buyer, now stunned by the bevy of yolks, will least expect it. The worker’s sole regret is that s/he won’t get the pleasure of seeing the astonished look on the unsuspecting consumer’s face.
Steve Buscemi stars as the disgruntled and devious egg-packer, doncha think?
Egg 9 was yet another twin, marred only by my own pitiful failure in shell cracking technique (I told you I’m incompetent in the kitchen):
And egg 10 did not disappoint:
I realize that at this point in the blog post, you’re questioning the sanity of a weirdo-nerd nature-loving worker-bee new-music composer who obtains her highest moment of joy for the day from a carton of eggs.
I also realize that at this point in the blog post, you’re questioning your own sanity for having even scrolled this far, egg photo after egg photo (and yes, since you were wondering, that’s a 10″ Circulon pan. Great for eggs, whether twins or only children).
At the same time, you’re admitting to yourself that you are nearly on the edge of your seat with suspense as to how this all turns out. So I know that you’re going to keep reading. I dare you not to keep scrolling.
Egg 11:
See? I told you you couldn’t look away. It’s like a train wreck, but with more protein.
And, drumroll, puh-leeze:
Egg 12:
Ta-DAH!
Twelve eggs. Ten of which were twins. As per the 1-in-a-thousand statistic above, it’s remarkable enough for anyone to end up with a carton like this. But I have to add, with apologies to Humphrey Bogart: of all the markets, in all the towns, in all the world, this carton arrives into mine.
And of all the egg shoppers on all of San Juan Island, I’m the one who buys it. Miraculously, I may be the only person weird and nerdy enough to have immediately grabbed my camera from the start, to document the entire damn carton’s worth of Siamese eggs.
And to add to the cosmic perfeggtion of it all:
I have a blog and can share my amazement with The World.
I think the disgruntled (or at least mischievous) egg-packer would be proud.
Through my appreciation and scribing, that quirky employee has created a personal… leggacy… from an eggspression of defiance.
I hope s/he is having a better time at work these days.
I hope s/he has found true love.
I also hope that s/he continues to fill random cartons with all the Siamese twin rejects from the warehouse,
if only to give weirdo nerds like me a reason to look forward to an eggceptional lunch.
Lisa of Fresh Eggs Daily said,
December 29, 2014 @ 5:32 pm
Awesome! I would guess whoever was supposed to be discarding the double yolkers on the assembly line instead boxed them all up and tossed the single yolkers! Ooops! Neat you chronicled it.
I raise chickens and I’ve only seen maybe 4-5 double yolkers in nearly 6 years.
Lisa
Fresh Eggs Daily
Alex Shapiro said,
December 29, 2014 @ 5:48 pm
I was so happy to discover your cool website, Lisa, and learn more about this phenomenon! Thanks!
Melanie said,
December 29, 2014 @ 6:59 pm
I have chickens and during spring/summer we get one every few weeks at least. It’s bizarre. Even now when the hens have slowed down, we still get one here and there. Two within the last month that I’m sure of. Cool story! Thanks for sharing
Marie Johns said,
December 29, 2014 @ 7:21 pm
I follow Fresh Eggs Daily, bought her book. I also write, and love to cook. The side note is that I have taught science, milked cows and raised calves and chickens. I found your post to be “eggciting” and correct you were, I could not stop until the end. Happy New Year, and best wishes for an “eggciting” future and more egg accomplishments in the kitchen. π
Alex Shapiro said,
December 29, 2014 @ 7:25 pm
Thanks for egging me on, Marie! π
liz said,
December 29, 2014 @ 7:43 pm
I get doubles all the time and a few triples .. these are my own chickens and eggs of course. .
Kathy Nelting said,
December 29, 2014 @ 7:55 pm
I have one hen that gave us 3 or 4 double yolk eggs each week all summer long. Lately it’s down to one or two a month.
Carl L. Hager said,
December 29, 2014 @ 8:07 pm
I couldn’t stop reading and scrolling and reading your webpage-turner. I was with you on every photo of every egg–reaching the denouement became an eggsigent need This is the best blog riff I’ve read in a year. And yes, Steve Buscemi is definitely the right choice as the egg packer. The Coen brothers to produce and direct?
