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Where Do These Stores Get Their Eggs

Since eggs come in many colors are the store bought eggs painted white?

No theres different breed of chickens that lay different color of eggs.Some breeds lay brown,some lay light green,then the standard chicken lays white....

Where do these stores get their eggs?

or better yet if you could tell me whether or not they abuse their egg laying hens? but where they get them is fine too, and i can find out on my own.
the stores:
H-E-B (i think they abuse their hens/Chickens but that article mightve been outdated)
Randalls
Kroger
thanks very much!

Can my pet store bought fish have babies?

Yes, as long as you have a male and a female they could concievably make babies. It's hard to tell gender unless they are ready to breed. Males will get white bumps (called "breeding tubercles") on their gill cover ("opercle") making them easy to spot. Apparently it drives the lady goldfish crazy *wink*. the breeding tubercles can look very much like ick, but they are just on the head and ick will be all over the fish.

What stores sell the Brach's Hide & Seek Easter Eggs? The ones with the hard outer shell & marshmallow inside?

I don't know where you live, but if you are near a Meijer's store, they carry them.

What does it mean if an egg has 2 yolks in it?

Good luck to you!
Double-yolked eggs are reasonably common for ducks and chickens, despite the fact that we so rarely see them in stores. It is estimated that 1 in 1,000 eggs (out of 50 billion produced annually in the US) have double yolks. Eggs increase in size as the number of yolks increases, but most of them are caught by "candling," or holding the egg up to a light source to reveal a shadow of what is inside the shell, and used for other egg products instead of being mixed in with single-yolks. Stores that do offer the eggs usually have one local source for them. The chickens, ducks and other birds that lay them have a genetic tendency to produce the eggs, so if a farm is stocked with such birds, most of their eggs with have double yolks. The eggs are popular with anyone who likes yolks and are also believed to be good luck by many.
Far less common are multiple yolk eggs, including triples and quadruples, like the one pictured above. Apparently, the greatest number of yolks found in one egg was nine!
If you can't find any multiple-yolk eggs in your neck of the woods, you can always separate one egg, add the yolk to another, and save the white for later.
http://www.slashfood.com/2007/01/04/mult...

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