WATER GLASSING EGGS: PRESERVE YOUR EGGS FOR WINTER!
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- Опубліковано 20 чер 2024
- Do you know how to preserve your eggs?
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Water glassing is a long-standing historical method that is very easy and very effective! While there are several different water glassing mediums (the technical modern one being sodium silicate), here Carolyn shows you how to use the cheap and readily available hydrated lime (also known as pickling lime and slacked lime) to easily store your eggs for up to 2 years without refrigeration!
This is a historical food preservation method that has been used for centuries to keep eggs fresh.
You can find pickling lime here: amzn.to/2UFvHmG
Check out how they did 8 months later here.... • OLD FASHIONED EGG PRES...
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Please watch: "Preserving Extra Eggs!"
• HOW TO HANDLE FARM FRE...
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WELCOME! We're so glad you're here! Let's start growing, preserving & THRIVING! We are Josh and Carolyn Thomas. Together with our eleven children, we are The Homesteading Family where we’re living a self-sustainable life in beautiful North Idaho. Let us welcome you and show you a bit about us here: bit.ly/HFWelcomeVideo
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I am 85 years old, we did this when I was a child...if people lived on a ranch FAR from town, & without power or phone....their negative attitudes would be changed to thankfulness.....you did a great job young lady with class & style.
@White Rider , the kjv bible is the only solution to this fallen world. I live on a homestead and get the greatest riches out of it, because 1ST= IM A BIBLE BELIEVING, BIBLE OBEYING, SPIRIT FILLED DECIPLE OF JESUS CHRIST. WE MUST REPENT= STOP, THINK AND TURN FROM OUR WICKED WAYS.. THEN BELIEVE THE WHOLE BIBLE AND BELIEVE HE IS WHO HE SAYS HE IS.. THATS ONLY DONE IN A RELATIONSHIP, NOT RELIGION. TODAY IS THE DAY OF SALVATION.
Great comment!
@@Heseesyou I am a Christian myself BUT that has nothing to do with this video. MANY people of many religious backgrounds believe this is the end times. Trust me, it isn't (as much as I wish it were).
So I should not wash my fresh eggs at all?? Can I wipe the dirt off or NO???
Jeanette the, which I have a good time Wright.....Mmmm, I was wondering the same. Our hens will occasionally get poop on the eggs. I suppose those eggs would just have to be washed and used immediately, instead of stored. Most of the time, they are clean.
Am I the only American here who noticed that once we got away from the "Old Fashioned" way of doing things our health went to sh*t?
Yes! The additives, preservatives, etc. And kids are what was set before them.
Yup!! So sad
Yup! That's what they wanted. They as in the higher ups/ government.
Yeah now that everyone is living past 70 years we are all suffering from cancers and shit instead of kicking the bucket by 50 as God intended
Yes! I am mad that people moved from being self saficient life styles! I am trying to get back to that but I am missing the last piece that I was going to get before the outbrake. I wanted chickens and goats.
Five gallon buckets can end up causing some eggs to crack due to weight over time. Gallon buckets, jars or quart jars don't seem a issue. Great video, very pleasing to listen to, needed a reminder, you did well.
Yes! This happened to one of my buckets and all the eggs inside went bad 🤢 I think a 1-2 gallon container is about the max the eggs can handle.
I'm starting with a gallon. I can't lift heavy things.
@@kathryncolton4423ya. I'd rather do smaller batches.
120 is my guess.
I'm starting in a half gallon- we only have 4 chickens rn
Thank God for great teachers like yourself. Back to the basics 😂
Why would anyone thumb this down? It is so informative, and you couldn’t ask for a more pleasant person to demonstrate it.
Was just wondering this myself! Like, why would you NOT want to be able to preserve your food?
I bet it's because of the 2 minute plus before she even gets to doing it.
Cause people have nothing better to do👍
Because they think it's silly or too much work...THEY LAzy
They think eggs come from a store...haha
When using preserved eggs, always crack each egg into a separate container, then if good add to whatever you are preparing. That way you don't spoil the batch if you have a bad egg.
I do this with all our eggs, we have roosters.
Right. When using three or more eggs, always crack each egg into a bowl and then dump that egg in with the others.
This is also a good practice with any eggs, especially if you have young helpers in the kitchen. It makes it much easier to see if there are any bits of shell and also makes it easier to get them out.
@@kathyzoll6886 its just a clunp of cells.
When using ANY eggs, crack then separately
I love learning what and how our great grandparents survived without refrigeration
My grandma just used the big box that kept the wheat flour for this. Meaning, just bury your eggs in flour and you are done. No chemicals needed. We had a room set in the house where the temperature was lower than in the rest and the quantity of sunlight was kept at a minimum, that was the place where the flour and other ingredients were kept, and the eggs just went in the flour.
Reeeeally? Interesting
🤔
@@CleverGirlAAH I watched a video on a lot of different options including ashes. So far the water glassing looks the best to me. The one I will try when I move out to the property. The ash or mineral oil just did not sound appealing to me.
