🥘 Elevate your cooking game with Eggylicious – where convenience meets quality!
Eggylicious Whole Egg Powder is a premium dried protein powder made from fresh, domestic eggs. With a high protein content of 45%, this versatile ingredient is perfect for a variety of dishes, easy to store without refrigeration, and boasts a 12-month shelf life. Enjoy the authentic taste of eggs in your cooking while ensuring top quality and hygiene.
C**L
Best powdered eggs.
Best powdered eggs! Love it. I use in my protein shake or homemade cereal (chia ground flax cinnamon vanilla coconut milk)for extra protein
M**B
Inaccurate label
The eggs tasted good, but the information on the jar is inaccurate. Here is what a customer daid about the product:One-pound Eggylicious jar I'm now using is labeled with inaccurate mixing proportions. In fact the same misinformation is on this Amazon product page, above, in manufacturer's Q&A section: "One tablespoon of whole egg powder is equivalent to one whole egg." That's WRONG, and the manufacturer admits as much implicitly, in other label information. Read on:For one egg's worth, label calls for "1 Tbsp (15 g)." The Nutrition label also is based on a one-egg portion size of 15 grams powder. The one-pound jar contains 30 such 15g portions (about 30 eggs in dried form).Problem is in that "1 Tablespoon" claim. A US measuring tablespoon is one-half fluid ounce, about 15 milliliters (ml). 15 ml of water weighs 15g. 15 ml of powdered eggs does not weigh 15g, because the powder is much lighter than water. To get 15g for one egg, you need about THREE measuring tablespoons of the product I received.I weighed out two eggs' worth (30g) of powder for a recipe: it exactly filled a 3-fluid-ounce paper cup. So, each egg's worth (15g) is about 1.5 fl-oz or three tablespoons.And the manufacturer knows that, implicitly. 30 eggs' worth at 1.5 fl-oz per is 45 fluid ounces, almost a quart and a half. Which IS the size of the jar it's shipped in. Yet whoever wrote up the label instructions (and Q&A info above) didn't check that "one tablespoon" claim against these other facts. The label needs to change, recognizing that 15g (one egg worth) is a much larger volume than "1 Tbsp."
B**C
Just what I needed to stretch my budget.
Works well as a complement to my breakfast regiment in preparing low carb recipes.
K**T
Makes great protein shakes!!
LOVE this dried whole egg powder. I use it to make my own vanilla meal replacement shakes.. I use powdered eggs, filtered water , half and half cream , salt, vanilla and some sweetener then put it in my blender. Delicious!!! It's like drinking melted vanilla ice cream.Plus these eggs DON'T contain that weird aluminum stuff that other powdered eggs have in it. I don't understand WHY a manufacturer would put aluminum in powdered eggs.
L**N
it's egg
I made scrambled eggs to put in my dogs food this morning. Just egg and water. I sprayed a microwave mug with oil spray. 2 T of the egg powder and 3 T of water. Needed a little more water so dribbled in a little more. Mixed it up really well. Microwaved it forabout 20 seconds. It puffed up so I took a fork and mixed up the left over liquid and microwaved another 10 or so seconds. It puffed up high just like an egg from the fridge. Mashed up and stirred the huge egg puff until it was the size I wanted in for scrambled eggs. No weird smell and the taste was great! It tasted like an egg because it is egg. Just egg. No additional ingredients to stretch ur mimic egg. The way I see it...I am saving money because the cost of fresh eggs is criminal. I'm going to order another container to put away. The best used by date is November 2025. No problem with that . I will be using for any application other than over easy for obvious reasons. Lol. Fantastic purchase! Super Highly Recommend!!!!
K**L
Good
Good stuff
M**R
Good product, performs as promised; directions about volume measure are wrong
Dried whole eggs are handy if you use eggs just occasionally. They keep much longer than fresh, and they cook up like fresh eggs. (Except in recipes separating whites and yolks!)I've used a few brands. This is a good-quality example.Quirk: One-pound Eggylicious jar I'm now using is labeled with inaccurate mixing proportions. In fact the same misinformation is on this Amazon product page, above, in manufacturer's Q&A section: "One tablespoon of whole egg powder is equivalent to one whole egg." That's WRONG, and the manufacturer admits as much implicitly, in other label information. Read on:For one egg's worth, label calls for "1 Tbsp (15 g)." The Nutrition label also is based on a one-egg portion size of 15 grams powder. The one-pound jar contains 30 such 15g portions (about 30 eggs in dried form).Problem is in that "1 Tablespoon" claim. A US measuring tablespoon is one-half fluid ounce, about 15 milliliters (ml). 15 ml of water weighs 15g. 15 ml of powdered eggs does not weigh 15g, because the powder is much lighter than water. To get 15g for one egg, you need about THREE measuring tablespoons of the product I received.I weighed out two eggs' worth (30g) of powder for a recipe: it exactly filled a 3-fluid-ounce paper cup. So, each egg's worth (15g) is about 1.5 fl-oz or three tablespoons.And the manufacturer knows that, implicitly. 30 eggs' worth at 1.5 fl-oz per is 45 fluid ounces, almost a quart and a half. Which IS the size of the jar it's shipped in. Yet whoever wrote up the label instructions (and Q&A info above) didn't check that "one tablespoon" claim against these other facts. The label needs to change, recognizing that 15g (one egg worth) is a much larger volume than "1 Tbsp."A cooking tip, with any powdered whole eggs: To use reconstituted liquid eggs, mix the powder with water in advance and let sit 10-20 minutes before using. It needs time to fully integrate (the mixture also thickens slightly). I find that one egg's worth (15 grams) needs around 2 fl oz (55-60 ml) water to yield a consistency like fresh eggs.For baking, pancakes, etc., with dry ingredients, it's simpler just to mix the powder with those, sifting if needed to eliminate lumps.
S**Q
Do Not Use for eggs substitute.
I bought this to use as a substitute for baking. I baked a cake made from scratch, this product did not work. I following the instructions exactly and my cake came out overtake. The center would not get done so I baked it longer. I have bake this cake for years and never had a problem with it. I feel it was the substitute for the eggs. I would not recommend using this.
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