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Where to get unlaid chicken eggs?

Does anyone know where to get unlaid chicken eggs? I've been trying farms but not very successful.

Public Comments

  1. You have to get the whole chicken. Have fun with that.
  2. UNlaid??? Um...unlaid means there is no egg. A hen has to lay an egg for there to even be an egg. Unless you mean you want a hen that is about to lay, and she hasnt yet. Hence the reason you have been unsuccessful in finding them.
  3. Send me $19.95, and I guarantee I'll send you a dozen by express mail.
  4. Do you mean unlaid or unfertilized? I would imagine unlaid eggs would be difficult to get out of the chicken. But, I don't know.
  5. I don't think it's possible. It comes out of the chicken whole. I would love to be a fly on the wall to hear what was said about you after you left.
  6. the nature of poultry processing has changed in this country, now all the insides of the bird (including any eggs) are ripped out with a steel hook and sold as byproducts. you need to go to an asian market and ask for a live chicken or find someone who kills their own poultry. just out of curiosity... why unlaid? i know only one recipe for unlaid eggs and it is really obscure, from mindanao in the philipines message me i you feel like answering
  7. you might try a chicken slaughtering place, see if they got any old hens that have stopped laying eggs, these are the ones you get the "unlaid eggs" from. good luck
  8. Unlaid....hummm, well you would have to kill a chicken and dissect her to get it out before it was laid. The action of laying an egg is pushing it out. So unless you meant something else it would be impossible to get with out the sacrifice of the hen.
  9. You must ask the chicken, very nicely!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  10. Unlaid eggs can only be found inside the chicken. I believe you mean unfertilized eggs?
  11. Any Italian butchers. They refer to unborn eggs. When I buy the chickens they cut them in half lengthways and it's quite fascinating to see the various sizes of egg yolks inside the chicken. Why do I do this? Well you see there is this chicken soup that we make and we put the unborn eggs into the soup. Little rounds of egg yolks. {I know separate the egg from the albumin and use the yolk - but you see with the unborn egg the albumin hasn't formed yet and it won't have a white covering when cooked} I wouldn't think you could buy them at a farm. The butchers buy laying chickens to get the unborn eggs. The're not cheap. But, for special occasions, they are worth it. Wedding breakfasts after mass and Christenings.
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