Interesting way to preserve things, but unfortunately mice, rats or other animals could still get the eggs that way
@@CHFG24 I agree, this is where petting a mouse killing machine brings joy 😂
Why am I watching this? I don't have chickens. I live in the middle of a city.
Watched the whole damn thing from start to finish.
🤣 I was watching soap making and somehow I got here and have sent it to three of my friends, it’s so interesting 😀
Same!🤣
Just in case?
Me too!
Quarantine life
* extra pearl of wisdom* “If you don’t have a lid for your croc to stop evaporation, add a layer of olive oil and then cover with a clean cloth.” 🤔 Genius dressed in work clothes... Thanks Carolyn!
Mmm..."crock"
What About Feces Contamination?
@@chesternichols1662 Wash your hands once in a while.
@@gravypatron I Guess it wasn't clear what I was saying,
If the eggs are not initially washed, could there be other contamination we should be concerned about. 🤔
@@chesternichols1662 if you take good care of your chickens and control internal parasites that should not be a problem. You should be able to to wipe your eggs with a dry cloth they will be safe. If you have poop covered eggs your birds have internal parasites. Wash those eggs under water but eat them now, do not water glass those eggs.
I like how you guys think "let the chicken be a chicken" its logical and straight to the point and I agree God put us on the planet and made us ambassadors of the realm and that is to respect and take care of the animals and the planet we call mother which is earth
I just thought I'd share a little of my experience with water-glassing. It does not appear I can upload a couple of pictures here, as an example, but I am just now using October 2022 eggs, here in Nove 2023. My observation is the shells are just a little more fragile and possibly a little thinner. They do not appear to be as tough as they were when I first put them into the lime water. I also noticed the yolks are not quite as bright and the whites appear a little thinner, but they still cook up without any difficulty. I use food-grade hydrated lime for my preservation. I have been water-glassing for 5 years now. Also, I have 10 dozen eggs per 5-gallon bucket; although I have found 8 doz seems to be an optimal fit with less loss of product. I have occasionally lost 1-4 eggs in any given bucket. I currently have 90-100 dozen in storage.
That's a lot of eggs! I am impressed! Thanks very much for the feedback.
You have NEVER waterglassed an egg because lime is NOT anything but lime. Waterglass is Sodium Silicate and is better and more expensive than lime. saw some at home depot for concrete sealer, also you can find crystals.
@@RRaucina 🤪😂😂😂
This lady is legit. My wife and I have succeeded in every tutorial that we've had the chance to try. Thank you for your hard work, from the Ozark mountain folk:)
Howdy Ozark neighbor!! There is an Ozark Homestead group now in Missouri-- we meet monthly in Texas Co. More info in Prepared Homestead UA-cam videos if you're interested
Think Arkansas is a good place to settle?
Do you know if it's the Type S hydrated Lime?
How long do they last ?
@@Stevenmartinez082 they say up to 2 yrs
Hydrated Lime is also called Calcium Hydroxide, just in case its not sold like that where you are.
Thank you !
(Tina here) Having made my own soap for several years, I really don't want to stick anything into any type of hydroxide solution, least of all food or my bare hands. Sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide are extremely caustic, why would calcium be any different? They are on the same part of the periodic table of elements so have nearly identical properties. Therefore, I don't know how hydrated lime = calcium hydroxide.
@@tomdixon7264 it’s in the fist paragraph of the wiki en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_hydroxide
I’m a chemist.
“In the same part of the table” is not quite accurate. Calcium ions carry a +2 charge and sodium and potassium ions only carry +1 charges. What that means is that the calcium ions “hold” onto the hydroxide ions more tightly than an equivalent amount of potassium or sodium hydroxide would. That means that overall calcium hydroxide is much less caustic than sodium or potassium hydroxides.
Just because something has a chemical name doesn’t mean its dangerous.
@@GucciCaligula OK thanks for the clarification. And yeah I get that everything in existence is pretty much a chemical. But still, if it's caustic, I don't feel comfortable with using it. I know how the other two types are, so if calcium hydroxide is "half" (correct me?) as caustic it's still somewhat nasty. Also, after looking it up myself, it even tells you NOT to use the construction grade stuff for home use, especially for food. Use ONLY the food grade, or pickling, lime.
@@tomdixon7264 again I think you’re letting a fear of terms distract you from what’s actually at issue which is overall safety. Caustic just means basic. Baking soda is caustic.
Also the “half as caustic” thing isn’t right either. There’s an annoying thing with chemistry and science in general where in order to answer a “why” question you need to go waaaayyy beyond the scope of the original question, or you need to oversimplify or tell a half truth (this is called hand waving) so you don’t spend all day explaining something simple.
The truth about how basic “caustic” a compound is depends on the pKB of the compound. This is a log scale measurement of how likely the compound is to dissociate in water (they can only “do” base things when dissociated) with higher numbers meaning less likely to dissociate.
The pKB of Sodium Hydroxide is about .2 the pKB of calcium hydroxide is about 2.4. And remember this is a log scale, so calcium hydroxide is 100x LESS basic than Sodium Hydroxide.
As for the use thing, yeah. The food grade really just talks about the purity, food grade means it got lab testing for its purity. Construction grade didn’t, it doesn’t mean that construction grade isn’t safe to use, it just means that no one checked.
