Eggs are sized by weight, and an extra large egg will weigh anywhere between 1 and 10 grams more than a large egg. Given that your recipe calls for 2 extra large eggs, that means a maximum difference in weight of 20 grams. There are slightly more than 28 grams in an ounce, so we're talking about a MAXIMUM difference of two thirds of an ounce, and a minimum difference of less than a tenth of an ounce of egg.
If there were four or more extra large eggs involved, I would use an additional egg, under this circumstance, I would just use the largest two eggs in the carton you can find and not worry about it.
2 jumbo and 1 large is approximately 194 gm. 3 extra large is about 186 gm. 2 Jumbo and a medium is closer at 187 gm
Eggs are graded by weight. 1 doz. jumbos equal 30 oz. 1 doz. extra large equal 27 oz. (large = 24 oz., medium = 21 oz., etc...) 4 extra large eggs = 3.6 jumbo eggs. (you may want to use 4 and reduce liquid a little somewhere else)
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Yes. Classification of eggs range as follows. Pee Wee Small Medium Large Extra large Jumbo Super Jumbo Double yolk This is not necessarily available in all countries or even areas but these sizes are listed in eggs producers charts around the world.
Jumbo, or Extra-Large eggs weigh 71-73g depending on the country of sale; large eggs weigh 63-73g, so you should use seven large eggs to approximate six jumbo eggs.
9 large eggs equals 7.2 extra large.
About 5.6 large eggs equal 8 small eggs
3 or 4 extra large eggs will about equal 5 large eggs.
Jumbo eggs typically weigh about 30 ounces per dozen, which means each individual jumbo egg weighs approximately 2.5 ounces. This size is larger than extra-large and large eggs, making them popular for recipes that require a substantial egg content.
two large eggs = 1 jumbo egg
4 jumbo is 280 grams. 5 EL eggs is 308 gm.4 EL and one small is 287 gm , that's as close as you'll get.
One-and-one-half small chicken eggs are the approx. equivalent of one large egg; three small eggs = one large egg.