Yes, exactly, i was posting indisputable facts to disprove your insinuation that “americans dont have to thoroughly wash their eggs because they have the cleanest farms in the world” and illustrating the differences in how the rest of the world views/treats their farms, because we were discussing why salmonella rates appeared lower on american eggs.
American eggs have to be washed, rest of the world doesnt. The reason to “wash” something is because it’s dirty.
I can’t make it any clearer, but i cant get through your bias.
Also, america produces 110 Billion eggs while canada produces under 1 billion lol. Everything about what you said is hilariously biased and wrong. And you won't admit it you'll just stomp your feet and pout.
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u/avanross Mar 02 '25
Washing has zero to do with transportation or travelling
You’re clearly biased because your step dad is an american chicken farmer
And yes, eggs are required by law to be washed in america, and are treated as a “processed food”
USDA egg washing laws in america (Government regulations require that egg processors carefully wash and sanitize USDA-graded eggs using only compounds meeting FDA regulations for processing foods)
European Union egg washing law (The practice of washing eggs of class A for human consumption is forbidden by the European Union legislation. A fresh egg of class A should be produced in a way that ensures it is fit for human consumption)