Use something that you’d be comfortable with.
Having now embraced homesteading and truly understanding how important it is to be at one with nature, your videos are so, so important and such a true blessing.
You guide, help, make us laugh!
I feel very blessed to have found your channel!
My grandma would be very happy I've gone back to a better way of living
Thank you
I homesteaded in the '70s in Western WV. We would buy waterglass in the grocery store and mix 1 qt of it with 2 1/2 gallons of water in a 5-gallon crock and fill it with eggs like you using the extras during the spring and summer. I kept them in the cold cellar with a wooden lid and a brick on it to keep out mice ( one mouse spoils the whole batch). They would get us through the winter. One point was that the yolks would be flat and often break when you cracked the egg so they were no good for frying, OK scrambled with other ingredients, and just fine for cooking cornbread and stuff like that.
It was a good healthy life but you had to work every day all day just to survive! The city kids mostly washed out and back to mom and dad when the weather turned.
My grandmom still had her cold cellar in the 80's and swore by it.
Wow
@@mala3isity learning these skills can never harm you!
Were the yolks flat due to the 5-gallon container, or does this preservation method cause flat yolks in general?
@@louise7571 I think it's just age, they aren't bad they just are stored without refrigeration.Good luck!
I'm 73 and city born but my mom was a farm girl from Minnesota and told me about what they did with eggs and other food sources. I still miss her.
We never stop missing our mothers 😢 16 years gone and my heart still aches just to hear her voice or have a comforting hug from her. Eternal rest to all our heavenly mothers 🕯🙏🏼 🕯
@@lourdesbaby964 how tender-hearted you are. I love your comments abt your Mom. May God bless you.🤗
@@debracampbell9040 , AMEN
@@lourdesbaby964 , AMEN
@@judithbeers7598, thank you.
Wow! I'm 63 y.o. and this is 1st I've ever heard of this. AMAZING!...how much knowledge has been lost to us by mass farming & mechanization. But... 200 years ago I'd bet it was common knowledge. Thank you for this.
well just this evening I found out you can can potatoes, you can make your own tomato paste and you can can dry beans and now, you can save your eggs......I'm 65 and thought I knew thing or two...
@@leelaural now you know a few more and if you want you can continue to grow your knowledge. Everyone that keeps learning stays young.
E. M. I am 72 and this is the first time I have ever heard of this.
62 and never heard of water glassing! Great info and very inspirational!
@@peterstiff8988 and you are incredibly self-centered and rude for no intelligent reason...
Thank you for caring about the chickens 💜
This lady is teaching absolute gold.
I was able to store 162 eggs in my 5 gallon bucket with a 3 - 4" of head space. That is 13.5 dozen. Yay! \o/
Can you do this with a plastic bucket or do you have to use a glass container?
Would love to try this it seems worth it.I hope I can find the hydrated lime we have chickens this year .This is knowledge thanks.
That’s a haul.. good to know.
I was concerned about filling my 5 gallon bucket so that is good to know, thank you
@@patsyrichard7596 I found masons hydrated lime at Menards. 60# for less than $8. My Home Depot didn't know what I was talking about .
Keeping eggs viable for over 6 months is one thing but up to 2 years is absolutely incredible. My grandmother used to pickle eggs but I don't ever remember her using this technique.
Thank you and God Bless 🙏🏻
Raw eggs?
Pickled boiled and shelled eggs used to be sold in pubs and chippies (fish and chip shops).
I never ate one.
I'd be happy with just 8 months.
Okay. As wonderfully informative as this preservation method is, I feel like what blew my mind the most was the olive oil evaporation trick! How genius! It’s one of those things that I never would’ve thought of myself but as soon as I heard it, it makes perfect sense and I’m definitely going to use that idea!
What is the olive oil evaporation
Been doing this for years with great success
@@lovinfl07 she mentions using olive oil, if you don’t have an airtight container. The concept is, the oil will lay on top of the water solution, preventing the water from evaporating. Which would allow your eggs to eventually spoil, if the air gets to them.
Coronavirus lockdown got me learning so much!
This lady looks so warm and cozy.
Her life looks like my daily hopes ‘n dreams.
Peter Stiff - Why are you even watching this video? You can’t glass pizza rolls
Also called calcium hydroxide and slaked lime, hydrated lime is highly caustic and can burn skin and eyes. It is used in cement and mortar, and it can kill a number of lawn-inhabiting parasites, such as fleas. Farmers often use it on outlying lands to protect animals from parasites that can sicken or kill them. Because hydrated lime's use is restricted in some locations, check your area's regulations before using the product.
Makes me wish I was back living in Idaho...
I'll bet all these survival video channels are really growing since this covid19 outbreak hit the scene lol. I am so glad we have these channels though. They really mean so much to me. Also peeps hit my friends book up if u can, it's about kale, she just put it out I'm sharing it for her thx! www.amazon.com/Easy-Amazing-Health-Drink-Recipes-ebook/dp/B085N9M7ZM/ref=sr_1_fkmr1_1?keywords=simple%20amazing%20kale%20health%20drink%20recipes&qid=1585015632&sr=8-1-fkmr1&fbclid=IwAR3eMmFt85ktpzgmabnECsEbj6dbQUftLIJ1AoTxJDk_bK6zJKwwOUrRo04
Great video but if you live in New York or any major city get the Fuc# out.
