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I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg nog :-) a few raw

eggs every day, I was thinking about just using the yolks as aren't the whites

difficult to digest? My question is what do I do with the whites? With the

trouble to get free range I don't want to waste them. Any suggestions?

Mrs. Siemens

field Christian Fellowship

Helpmeet to , mommy to Zachary and Lydia

" For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto

salvation.... "

-Romans 1:16a-

---------------------------------

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One thing I do with whites is substitute 2 egg whites for 1 whole egg when

baking. It usually doesn't make much difference in the final product.

Irene

At 04:42 PM 4/1/2005, you wrote:

>I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg nog :-) a few

>raw eggs every day, I was thinking about just using the yolks as aren't

>the whites difficult to digest? My question is what do I do with the

>whites? With the trouble to get free range I don't want to waste them. Any

>suggestions?

>

>

>Mrs. Siemens

>field Christian Fellowship

>

>Helpmeet to , mommy to Zachary and Lydia

>

> " For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God

>unto salvation.... "

>-Romans 1:16a-

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>---------------------------------

>Post your free ad now! Canada Personals

>

>

>

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--- Siemens <amandasiemens@...> wrote:

> I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg nog :-) a few raw

eggs every

> day, I was thinking about just using the yolks as aren't the whites difficult

to

> digest? My question is what do I do with the whites? With the trouble to get

free range

> I don't want to waste them. Any suggestions?

I believe egg whites are a problem only when eaten by themselves, i.e. without

the yolks.

A lot of people who think they have allergies to egg are actually allergic to

the whites

and not the yolk.

Some are under the impression that eating the whites and not the yolk will help

reduce

their cholesterol numbers.

Anyhow, if you are making an egg nog using raw eggs, it shouldn't be a problem

if you put

the entire egg into it (unless you are allergic to egg whites).

HTH

P.S. Egg yolks should not be given to infants - so if you are preparing the egg

nog for

your daughter, use only the yolks.

P.P.S. I hate to say it, but you don't want to use too many egg whites in any

kind of

prepration - since they are known to bring on allergies.

That's the way allergies are - they strike out of the blue, stay with you for

years and

then disappear as mysteriously as they came.

I used to love sea-food a lot, esp. shrimp - and one fine day, I got a severe

allergic

reaction to it and haven't been able to eat shrimp since then.

I guess that's nature's way of telling us that too much of a good thing isn't

good :o)

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> > I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg nog :-

) a few raw eggs every

> > day, I was thinking about just using the yolks as aren't the

whites difficult to

> > digest? My question is what do I do with the whites? With the

trouble to get free range

> > I don't want to waste them. Any suggestions?

>

> I believe egg whites are a problem only when eaten by themselves,

i.e. without the yolks.

Have you read Mercola's latest comment on egg whites? See below:

" Important Update on Eating Raw Eggs

By Dr. ph Mercola

Well folks, it is time for a major update on my recommendations for

eating raw eggs. First, before I review the update, I want to dispel

the common myth that raw eggs are bad for you. Most people fear them

because of the risk for salmonella contamination. If you are still

concerned about this please read my earlier article on raw eggs.

As part of that article I had stated that one should never consume

raw egg white alone without the yolks, as a component in them called

avidin binds to the B-vitamin biotin, potentially creating a

deficiency in your body. However, my position shifted when one

consumed whole raw eggs, both the yolk and the white together.

One of my raw food mentors convinced me that there was more than

enough biotin in raw egg yolks to compensate for this problem, and I

revised my previous recommendation to say that eating whole raw eggs

would not pose a problem. This idea made sense to me as many wild

animals consume raw eggs with no apparent problems.

However, recently a subscriber, Dr. Sharma, PhD, who is a biochemist

with Bayer, contacted me about this issue. His investigation into

the matter revealed that there is not enough biotin in an egg yolk

to bind to all the avidin present in the raw whites. He found that

5.7 grams of biotin are required to neutralize all the avidin found

in the raw whites of an average-sized egg. There are only about 25

micrograms -- or 25 millionths of a gram -- of biotin in an average

egg yolk.