Alex Shapiro said,
December 29, 2014 @ 8:18 pm
I am on the floor laughing from your eggcellent comment, Carl!
Emilio D. MIler said,
December 29, 2014 @ 9:13 pm
ClichΓΒ©s from the Facebook era: I wanted to click “like” on almost every paragraph.
The second half of this post was somewhere between a conversation and mind reading. Because I did think “The Insubordinate Egg-Packer” was a great title for a film or, who knows, maybe a chamber music piece… commissioned by *these* yolkey folks, of course: http://greatereggchamber.com/ (takes one to know one, you know…)
And I actually envisioned Buscemi’s face before you mentioned it (if we’re being strict, it was actually after you mentioned it… but you get my drift). And, Carl: the suggestion of the Coen brothers is just perfect… but I hadn’t thought of it, so no mind-reading on your account.
Last but not least: yes, Alex… I was totally wondering about the pan.
If something’s wrong with us, I’m glad we have that in common.
E.
PS: E-G-G… not a bad motif to start on π
Alex Shapiro said,
December 29, 2014 @ 9:49 pm
Oh Emilio, your comment is priceless! I am so glad to know a kindred soul is out there, understanding my bizarre ovo-obsession π
I actually clicked the link to the nice people of Egg Harbor, but it’s not all it’s cracked up to be (sorry): for all their town pride, they fail to divulge what state they reside in. How can I visit and bring them Siamese twin eggs, if I don’t know which interstate to take?
Yours in E-G-G (maybe G-flat, if we’re going for a fried egg),
Alex
Sandy Rowe said,
December 30, 2014 @ 5:38 am
There’s a market we occasionally go to that sells double yolkers by the dozen.
Planktown Market in Shelby, Oh.
Sammi said,
December 30, 2014 @ 6:45 am
I, too, follow Fresh Eggs Daily and am so happy she posted your blog! Love all the eggy comments as well π I get double yolkers frequently from one of my ladies. I’ve always suspected WhoDat with DatAss (named for spectacular fluffy rear, all the other ladies are jealous) but who knows?
During your research, did you find out why they toss the doubles? Whenever I sell or gift my eggs, everyone is super egg-cited about the doubles. Learn something new everyday π Thanks for the great post!
-Sammi
Alex Shapiro said,
December 30, 2014 @ 10:19 am
I love your hen names, Sammi! Nope, I’ve looked around and still haven’t learned why doubles are rejected in the commercial world. I agree with you, it’s a treat to eat them, assuming one especially enjoys a good yolk π
Alex Shapiro said,
December 30, 2014 @ 10:24 am
I wrote the sellers of my carton of eggs, National Food Corporation, to share my experience (and, this post, if they wanted a laugh). They wrote back the neggst day:
Alex,
Very entertaining blog post and how lucky to get 10 double yolks in 1 carton! You are lucky! I wish I could promise that it will happen every time, but a dozen double yolks in one carton is very unusual. I can promise that your Naturally Nested eggs are laid by hens that are never treated with steroids, stimulants or hormones.
Here is some information from the Eggcyclopedia on how a Yolk is formed…
http://www.incredibleegg.org/egg-facts/eggcyclopedia/f/formation
I am going to write them back, and see if they can tell me why they don’t normally include double-yolkers. The investigation continues….!
Alex Shapiro said,
December 30, 2014 @ 10:24 am
I emailed the sellers of my carton of eggs, National Food Corporation, to share my experience (and, this post, if they wanted a laugh). They wrote back the neggst day:
=====
Alex,
Very entertaining blog post and how lucky to get 10 double yolks in 1 carton! You are lucky! I wish I could promise that it will happen every time, but a dozen double yolks in one carton is very unusual. I can promise that your Naturally Nested eggs are laid by hens that are never treated with steroids, stimulants or hormones.