I pioneered in the 60's with no power. I water glassed my eggs for years. They were great.
How long were they good?
With lime?
@Sandra Kisch How long did your eggs remain fresh? Do you still do this with your eggs? Thank you!
Lime is NOT waterglass! Sodium Silicate is waterglass. Wake up back to landers!
great video, was very shocked my chickens did not stop laying this winter for some reason. I followed your pickle recipe, and they came out better than the store thank you.
You must have very happy chickens😊
Thank you sister! Never heard of this!! Hard times may be coming where this will be an incredible blessing
She's definitely the Bob Ross of food preservation. I could literally just sit and listen to her for hours.
I was just thinking the same thing! She reminds me of Bob Ross. Takes something that seems a little daunting to me and makes it seem easy, and fun with a positive soothing yet informational tone! Love people like this!
Well said! 😆
First off, she reminded me of Miss Nancy from, Romper Room, because of her sweet demeanor. Bob Ross is another good comparison.😊
Phaandor Pertwee i hear ya,lol
Love Bob Ross
I did this with about 8 dozen eggs last October 2019. It's now March 2020. I'm still eating and baking with the eggs. They are fine.
Inkdraft.. do they taste any different?
So you can eat them straight, not just use them for cooking?
@@peterstiff8988 😂😂😂😂
Are they still good for frying and scrambled ect?
@@peterstiff8988 You dropped this L, simp.
Thank you for caring about their wellbeing. 💕
You got me when you said if God said...
Subscribed !!
The other thing that I want to mention is that in the old days people would have multiple buckets. When a bucket was filled with eggs to be stored they then emptied it out placing all the eggs in a new bucket - thus putting the newest eggs to the bottom . That way you pick the oldest eggs out first when you started to use them :)
She didn't say what she was going to do with the dirty eggs. Said she had something else to do with them
I've done this 2 years now, I use 1 or 2 gallon crocks or jars and eat oldest to newest. First year I didn't and the eggs at the bottom were a year old when I got to them, they were still good, but I'd prefer eating oldest to newest.
@@shedlady6121 we eat our dirty eggs as regular, don't store them.
@@cluckieschickens Do you know how to "clean" the eggs without "washing" them? I was totally miffed by this statement. How do you have "clean" eggs without "washing" them? Thanks for any response.
@@deeannray5093 I wait for the crud to dry and take a soft toothbrush or rag and carefully brush it off
Very impressed with your respect for the chickens and doing things God's way!!
May He bless you abundantly! 💜
🙂
Please pray for me for an unspoken request. God Bless You!
@@janetphillips2875 Praying and believing that His hand is upon you and yours. Amen!
@@lionsden6 TY! You have made my day today!
See my reply in the comments section about hens laying in the winter.
This is so cool,thanks for keeping this knowledge alive. I'm almost 40 and had never heard of this until maybe a month ago.
I'm really glad to see some of the old ways coming back.
I watched this a year ago and followed her instructions, (though I used pickling lime), and it worked great! I have eggs from a year ago that are still good. Just one tip I'll add: do not try to make hard boiled eggs with these. The air pocket disappears and they explode when steamed or boiled.
They lose porosity. Just poke a pin hole in the air sack area just before boiling but after you was off the lime.
Thank you both for this information.
@Stephanie Ford Do you wash the eggs after you take out the eggs out of the pickling lime? And where did you purchase the pickling lime; and what kind of container did you use and where did you purchase it? Ty
Mammaw, I used Mrs Wages canning lime from our local grocery store.. Currently eating 9 month old eggs. I did it in February as an experiment, works great.
@@attheflattrackraces4662 hi Mike, how long do you keep the eggs in the solution?
Thank you for explaining everything about eggs so well. I guess I could call you an eggspert
ahaha that's so cute
Eggcactly!
Faith 😂 that was awesome!!
Haha silly goose 😂
eggzactly!
This is such a great video! So easy to understand and follow all the steps. Thank you for making this.
My backyard pullets are laying more than I can eat this, their first, winter so I am saving some this way in case they take a hiatus during the summer heatwaves (110+) we get where I live. Then I'll save the spring eggs for next winter when they will have their first molt.
It is so exciting and rewarding having a little backyard flock.
Wow ur a blessing especially during these times. Thank you from humanity!
FYI I did this in May, kept my eggs at room temperature until December and just tried one.
Did the float test first with no buoyancy whatsoever.
The egg looked completely normal, with no off odor at all. I scrambled it up and tried it and it tasted like a regular store egg. So not the ultra fresh delicious farm egg taste, but a very respectable run of the mill, perfectly acceptable to eat taste.
Can you use 5 gallon bucket like from lowes or a glass jar.
@oj johnson I would use a food grade container. Lowe’s buckets are not food grade.
