I believe all chickens come from hen chickens; therefore the eggs that result in chickens are the same, whether the meat is broiled or not.
The hen lays the egg. The term "hen" refers to a female chicken, and it is the female that is responsible for laying eggs.
Just the same as a laying hen. Broiler chickens are just called this because they are specifically raised for meat and are slaughtered at a certain weight. Most broilers reach the desired weight well before they are of egg laying age and therefore never get the chance to lay an egg, but they are quite capable of doing so.
For this you have to have a male chicken called a cock and he will fertilise the egg by having sex with the hen
Nothing. Hen, laying hen, broiler hen. The amount of feed they receive and the age they live to is about the only difference. The laying hen will live to produce eggs and the broiler hen will eat well until she reaches optimal weight and be processed into meat.
eggs don't grow. they come from a chicken (hen) or if your talking about a different egg such as a goose egg its the same thing. its impossible ''TO GROW"" a egg
Chicken are not really born. Unlike mammals, chickens are hatched from the egg laid by the hen or female chicken. The hen lays a fertilized egg in a nest and if that egg is incubated for 21 days a chick will emerge from the shell.
In a literal sense, the chicken. Without the hen, the egg could not be formed nor laid. Therefore, the hen must come first. The question that comes soon after is "Then how was the hen born?" The fact of the matter is chickens were not born, they evolved from other creatures; the chicken has been "in the making" for millions of years. So, in a technical sense, the egg came before the hen; the only thing that came before the chicken was non-chickens, therefore the mutations/combinations had to have occurred inside the egg which gave birth to the hen.
There is more chance of egg because it is a cell. ________________ The way that you have asked the question leads necessarily to the conclusion that the hen existed before its egg existed, if you are talking about an egg laid by the hen. It leads necessarily to the conclusion that the egg existed first if you are talking about the egg from which this hen developed. You have only to clarify which egg you are talking about, and the conclusion becomes unambiguous. This is different from the classic "Which came first, the chicken or the egg?"
"Which came first, the chicken or the egg?" is a famous riddle that has no answer.
A chicken egg is fertilized when a rooster mates with a hen, transferring sperm to the hen's oviduct where the egg is formed. The sperm fertilizes the ovum (egg cell) within the oviduct, resulting in the formation of a zygote. The zygote then develops into an embryo within the egg as it travels down the oviduct and is eventually laid by the hen.
It depends on who is cooking and what seasoning's, spice's, methods they use.
It depends on whether there is a rooster around to fertilize the eggs. Broiler hens lay eggs that can grow into chicks just as typical egg-layers do - otherwise we wouldn't have broiler chicks to raise.