This is obviously not nearly enough to do the job. For this very

reason, controlled diets of only raw egg whites lead to severe

biotin deficiency.

New Egg White Recommendations

So is this the 'end' for the healthy consumption of raw egg whites?

If you naturally tend to be biotin deficient or are pregnant then

the answer is yes. However, raw egg whites (the white 'Yin' to the

yolk's 'Yang') are part of the important combined nutritional

balance of the egg.

The nutritional breakdown of the egg white is rather impressive.

With 9.8 grams of varied protein, high riboflavin, magnesium and

potassium, plus a whopping 25 percent the daily value of selenium,

there are options to have your white and eat it too! If you decide

to eat whole raw eggs, here are my suggested options:

1. My primary new recommendation, and the one I now follow, is to

separate the yolks from the whites so you can cook the whites and

consume the yolks uncooked, or raw. The white can be cooked and

eaten on its own. Although cooking the white reduces the nutrient

quality and perhaps increases allergic sensitivities to some, the

avidin in the egg white breaks down when cooked to 100 degrees

Centigrade, therefore releasing the biotin back for your absorption

and virtually eliminating any risk of biotin deficiency.

2. Supplement with biotin. Safe and adequate recommendations for

biotin use are about 30 to 300 micrograms per day in adults, and 10

to 30 micrograms per day for infants and children. Typical

therapeutic doses are anywhere between 100 micrograms and 16

milligrams per day.

Studies have shown daily doses as high as 100 milligrams caused no

adverse effects in otherwise healthy individuals. No studies to date

have been done using intakes anywhere near 5.7 grams, but for those

who are interested Allergy Research Group has a 5,000-mg biotin

capsule, and, depending on your overall egg consumption, there's

also an 8,000-mg capsule by Thorne. You would theoretically need

about 5,000 mg of biotin per egg white to 'neutralize' the avidin in

the average large egg.

You can also get limited amounts of biotin from your food. Animal

livers are by far the richest sources.

3. Don't eat raw egg whites every day. Allow your biotin reserves to

rebuild and eat only raw yolks or an alternative breakfast.

4. Eat yolks one day then whites the next. Remember that the biotin

loss occurs in your digestive tract when the two molecules bond

together before it is even absorbed. Eating the yolk and the white

separately will greatly reduce the problem.

5. Keep your intestinal flora healthy. Probiotics should always be

used. The GI track is long and has evolved different biotin

strategies at different locations. A 1989 study showed quality

biotin absorbed most effectively at the upper bowel. Keeping this

region healthy and functioning optimally with plenty of good

bacteria is a must to speed up the nutrient uptake of high-quality,

small molecules such as biotin versus the 'lumbering' avidin

at the start of digestion.

Additionally, a healthy lower bowel will produce limited biotin on

its own and absorption may even be possible.

Detection and Treatment of a Biotin Deficiency

If you have been consuming whole raw eggs like I have, you may be

concerned that you are now deficient in biotin. You need not worry

too much as it takes months to years of severely deficient biotin

intake to cause any noticeable symptoms, and these symptoms will

clear up quickly if you stop eating raw egg whites and take a biotin

supplement for a few weeks.

Common symptoms of biotin deficiency include:

* Brittle fingernails

* Thinning hair and/or loss of hair color

* A red, scaly rash around the eyes, nose and mouth

Less common symptoms of biotin deficiency include:

* Depression

* Lethargy

* Hallucinations

* Numbness and tingling in the hands and feet

A definitive diagnosis of biotin deficiency can be made if the

symptoms in question resolve by supplementing with biotin, or by

measuring and detecting a reduction in urinary excretion of biotin.

The Bottom Line

One of the problems with being on the leading edge of natural

medicine is that occasionally one will veer off course a bit, but

with time the direction always swings back to the truth. Many

readers have appreciated my openness to modifying my views based on

new information. This is in direct contrast to the conventional

medical model that can be quite dogmatic and rigid about considering

new data to modify their current beliefs.