I used one of those big containers that Sams Club cheese puffs come in, and I had a plastic 2 gallon food prep bin. Glass jars hold surprisingly few eggs, even the half gallons so there was a lot of wasted lime water.
I am able to get food grade buckets from the grocery store bakeries for free (they get icing in them so they have several a week)
Well when you’re starving it will be a feast fit for a king
Thank you. I'm always looking for large food storage containers. The bakeries use icing in the bucket size I'm looking for. 👏
Lowe’s does sell five gallon food grade buckets
Sold!
Once you gave the argument of "If GOD gave them the ability to stop laying eggs at certain times than maybe its not good for their bodies"
That was game right there!
Chicken originate in warm climates were they produce year round. If God wanted you to preserve eggs he would've preserved them for you, see how dumb that sounds?
Peter Stiff No U
You need a time out!
@R C Wray? You didn't see that coming? Stay healthy. Don't feed trolls. ✌🏻
Amen!
Perfect for the times we are in with eggs so expensive. Thank you. I have 7 hens… and will use this method. :)
Extra corn helps chickens lay for longer when it gets cold- being high in energy it helps them keep warm. Great vid and hi from Oz all :D
During the dead of winter we get about 7 hours of daylight a day where I live.
My father uses high protein cat food for his ducks; they go wild for it and the eggs are amazing.
I live off grid with very little electric and no refrigeration. You have just made my day!
@partisan hahaha
@partison lol true but internet is super useful and you can run it off of solar /wind power setup. Or she could make a WiFi harvester out of an old dish network satellite dish and get free WiFi from a mile away.
How you live off grid but be watching UA-cam 😂
Spinderella 360 .... WHY?
Get some soller panels.
@partisan You beat me to it. Nice one.
You get a "Thumbs Up" from me when you said, "Let them be just chickens!".
No sense living naturally, and not allowing your chickens to too
But weren't they selectively bred by people around china? They used to only have a big population boom when the bamboo went to seed because there was enough food to feed all the eggs you could lay in a month, not 3/4 of every year of their lives.
Don't tell God what his plan is while you're in your house made of his trees.
@@danisprettygay yes! exactly....they are domesticated....and WE (humans) have done that so that we can have a more abundant source of food. If God gave man domain over the animals and the ability to domesticate them, we already make these animals do what they would not "naturally" do in the wild. To be honest, our family can't afford to feed animals year round without egg production. We stew our chickens at around three years anyway, so they don't live super long lives anyhow.
Certain breeds will keep laying year round if you want them without giving them lights. I believe the buff orphington is one of them(if I spelled that right lol)
Oh my gosh. I've never heard of this. We're preparing to get 6 chickens within the next couple of years and this is soooo good to know. Thank you!
I watched this because it's something I know nothing about.
Now I know a little. Thank you
Thank you for letting your chickens take a break in the winter - we do the same! ❤️🐓
👍
in winter they lay more eggs 😂😂😂😂, in summer they dont
Uh, how do you make chickens take a break from laying,or, for that matter, make them lay eggs. Either they do or they don't. It's not a demand that you can force on them.
@@TheJackPrice thats fake news it depends on the chicken,
Poor Chickens never get a break, They lay year round, stay outside (mostly) they know if they stop laying their days are numbered. We have a few as pets and the eggs are a benefit but we keep them warm in the winter and try to keep them clean. Our oldest lived just over 10 years. My wife had a rooster named Romeo he was her shadow and protector he was very special and made a wonderful pet. Romeo (rip) but he was rough on his hens.
It’s really cool to learn how our grandparents preserved food before refrigeration became common place… only 75 or 80 years ago!
Thanks for producing this type of content!
Keeping the old ways alive ensures we don't go complete stone age when the switch is turned off.
I love your kitchen. Love that you have cloth instead of cabinet doors. So down to Earth.
Thank you! 😊
What a cheery and delightful video thank you so much!🤗
I came because I thought she was a little girl with impressive knowledge, I stayed bc of how much canned food was behind her.
Ditto
Me too!
Lol, me too!
Same wish I could trust myself to can goods
Amen!
I loved how she said " Let chickens be chickens" we tend to forget that animals have to be animals, whether they are farm animals or domestic ones. Nice video. I came her out of pure curiosity. I don't have chickens, but really enjoyed this lady. She is so calm and makes un-stresses me with her suave voice!
@@MrAdamNTProtester we need more chickens, kill the babies.
@@MrAdamNTProtester Off topic much? Nobody who shares your views wants to hear from you?? Please hush and go where you're wanted and appreciated, if you can find your way there...
I was following the advice of one of my other homesteading ladies and she recommended black seed oil sunflower seeds, these are sold in feedstores. She also recommended oats and corn. We have had to order organic now because of the Riund Up contamination in so many things especially feed. So if its damaging my animals, it will damage me too. So the sunflower seeds , even with the shells on, has caused my hen's to lay in January, and we have long winters and snow.but I also make sure they get an electrolyte in their water year round with. Vitamin D in it, and it has minimal amounts if A and Bs and magnesium and potassium, but that D makes a difference in their winter depression. Before adding this ssf supplement, they would get depressed in winter and not come out if there was snow on the ground, and not get out to eat ( I put the feeder inside now in winter) and they would die from lack of calories. But th he D has really made a difference in their happiness . ] But those oil seeds also must be loaded with nutrients because I've never had them just start blasting out eggs in january before.
