Ate Duck Eggs
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Ate Duck Eggs
Hi all, I have tested sensitive to eggs on my enterolab tests 2 years ago. I recently asked Tex if an egg allergy applied to all eggs as I have some ducks that are laying like crazy and wondered if I would be OK eating them. The bottom line was just to try, so I got brave and had one for breakfast Saturday and Sunday. I have not had a reaction and am thinking I can probably eat these. I won't eat them everyday, but spread it out so I don't create a problem. I don't know if this info will help anyone else, but I'm very encouraged that I might be able to use these as part of my diet.
JoAnn
JoAnn
Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway. John Wayne
Awesome! Thanks for volunteering for such "risky" research, and reporting the results. But most of all, I'm happy that the project was a success. 
Nice going,
Tex
Nice going,
Tex
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
Good one Joe
They tasted just like chicken eggs and I loved every bite! It's been so long and I've missed them so much. Just a funny side story, a salesman came to our door trying to sell my husband some pest control product. Before he could finish his shpeel, our ducks came waddling around the corner along with some of our hens eating every bug in sight. My husband pointed out that we have a pretty good crew that manages our place and that we have very few pest problems. (Other than salesmen!) Hope you're feeling better today, JoAnn
Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway. John Wayne
JoAnn,
When I met with Dr. Fine a few years ago we talked about how some people can tolerate milk protein from goats and sheep and not cows. He said the casein was different and that it's true that some people do fine with casein from smaller animals (although he doesn't recommend doing this). I guess the same would be true for eggs/albumen. Glad you got to enjoy the eggs - it can open up a whole new world for you
Mary Beth
When I met with Dr. Fine a few years ago we talked about how some people can tolerate milk protein from goats and sheep and not cows. He said the casein was different and that it's true that some people do fine with casein from smaller animals (although he doesn't recommend doing this). I guess the same would be true for eggs/albumen. Glad you got to enjoy the eggs - it can open up a whole new world for you
Mary Beth
"If you believe it will work out, you'll see opportunities. If you believe it won't you will see obstacles." - Dr. Wayne Dyer
Ant, my egg test was 13 I think, so you're better off than me.
Gloria, I hope they keep laying, too. My hens have all but quit because of shorter days and moulting. I'm thinking about trying their eggs this spring since they are fresh and see what happens.
Mary Beth, very interesting information about the casein. That might be my next big experiment to try goat cheese. I think I'll wait till spring when I'm extra sure about my healing process. We have sheep right now, but who knows, if I can eat goat cheese I might have to buy a goat
JoAnn
Gloria, I hope they keep laying, too. My hens have all but quit because of shorter days and moulting. I'm thinking about trying their eggs this spring since they are fresh and see what happens.
Mary Beth, very interesting information about the casein. That might be my next big experiment to try goat cheese. I think I'll wait till spring when I'm extra sure about my healing process. We have sheep right now, but who knows, if I can eat goat cheese I might have to buy a goat
Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway. John Wayne
- MBombardier
- Rockhopper Penguin

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- Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2010 10:44 am
- Location: Vancouver, WA
I couldn't imagine going without eggs. I am so glad you did well with the duck eggs, JoAnn!! Are your duck eggs green?
I'd love to have chickens again, like I did on our farm in Missouri when I was a teenager. For years I cracked eggs into a bowl before putting them into whatever I was going to use them for because on the farm the chickens had the run of the place so we didn't always know how fresh the eggs we found were. There were times when my mother would slip half-formed chicks into the garbage disposal instead of the frying pan or the mixing bowl...
If you buy a goat, I've been told that Nubians give the best milk.
I'd love to have chickens again, like I did on our farm in Missouri when I was a teenager. For years I cracked eggs into a bowl before putting them into whatever I was going to use them for because on the farm the chickens had the run of the place so we didn't always know how fresh the eggs we found were. There were times when my mother would slip half-formed chicks into the garbage disposal instead of the frying pan or the mixing bowl...
If you buy a goat, I've been told that Nubians give the best milk.
Marliss Bombardier
Dum spiro, spero -- While I breathe, I hope
Psoriasis - the dark ages
Hashimoto's Thyroiditis - Dec 2001
Collagenous Colitis - Sept 2010
Granuloma Annulare - June 2011
Dum spiro, spero -- While I breathe, I hope
Psoriasis - the dark ages
Hashimoto's Thyroiditis - Dec 2001
Collagenous Colitis - Sept 2010
Granuloma Annulare - June 2011
-
Linda in BC
- Rockhopper Penguin

- Posts: 801
- Joined: Mon Apr 19, 2010 9:39 am
- Location: Creston British Columbia
That is great news, JoAnn!
(these are eggs by the way
)
I had my first duck agg, given to me by a neighbor, last year. I was amazed at how they tasted just like chicken eggs! Hope the ducks keep laying. Giving them a light in their coop can keep egg production up, I have heard, if the decline is because of the shorter days (but won't help if it's because they are moulting.)
I was reading some older posts tonight on eggs (I read the one about the gal putting her chickens on soy-free feed .. she was feeding them hamburger, amongst other things, and they loved it ! It's in the multiple intolerances forum, I think.) Anyhow it seemed to come up a couple of times that some people were only alllergic to the egg white (albumen) which is where most of the protein is apparently. I had to stop eating eggs myself about a month ago , and am just now thinking about trying to figure out exactly which part of the egg (if it is only one part) I am reacting to. On Sunday night DH made salmonwith a lovely hollandaise sauce (it uses only the yolk) and I was so pleased that I didn't seem to react. So maybe for me , it is just he whites, too. Any thoughts/experiences with this?
Linda
(these are eggs by the way I had my first duck agg, given to me by a neighbor, last year. I was amazed at how they tasted just like chicken eggs! Hope the ducks keep laying. Giving them a light in their coop can keep egg production up, I have heard, if the decline is because of the shorter days (but won't help if it's because they are moulting.)
I was reading some older posts tonight on eggs (I read the one about the gal putting her chickens on soy-free feed .. she was feeding them hamburger, amongst other things, and they loved it ! It's in the multiple intolerances forum, I think.) Anyhow it seemed to come up a couple of times that some people were only alllergic to the egg white (albumen) which is where most of the protein is apparently. I had to stop eating eggs myself about a month ago , and am just now thinking about trying to figure out exactly which part of the egg (if it is only one part) I am reacting to. On Sunday night DH made salmonwith a lovely hollandaise sauce (it uses only the yolk) and I was so pleased that I didn't seem to react. So maybe for me , it is just he whites, too. Any thoughts/experiences with this?
Linda
"Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible."
The 13th Dali Lama
The 13th Dali Lama
Thanks for all your fun comments and the "egg" dance Linda. My ducks are Pekin ducks, the big white kind and they are the clowns around our place, especially when they go running through the irrigation water honking (they should be quacking but sounds like honking) and circling around each other. They lay large white eggs and I used them a lot in baking in the past. We let our ducks and chickens free range, but they come in at night to their shed and we lock them in to protect them from predators. They've usually laid their eggs by the time I let them out in the morning. We've had fox, raccoon, skunks, and even an owl get them in the past. We get our feed from the local feed store and it does not contain soy. I accidentally found this out while doing a seed project at school. The light idea is a good one Linda and even for warmth, although they seem to avoid it for heat as we've tried it in the past when the temperatures were low. I have one poor hen that is moulting so bad she looks like someone has plucked her. We've got a snow storm coming in tomorrow and I feel like I need to crochet her a little jacket tonight
JoAnn
JoAnn
Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway. John Wayne

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