When eating any part of an egg raw, I also recommend that you read my

guidelines on how to ensure that you are consuming fresh high-

quality eggs. "

--------------------------------------------------------------------

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Guest guest

> Message: 3

> Date: Fri, 1 Apr 2005 19:42:05 -0500 (EST)

> From: Siemens <amandasiemens@...>

> Subject: egg whites

>

> I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg nog :-) a

> few raw eggs every day, I was thinking about just using the yolks as

> aren't the whites difficult to digest? My question is what do I do

> with the whites? With the trouble to get free range I don't want to

> waste them. Any suggestions?

I understand that the raw egg whites tie up biotin.

What to do with them?

1. Make meringue

2. Use them in custards (along with some yolks so you get some yellow.)

3. Omelets

4. Find a Powter fan and trade your whites for their yolks.

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Guest guest

A little contradictory don't you think ::grin:: don't worry I know

what you meant :-)No I've never given baby egg whites.

>

> P.S. Egg yolks should not be given to infants - so if you are

preparing the egg nog for

> your daughter, use only the yolks.

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Guest guest

BEAUTIFUL! When I fry my eggs, I like the white cooked and the yolk

raw. So I can have my raw yolks and my cooked whites!!! ::does a happy

dance::

--- In , " filikara " <filippa91@y...>

wrote:

1. My primary new recommendation, and the one I now follow, is to

separate the yolks from the whites so you can cook the whites and

consume the yolks uncooked, or raw. The white can be cooked and

eaten on its own. Although cooking the white reduces the nutrient

quality and perhaps increases allergic sensitivities to some, the

avidin in the egg white breaks down when cooked to 100 degrees

Centigrade, therefore releasing the biotin back for your absorption

and virtually eliminating any risk of biotin deficiency.

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Guest guest

On Fri, 1 Apr 2005 19:42:05 -0500 (EST), Siemens

<amandasiemens@...> wrote:

>

> I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg nog :-) a few raw

> eggs every day, I was thinking about just using the yolks as aren't the

> whites difficult to digest? My question is what do I do with the whites?

> With the trouble to get free range I don't want to waste them. Any

> suggestions?

Spike your hair.

Chris

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Guest guest

I give my son raw yolks everyday & save up my whites to make

macaroons. Yummy treat for all of us & something he can even have

since they are gluten & dairy free!! :)

HTH,

> > > I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg

nog :-

> ) a few raw eggs every

> > > day, I was thinking about just using the yolks as aren't the

> whites difficult to

> > > digest? My question is what do I do with the whites? With the

> trouble to get free range

> > > I don't want to waste them. Any suggestions?

> >

> > I believe egg whites are a problem only when eaten by

themselves,

> i.e. without the yolks.

>

> Have you read Mercola's latest comment on egg whites? See below:

>

> " Important Update on Eating Raw Eggs

>

> By Dr. ph Mercola

>

> Well folks, it is time for a major update on my recommendations

for

> eating raw eggs. First, before I review the update, I want to

dispel

> the common myth that raw eggs are bad for you. Most people fear

them

> because of the risk for salmonella contamination. If you are still

> concerned about this please read my earlier article on raw eggs.

>

> As part of that article I had stated that one should never consume

> raw egg white alone without the yolks, as a component in them

called

> avidin binds to the B-vitamin biotin, potentially creating a

> deficiency in your body. However, my position shifted when one

> consumed whole raw eggs, both the yolk and the white together.

>

> One of my raw food mentors convinced me that there was more than

> enough biotin in raw egg yolks to compensate for this problem, and

I

> revised my previous recommendation to say that eating whole raw

eggs

> would not pose a problem. This idea made sense to me as many wild

> animals consume raw eggs with no apparent problems.

>

> However, recently a subscriber, Dr. Sharma, PhD, who is a

biochemist

> with Bayer, contacted me about this issue. His investigation into

> the matter revealed that there is not enough biotin in an egg yolk

> to bind to all the avidin present in the raw whites. He found that

> 5.7 grams of biotin are required to neutralize all the avidin

found

> in the raw whites of an average-sized egg. There are only about 25

> micrograms -- or 25 millionths of a gram -- of biotin in an

average

> egg yolk.