@@MrAdamNTProtester mind your own business. Not everyone shates your views.
Yeah but humans made domesticated chickens,
Wonderful method and tips from all commentators.! Thanks y'all 😃✌🏼
I just love your channel and family. Wish I had your lifestyle. So informative. Lots to learn.
I had to comment. We just opened two eggs from the 42 (there is meaning to that) we put away in lime water in July of 2020. 14 months ago. They are perfect. Thank you so much for this video. We are amazed at the results.
😄
Is it possible to wrap store bought eggs with saran wrap and get the same result?
What if you don't have fresh unwashed eggs?
@@bethreyes1189 good question
Thank you
I love this family...we definitely should not demand animals to produce more than they normally can.
😅😅...I never said we should not eat meat,I do and I enjoy it.
That includes adulterating chickens to harvest them earlier-- Why?? (I raised chickens on our small farm- they are ready to eat plenty early without adding chemicals to them... Ughh)
@@carriepo8671 Well,if you grew them without any chemical/artificial enhancements then that is totally fine. I'm not saying that people shouldn't make their farm operation as efficient as can be.What I'm saying is we should not put unnecessary chemicals/stresses on our animals just because we want more from them.
The main reason chickens do not lay eggs in the dark days is because the eggs are to produce baby chicks and they must be kept warm. The darker days are colder.
I don’t live on a farm but I find it very interesting. Hopefully one day I can live on a farm or ranch and I will do this. Very educational.
Nice that you give God the glory for His design of His creation.
Thumbs up on letting chickens be chickens 👍
Thanks for the video !! ❤️
Gail Stone hhhfffhvhhhjg gvjjg
Absolutely right to let your chickens be chickens. If your chickens had to be cows they wouldn’t fit in the henhouse... 🤣
Roast chickens are happy chickens. The eggs are the nex generation or can be used in egg fried rice or served on toast.
👍
The Lord bless you, and keep you:
The Lord make his face shine upon you, and be gracious unto you:
The Lord lift up his countenance upon you, and give you peace.
Shalom
Shalom!!
I sing this to my kids every night :)
Don't tell me that please. Thanks
AMEN!!!! I realize that this video is a few years old, but it's amazing I never new that you could preserve fresh eggs for that length of time. Thank you so much for sharing, God bless and have a Blessed & Joyful day, Bernice
Thank you for this wonderful news in a materialistic society!! VERY SPECIAL and thank for your large family of God.
Thank you for this video. I've just started getting more farm fresh eggs and wanted more info on how to keep them fresh and stored safely for consumption.
Even though I may never use this- no way to get fresh eggs- I learned something here. Thank you for posting this.
Just Google farms near you. Call them and ask for unwashed. They will happily help you. Prob have dozens for you. Pls
Support local farms We Need Them. EVERY CUSTOMER COUNTS ❤️
Another homesteader taught me that you can used store-bought eggs if you can't get fresh farm eggs. You just have to grease them with crisco or lard before putting them into the lime. It simulates the protective "bloom" that the chicken leaves on the egg. It works perfectly.
@@dajw7540 Could you explain more up until her steps?
This is good stuff to know in this day and time. You can never tell when the power grids will go down and we have no power. This was my job as a kid. My grandma started me out young on this. And it also seems like anything else to do with a chicken was my job too. From feeding to plucking. We didn't get to ask too many questions, if granny said do it, you just went and done it.
Awww good for you.
Been there, and I learned a lot!
Unfortunately, I never learned this.
Great respect for your elders!
Same here. As long as I can remember I was feeding the chickens & gathering eggs. We grew our own chicken for our freezer so it was also my job to help process them each summer. I'm grateful that I know how to raise and process my own food
We always burnt the feathers off, no plucking.
This kind of information can sustain your family through really tough times....
Just started following about a week ago. Wish I had found you sooner. Great videos. Great couple. May you be blessed always🙏🙌🌸
After working for an egg farm year-round for a while, I love how you think about your chickens and their well-being
She's sooo lovely! She's a breath of fresh air, so authentic & down to earth & I've no doubt she's a wonderful housekeeper, mother, wife etc.
Wow
Brought back some old memories years ago :)
Thank you so much for sharing this valuable preservation method‼️
I look forward to implementing this technique‼️‼️ 👍
So many inconsiderate people in this room :(
I have watched so many videos that go too fast and you are left with so many questions. I like the way she took her time and explained everything. It's called being informational.
She doesn't have any links on where to buy the buckets and all. She isn't promoting any products. You out there who want to complain and say mean things need to stop and continue on to other videos that would fit your narratives.
Plus, she'd just adorable and has such a friendly demeanor and informative presentation.
Peace to all
Everything about this video is perfect, candy candy candy
Thanks much
AWB
I found this video extremely interesting and helpful! Saved it for later use when my family's chickens start laying again!