Here is some information from the Eggcyclopedia on how a Yolk is formed…
http://www.incredibleegg.org/egg-facts/eggcyclopedia/f/formation
=====
I am going to write them back, and see if they can tell me why they don’t normally include double-yolkers. The investigation continues….!
Tim said,
December 30, 2014 @ 3:40 pm
When I saw the hint of what was to come on the marker-made-tally on your egg carton, I couldn’t believe what was to come. I’m glad you documented the experience…I’m glad they included the eggs rather than discarding them, and I hope they reply saying why they are discarded. My theory is because some customers want eggs for the egg white, not the yolk (the yolk has more cholesterol) and a customer might feel ripped off for not getting as much white in a twinned egg.
Kelly said,
January 9, 2015 @ 2:34 pm
Applause! NIce to have a laugh at the end of the day. I’ve never seen a double egg in my own kitchen, so that would blow me away too. Thanks for lightening my Friday.
Alex Shapiro said,
January 9, 2015 @ 9:28 pm
Delighted, Kelly!
Paul H. Muller said,
January 12, 2015 @ 12:53 pm
Ya shoulda bought lottery tickets instead of eggs…
Alex Shapiro said,
January 12, 2015 @ 1:05 pm
Eggactly, Paul.
Lamont Roth said,
July 26, 2015 @ 9:12 am
I recently bought a cartoon of eggs in which all 12 eggs were double yolkers. I was almost afraid to eat them by my wife told me it was ok. I’m pretty sure a packer did this on purpose. All twelve eggs were very long in shape it once I started breaking them, I could tell all 12 were going to be double yolkers.
Linda K Sayre said,
October 11, 2015 @ 4:07 am
Would you believe that your eggsperience brought back a similar eggisode?? I frequently buy large eggs from Discount Drug Mart on Cleveland Avenue in North Canton, Ohio. I believe only 2 of the carton were not twosies!! I know I have taken pics & must dig thru my CDs for proof, but I remember cackling about this & bragging to my daughter (I only have 1-daughter, that is). Ha!! I remember thinking: what are the odds?? The reason I found your blog was bc I was becoming suspicious bc the size of each egg (carton purchased at Giant Eagle in Green with a coupon for 75 cents
off) was so small in the carton (last carton I bought from
Giant Eagle in Green raised my suspicions too). I’m finding
that they weigh eggs by the dozen now? I wonder if I bought
eggstra-large eggies bc they were on sale?? Possibly!! & I wonder if workers get to take home the twinsies & 1 carton got scrambled in with the other cartons?? & it weighed too much for eggstra-large, but 2 smaller eggs fit the beak (oops- bill)?? Ha!! Thanks for your blog!! I, too, am very good at amusing myself – thanks on the enlightenment!! My day is starting sunny-side up!!
Rita Donovan-Roth said,
February 11, 2016 @ 6:55 pm
Actually I get them often, as a matter of fact I got twins 11 out of 12 and was so excited, but never ever knew how rare this is!!!!!!! They were jumbo bought at Albertsons!!!!! Rita Donovan/Roth
Cheryl McDonald said,
May 30, 2016 @ 10:08 am
They may be rare in retail sales, but not as rare when bought directly from the small producer. I grew up getting eggs from an farmer who happened to have quite a few hens that produced double yolk eggs. My mom bought them all when he had them. His hens had produced various size eggs depending upon the seasons and the hens age.
We all loved dipping toast in the extra egg yolk, Yum.
Alex Shapiro said,
May 30, 2016 @ 12:04 pm
That’s right, Cheryl! These, of course, were store bought. Since I wrote this post, my husband acquired 25 hens to add to his organic farm, and we come across double-yolkers once in a while– always a fun discovery!
Alex Shapiro said,
May 30, 2016 @ 12:09 pm
Thanks for this cute comment, Linda!
Traci said,
March 16, 2017 @ 9:00 am
I just got a dozen jumbo eggs from the Giant Eagle brand, I buy them every week. I just fininshed my lunch and I cracked three of those eggs. All were double yolks. And I can’t wait to see what I get tomorrow! π