>

> This is obviously not nearly enough to do the job. For this very

> reason, controlled diets of only raw egg whites lead to severe

> biotin deficiency.

>

> New Egg White Recommendations

>

> So is this the 'end' for the healthy consumption of raw egg

whites?

> If you naturally tend to be biotin deficient or are pregnant then

> the answer is yes. However, raw egg whites (the white 'Yin' to the

> yolk's 'Yang') are part of the important combined nutritional

> balance of the egg.

>

> The nutritional breakdown of the egg white is rather impressive.

> With 9.8 grams of varied protein, high riboflavin, magnesium and

> potassium, plus a whopping 25 percent the daily value of selenium,

> there are options to have your white and eat it too! If you decide

> to eat whole raw eggs, here are my suggested options:

>

> 1. My primary new recommendation, and the one I now follow, is to

> separate the yolks from the whites so you can cook the whites and

> consume the yolks uncooked, or raw. The white can be cooked and

> eaten on its own. Although cooking the white reduces the nutrient

> quality and perhaps increases allergic sensitivities to some, the

> avidin in the egg white breaks down when cooked to 100 degrees

> Centigrade, therefore releasing the biotin back for your

absorption

> and virtually eliminating any risk of biotin deficiency.

>

> 2. Supplement with biotin. Safe and adequate recommendations for

> biotin use are about 30 to 300 micrograms per day in adults, and

10

> to 30 micrograms per day for infants and children. Typical

> therapeutic doses are anywhere between 100 micrograms and 16

> milligrams per day.

>

> Studies have shown daily doses as high as 100 milligrams caused no

> adverse effects in otherwise healthy individuals. No studies to

date

> have been done using intakes anywhere near 5.7 grams, but for

those

> who are interested Allergy Research Group has a 5,000-mg biotin

> capsule, and, depending on your overall egg consumption, there's

> also an 8,000-mg capsule by Thorne. You would theoretically need

> about 5,000 mg of biotin per egg white to 'neutralize' the avidin

in

> the average large egg.

>

> You can also get limited amounts of biotin from your food. Animal

> livers are by far the richest sources.

>

> 3. Don't eat raw egg whites every day. Allow your biotin reserves

to

> rebuild and eat only raw yolks or an alternative breakfast.

>

> 4. Eat yolks one day then whites the next. Remember that the

biotin

> loss occurs in your digestive tract when the two molecules bond

> together before it is even absorbed. Eating the yolk and the white

> separately will greatly reduce the problem.

>

> 5. Keep your intestinal flora healthy. Probiotics should always be

> used. The GI track is long and has evolved different biotin

> strategies at different locations. A 1989 study showed quality

> biotin absorbed most effectively at the upper bowel. Keeping this

> region healthy and functioning optimally with plenty of good

> bacteria is a must to speed up the nutrient uptake of high-

quality,

> small molecules such as biotin versus the 'lumbering' avidin

> at the start of digestion.

>

> Additionally, a healthy lower bowel will produce limited biotin on

> its own and absorption may even be possible.

>

> Detection and Treatment of a Biotin Deficiency

>

> If you have been consuming whole raw eggs like I have, you may be

> concerned that you are now deficient in biotin. You need not worry

> too much as it takes months to years of severely deficient biotin

> intake to cause any noticeable symptoms, and these symptoms will

> clear up quickly if you stop eating raw egg whites and take a

biotin

> supplement for a few weeks.

>

> Common symptoms of biotin deficiency include:

>

> * Brittle fingernails

> * Thinning hair and/or loss of hair color

> * A red, scaly rash around the eyes, nose and mouth

>

>

> Less common symptoms of biotin deficiency include:

>

> * Depression

> * Lethargy

> * Hallucinations

> * Numbness and tingling in the hands and feet

>

> A definitive diagnosis of biotin deficiency can be made if the

> symptoms in question resolve by supplementing with biotin, or by

> measuring and detecting a reduction in urinary excretion of biotin.