@@SkyBrigidRain build a catapult when this happens and lob some fresh eggs my way, if you will. That would be great.
Screw rude people. Probably jealousy.
Hey Carolyn, I just water glasses my second year of eggs. The last ones were still fresh in the bottom of the bucket. Cheers for the tutorials.
Haha Peter your reply is so funny!! Im sorry for those that are too serious but since the crap news everyday I thought I would never laugh again. Peter Thankyou so much I needed that. My stomach is hurting😝😝
WOW! That is AMAZING!!!!
@@peterstiff8988 I thought it was funny. People just took it wrong.
Does the lime settle on the bottom of the bucket? I’m doing it for the first time and after mixing it well and adding my eggs the lime settled on the bottom.
I get farm eggs delivered once a month. I think we are in for a hard winter. Bless us all. Thank you miss.
Thank you! Watched this before I did my first batch. 😃
This girl is more precious than gold and silver. And a real beauty too.
And pregnant.
@Carol Burns So? WTF? like I give a crap. Plus Someone else galled her a girl not me. And nope I wont be responding to such idiocy.
Carol Burns feminist alert!
Would bang
She's Wholesome! 💜🏆
Agreed. Letting the chickens have their natural break in laying is good.
She is not pushing your chickens to lay all year fool...just to preserve some when you need them when they don't lay fkn listen
@@kymhealy3761 😂
My brother told me recently that chickens have about 500 eggs . I never knew that. So they either lay them over a number of years at a natural pace, and have vacations in winter, or they are pushed to lay their eggs continually with lights. And then they are all used up quicker.
@@pattysherwood7091 human females the same...born with the total amount of possible eggs...use em up and there are no more...some with fertilization and you have an offspring...circle of life...with the chicken or the egg question... Not yet andwered
Kym Healy that is true. And that dang question about what came first is pretty deep. Must be something farmers wondered about during chores.
Thank you for teaching me a new skill! 🙏🌎🕊️
Wow, criminal that something so simple and basic is not taught as "mandatory" in schools. I took Home Ed (more years ago than I care to say) and the only things we made were cookies and Kool aide...I kid you not!! I really appreciate you taking the time to upload and impart knowledge. Thank you☺
I’m really glad that I found your channel. Greetings from North Carolina. I just inherited 50 acres of family land that has been in our family since 1834. Looking forward to moving out there and getting my own homestead going and teaching my grandkids how to live off of it. Thank you guys for the wealth of info that you give out.
Wow! That’s fantastic!
She’s a source of a lot of great information and I highly respect her and her family and all the work they’re doing.
She just happens to be wrong about using pickling lime and having to start with unwashed eggs that have never been put in the refrigerator.
Howdy Neighbor!! What part of NC?!? I grew-up on a very old family farm near Greenville, NC and my parents/some extended family still live in the area. I spent most of my professional life in New Bern, NC and I now live near Wilmington, NC but visit the Greenville, NC area whenever possible. ❤️
That's awesome! Hope all is going well.
WoW! What a blessing you have been given. Enjoy those 50 acres and the GRANDkids!!
"if god created the chicken to stop laying eggs during the winter, then maybe that's best for their bodies" - Yes!! No matter what higher power (or not) you believe in, we need to start understanding that nature tells is when we can or cannot benefit from it. We need to start following more traditional teachings that understand the life cycle of plants and animals, so that we aren't over-using and depleting our resources for food like the western world currently does. Homesteaders should definitely do some research into traditional indigenous teachings in hunting and gathering, as they follow so many of the same principles as you just said, like knowing when it is time to prepare for winter like this, like being wary of hunting females (life-givers), like hunting and gathering in season..
Anyways, wonderful video on egg preservation! Thank you! Let chickens be chickens!
The chicken originates from Southeast Asia near the equator where daylight hours are longer all year round. There is no 'winter' in that area.
@@peterstiff8988 if your child drew a picture for you that you knew was crap, would you throw it away or put it on the fridge? It doesn't matter what people believe as long as it's with the best intentions. That said: there's a reason nature exists as it does and it's best not to mess with the natural flow of things, whatever the reasoning. Please stop spreading hate and just appreciate the knowledge she was willing to share
Ness, do agree the West needs to stop over-using and depleting their resources on the East and South whose hunting and gathering methods aren't able to feed their overpopulated nations.
Shove ur religious shit where your God shines
Couldn't you argue that god allowed for the technology to allow for chickens to lay eggs year round? If you pick and choose you should live in the wild with no technology, not even fire unless it comes from nature.
So cool. I don't even have a farm or 🐔, yet... So informative. Thank you.
Heck of a video. Thanks
I did this, just as explained, and 9 months later did a comparison between these eggs, and fresh eggs. NOBODY could tell the difference. Thank you for making this presentation. I enjoyed all of your insight, and very valuable information. My girls started laying again like crazy, so I'm going to start with a second batch, and use up the older eggs. Blessings to you, and your homesteading family!!
In Europe we used another watery solution to prepare eggs - the real water glass (natrium silicate 1 : 9 mixed with water). Your method is not real "water glassing", but laying the eggs in a calcium hydroxide solution. Both methods work on a similar principle. The advantage of using natrium silicate is that it does not give the eggs a chalky taste. But natrium silicate is more expensive. Thank you for your interesting video!
