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Eggs
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Does anyone know why you should not keep eggs in the fridge? I am sure someone told me once it was because it absorbed the flavour out of other foods, is this correct?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You should not keep eggs in the fridge. They are not refrigerated in the supermarkets, or sent in refrigerated lorries.
In a fridge they become very cold - so when you cook them they will not have had long enough at a high temperature to kill any bacteria. Unless you are very well organised and remember to take them out a few hours before cooking.
In a fridge they become very cold - so when you cook them they will not have had long enough at a high temperature to kill any bacteria. Unless you are very well organised and remember to take them out a few hours before cooking.
http://www.aeb.org/LearnMore/FightBac.htm#stor e
Continually keep raw shell eggs, broken-out eggs, egg mixtures, prepared egg dishes and other perishable foods refrigerated at 40� F or below when you�re not cooking or eating them. These foods should not be left at room temperature for more than 2 hours, including the time you use to prepare and serve them. Allow no more than 30 minutes to 1 hour when it�s 85� F or hotter.
To guard against breakage and odor absorption and to help prevent the loss of carbon dioxide and moisture which lowers egg quality, store raw shell eggs in their cartons. Place egg cartons on a middle or lower shelf where the temperature will fluctuate less than on the door. Refrigerated raw shell eggs will keep without significant quality loss for about 4 to 5 weeks beyond the pack date or about 3 weeks after you bring them home.
Continually keep raw shell eggs, broken-out eggs, egg mixtures, prepared egg dishes and other perishable foods refrigerated at 40� F or below when you�re not cooking or eating them. These foods should not be left at room temperature for more than 2 hours, including the time you use to prepare and serve them. Allow no more than 30 minutes to 1 hour when it�s 85� F or hotter.
To guard against breakage and odor absorption and to help prevent the loss of carbon dioxide and moisture which lowers egg quality, store raw shell eggs in their cartons. Place egg cartons on a middle or lower shelf where the temperature will fluctuate less than on the door. Refrigerated raw shell eggs will keep without significant quality loss for about 4 to 5 weeks beyond the pack date or about 3 weeks after you bring them home.
They do not pick up flavors in the fridge any more than on the counter. (unless your fridge needs a lot of cleaning). They do go stale as BBW said but, will stay fresh longer at lower temps. The same can be said for bacteria growth. If you worry about getting them hot enough while cooking, then you obviously don't like them over easy as I do.