>

> The Bottom Line

>

> One of the problems with being on the leading edge of natural

> medicine is that occasionally one will veer off course a bit, but

> with time the direction always swings back to the truth. Many

> readers have appreciated my openness to modifying my views based

on

> new information. This is in direct contrast to the conventional

> medical model that can be quite dogmatic and rigid about

considering

> new data to modify their current beliefs.

>

> When eating any part of an egg raw, I also recommend that you read

my

> guidelines on how to ensure that you are consuming fresh high-

> quality eggs. "

> -------------------------------------------------------------------

-

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Guest guest

[] I am going to start eating (well drinking, can you say egg

nog :-) a few raw eggs every day, I was thinking about just using the

yolks as aren't the whites difficult to digest? My question is what do

I do with the whites? With the trouble to get free range I don't want

to waste them. Any suggestions?

[MAP] You shouldn't feel any worse about wasting the whites than

wasting the shells. Both are almost worthless nutritionally and serve

little more than support for the yolk, where 99.999+ % of the egg's

content resides. (Ignore Mercola's awkward and numerically misleading

defense of whites in his latest (cited in this thread) egg advice;

he's stuck in a conceptual rut there.)

Mike

SE Pennsylvania

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Guest guest

> Back to this yolk/whites question (sorry.) I assume that we're to gather

> from this study that egg whites have a toxic quality *only* when eaten

> alone.

The raw white has a number of anti-nutritive factors however it is consumed.

> By extension, isn't the study suggesting that eggs whites are, at the

> very least, okay when eaten along with their yolks?

I believe posted a link a while ago that states that the amount of

biotin (a necessary B vitamin) in the yolk even if it all gets bound is far from

enough to quench all the biotin binding factors in the egg white.

" 5.7 grams of biotin are required to neutralize all the avidin found in

the raw whites of an average-sized egg. There are only about 25 micrograms

-- or 25 millionths of a gram -- of biotin in an average egg yolk. "

http://www.mercola.com/2005/feb/9/raw_eggs.htm

Bruce

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  • 8 months later...

But AFAIK historically, not eating the whites is

a new development?

Certainly in the relatively recent past when I lived in Italy

they sold " Uova da bere " = eggs to drink, which they

did, right out of the shell, the whole thing.

Also I know that if I drink a milkshake with whole eggs

I feel better than if I make it with only yolks.

Now why would that be?

Take care,

Alice - violist & HSing mom to Alice (DS) born Thanksgiving Day 1995 :-)

Hopewell Junction, NY

http://users.bestweb.net/~castella

castella@...

Re: egg whites and pregnancy

KerryAnn-

>Has anyone looked into the issue of whether or not egg whites should be

>cooked during pregnancy due to the avidin binding to the biotin?

I'd say that egg whites should, as a general rule, ALWAYS be cooked,

regardless of pregnancy, and not just because of the avidin problem,

but because the whites contain trypsin inhibitors, meaning that

eating raw whites will inhibit protein digestion and absorption

generally. That's not to say an occasional exception will be any

kind of problem, but overall, yolks are best raw and whites are best

either discarded or cooked.

-

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Alice-

>But AFAIK historically, not eating the whites is

>a new development?

Not at all. It's quite traditional, and if you look at animals

eating eggs, the most common behaviours are eating the whole egg

including the shell and breaking into the egg and eating the yolk.

>Also I know that if I drink a milkshake with whole eggs

>I feel better than if I make it with only yolks.

>Now why would that be?

I have no idea. I could speculate, but I'd really need a lot more information.

-

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  • 3 weeks later...

>

> Has anyone's child ever gotten red cheeks from egg whites?

Egg white is a common childhood allergy.

> Why would their cheeks get red from them, are there phenols in egg

> whites?

No.

> Also, does anyone know if parsnips are a carb? I just found out last

> night that peas are carbs ( who knew!! )Well, I didn't.

Type " parsnip carbohydrate " into google. I just did, and this is the

first link

http://www.carbs-information.com/carb-vegetables/carbs-in-parsnip.htm

Dana

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