Yes they certainly do. They love them. I myself have had one. It was quite disgusting. However I was very drunk and so able to proceed and finish it.
Yes, eggs are a common staple in Japanese cuisine. They are used in various dishes such as tamagoyaki (Japanese rolled omelette), ramen, donburi (rice bowls), and as toppings in sushi. Eggs are also often included in breakfast dishes and bento boxes.
Eggs never come out of eggs--what are you talking about? The purpose of an egg is to protect something soft that is not an egg, so that wouldn't even make any sense. Gently, gently... This may be English as a second language manglish and a confusion with semantics and terminology and thinking hatch needs a noun and getting mixed up with eggs, chickens and hens. I think what is meant is: why the eggs you buy, laid by hens, don't hatch when you take them home. If they are battery cage eggs, then they aren't fertilised. Hens/chooks lay eggs whether or not they are mating with roosters. If you are actually buying eggs in a free range environment that has roosters or have your own hens and rooster and the eggs are fertilised, they won't develop unless a chook becomes broody and commits to sitting on them and keeping them at a constant temperature, apart from quick trips for water. The most productive hens have had broodiness bred out of them because while they are sitting on the eggs, they don"t lay any more eggs for some time. but classic old breeds still behave like real, motherly chooks. A lot of people keep little broody bantams to hatch their other chooks' eggs. Personally, I prefer to keep my splenetic rage for people who eat or hunt whales - someone who may be speaking in a second, new language, who genuinely doesn't know the reason why eggs bought don't hatch and may be quite young is deserving of a little more compassion, as indeed, are the whales.
"Kain tayo" means "let's eat" in Filipino. In other major dialects in the Philippines, it can be translated as follows: Cebuano: "Kaon ta" Ilocano: "Kumain tayo" Waray: "Kaon ta" Hiligaynon: "Kaon ta" Kapampangan: "Me kari tayu" Bicolano: "Makan kita" Pangasinense: "Mangan tayo" Maranao: "Taramu sa ko"
Before the Spaniards colonized the Philippines, the natives are quite literate and they have their own alphabet what is now known as "Baybayin" (see link). And yet when the Spaniards landed, they called the natives "Indio" meaning uncivilized. Because women don't wear top-clothings. But why would they. The Philippines being near the Equator is a very hot and humid country. And also because, the natives eats with their hands. This is still practice today. I myself eat with my hands when I'm home. How else can you commune with foods. The Filipinos revered their foods, because for us to eat, some fauna or some flora would give up their life. But today, because of refrigeration and mechanized farming, foods are no longer appreciated or revered. We take everything for granted. BTW, the name 'INDIO" is what is "INDIANS" to the NorthAmericans (USA).
miisti - he eats nmiisti - I eat kmiisti - you eat kmiistina- we eat (inclusive) nmiistina- we eat (exclusive) miistoak- they eat miistitok- let's eat [double vowel pronunciation, and the "st" makes a "z" sound]
Yes
Eggs don't eat.
You can eat eggs from any type of duck, it is illegal to in any way kill a wild mallard duck. You can only eat domesticated mallard ducks or their eggs.
Rats are known to eat a variety of foods, including eggs. However, they are more likely to go after fresh eggs rather than rotten ones. Rotten eggs may not appeal to rats due to their strong odor and potential health risks.
chickhen ,duck
Yes. Minks are opportunistic predators, and the eggs of birds are on the menu.
Your action may release unpleasant odors.
They are food for the bugs. If no bugs ate the eggs, just think how many there would be.
Only Chuck Norris can.
No.. a rotten egg isn't dangerous or unhealthy to eat, but i wouldn't recommend to eat more than one. although I normally wouldn't eat a rotten egg I did 48hrs ago eat what was euphemistically described as scrambled egg on an Emirates flight from Delhi (part of their award winning cuisine ??) and have now had 2 days of diarrhea and flatulence.... so don't eat rotten eggs or egg dishes on airlines
Yes, provided they are from a safe source and are thoroughly cooked.
Not really.