Yes, of course they can. Eggs are used for all kinds of recipes. You can store open or cracked open eggs for a day or two in a refrigerator. Place the eggs in an air tight container for safety.
No, boiling doesn't change the shell.
No the volume of the egg shell doesn't
No the volume of the egg shell doesn't
A hard boiled egg is made of..... egg. It is simply a whole egg, in the shell that has been placed in boiling water. The heat causes the liquid egg inside the shell to become solid. The yolk of the egg becomes the yellow center, and the clear "white" of the egg becomes the white outer part of the boiled egg. Remove shell, add salt to taste, eat.
vinegar
Because in the boiled water the egg can only be heated to maximum 100 degree centigrade temperature while in crank shell the egg can be heated higher and higher since the crank shell is made of solid calcium which has no melting point.
Because a cooked egg is flat and fried in comparison to a boiled egg. A hard boiled egg has a hard shell and it is dry inside. With an ordinary egg it is soft inside and sensitive that's why.
To boil them yes, otherwise no I store them in the fridge in an unused egg carton marked "Boiled".
The shell of a boiled egg is the same strength as a raw egg. Since the egg has been boiled, if its shell is cracked no egg will run out, but the same force will crack the shell.
Yes. hard-boiled egg
When you peel a hard boiled egg you will first notice that after the shell is a white shell membrane, that is there to make sure the egg does not leak out of the pores. Next you will see the egg whites, this is albumen, a protein and water mix that is there to cushion the egg yolk and IF this were a fertilized egg, would provide water to the growing embryo.
Probably. Scrambled eggs are the same thing as hard boiled except hard boiled is in the shell and the yolk and white remain seperate.