I thought she said at the start of her video that there are several different ways to do it, so I'm guessing that there isn't a right or wrong method... just different methods of getting the job done.🙂
so well done! thank you!
Great video you’re truly a blessing .
Oh I love your take on letting the chickens follow their natural pattern of laying eggsas they choose and the idea of letting them rest, how beautiful is that!! I'm looking to live off grid and although I can't underestimate the challenges I'm also relishing the natural way of life! 💚
It’s how it should be Such a cruel industry.
Lisa is 100% right. The industry is beyond cruel with how much they force these chickens to lay eggs. It completely drains them and sucks so much nutrition out of their bodies. They were never meant to lay as many eggs as humans are forcing them to. It’s so cruel. Not to mention what the egg industry does to the poor little baby male chicks that are born. It doesn’t get any more disturbing than that.
Industry?,did you think hens produce one egg per day naturally,naturally they use eggs for making chickens,pip pip.
Do it. Even if it's something you don't know if you can pull off 100%. Each skill you learn and use and the satisfaction of being responsible and self-sufficient in certain areas will enhance your life.
@@claesmansson9070 We had the cutest thing happen. We had our eleven hens about a year and we get so many eggs, when I started noticing a pile of them in a hard-to-get-to corner of the coop, I just left them. I noticed a couple hens had become broody sitting on them all day long. One morning I opened their side boxes and heard peeps! I hadn't heard that in so long, at first i thought it was small birds around. I looked inside and surprised ten little chicks running around the bottom of the coop with the hen clucking after them! So thrilling to see nature at work!! God's plan is perfect. When i realized they'd soon need feed and water (their shells looked about exhausted), we set them up in the top of the coop away from the herd--except sleeping. When they got big and brave enough they came down the ramp and braved the other hens and two roosters. 🥰
My grandma sold eggs. She had me "candle" them and put in cases. I had no idea what I was doing but know I realize it was to ensure a chick wasn't forming so it would have been dark or darkening. The candling was a light bulb in a cardboard box with a hole at top where I set or held the egg to check it.
Just make sure there isn't a rooster in the hen house.
I used to work on a chicken farm as a teenager during the summer and candeled eggs...Its was really odorous..🤗
@@barbaraalden6013 very true. My grandfather's hen house had a magnificent older. LOL
First video I've seen on this channel and I love it. So clear and informative and pleasant too!
I saw this in my feed today 9/12/2022 and thought "who is that little girl on the Homesteading Family channel." 😂Your daughter (the one I thought made this video) looks just like you, Carolyn! This lesson is still very good and useful. Thank you.
She seems so happy while she works and teaches. I love it.
Subscribed after hearing about how God made it for the chickens to rest during the winter. You care and that is fantastic to hear!
I thought the water glassing method was presented very well. The fact that chickens don’t lay or lay very little during the winter certainly does attest to God’s care for them and for us since He gave us a brain to figure out ways to preserve our foods. Any one that thinks God made chickens out of lizards is very odd and probably should see a phyche doctor.
Our chickens lay all year round.... could they be devil chickens????
My thoughts exactly,God is always in the details! I thought hens laid all of the time ,all year round!
Che' Saxton I so agree with letting the chickens be chickens. I like this idea I have been freezing eggs for years
Some do lay all year but like she stated, most of the time their laying is drastically reduced. The solar clock is what regulates their egg laying, which is why she doesn’t use artificial light. I completely agree with her, the hens typically last longer and have a better life. Every hen has a finite amount of eggs she can lay from birth til the end. Let ‘em live a little. Looks like God knew what he was doing, huh?
Just found you!!! What a find!!! Beautiful video and elegant explanation. Thank you so much!!
Nice thing to know about, thanks!
Ever hear the saying we've forgotten more then we now know? Lost knowledge. This would have been common knowledge in everyday life at one time. I'm always reminded of this when I learn new gardening techniques. "I'm sure this was common knowledge at one point in time". Great vid
Thank you
It's because things are made to be as easy as possible. With electricity and refrigeration people dont need to know this method. Which isnt smart because if a disaster happens and those things are gone..people will be screwed. It should be mandatory for everyone to learn how to survive without electricity and how to grow and preserve food.
My mom taught me a lot of things but thus one she didnt know. I'm sure she would have stumbled upon it at some point though. I'm glad I did.
I live in south central Pennsylvania, and this is what I did to preserve store-bought eggs at room temperature. I took regular sandwich bags, put one egg in each bag, coated the eggs with mineral oil, and put them in with my canned goods. 6 months later I cracked and ate the first egg, and it was just fine. I only added enough oil to coat the eggs and have a little bit left in the bottom of the baggie. Hope this helps 😁👍
Wow, wished I still had my homestead. This was such amazing, helpful information!!! Wished it worked for store bought eggs :( Thanks!!!
I don't know why this was recommended but it's pretty cool and good to know
I guess 500 eggs. I can't believe I've never heard of this. Thanks from Texas. May Jesus Christ bless you.