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egg on your face?!....a way to save (just a bit) on eggs.....
#1
.....use liquid eggs......a carton has about 18 eggs & cheaper then buying physical eggs......at least for now....


Liquid eggs? NYC bodegas have new strategy to keep bacon, egg and cheese prices down

.....The bacon, egg and cheese sandwich is a bodega staple, prized for its simplicity. But the beloved breakfast item is getting pricey, as the cost of eggs climbs.

The United Bodegas of America is cutting the price by cutting a corner: using liquid egg substitute to make the classic sandwiches. The idea, which originated at La Bonita Deli & Grocery in the Bronx, will drop their standard price for a bacon, egg and cheese sandwich from $6 to $4.99.

“Bodegas have figured it out,” said Fernando Mateo, the UBA spokesman. “We don’t’ need rocket scientists. We don’t need people not knowing when the bird flu is going to be over and when egg prices are going to come down. We’re going to do what we have to do, in order to fulfill our commitment to the communities we serve.”

So how does the liquid egg substitute work? A cook showed NBC New York what it looks like, pouring what amounts to one egg from a carton (not an egg carton, mind you, but something resembling a carton of juice or milk) onto the griddle. The carton it comes from contains about 18 eggs.

Mateo reasons that as long as that quart of liquid egg costs less than a dozen shelled eggs, bodegas will be able to keep their sandwich cost below $5.

“When we can save them a dollar on a sandwich, that’s a lot. That’s a dollar they could use to buy other things,” said Mateo.

Still, as the yellowish liquid sizzled on the griddle behind the bodega counter on Wednesday, some Bronx residents walking by along 183rd Street were skeptical. Would the taste and texture of their egg and cheese sandwich be compromised?

That’s like cheating the community. Nobody wants liquid eggs,” said Quaison Richardson. “If I’m going to pay for an egg sandwich, I want the egg. I want you to crack the egg, not get it out of a container.”

“That’s nonsense, using the egg beaters,” said Shavar McFadden, who has taken to buying single eggs at the counter and only buying them when he needs them.

The cost of eggs has more than doubled compared to last year and could jump another 41% in 2025, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The USDA has rolled out a $1 billion plan to combat rising egg prices.

Back in the Bronx, the UBA says bodegas are proactively coming up with cost-saving solutions for their customers. And if the price of liquid egg containers climbs?

“Well, we will cross that bridge when we get there,” says Mateo. “Right now, let’s celebrate what we have.”

What they have, are cheaper bacon, egg and cheese sandwiches for those who can’t stomach paying higher prices.......



.......for now......liquid eggs are cheaper than real eggs...........?!
_____________________________________
I reject your reality and substitute my own!
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#2
I buy them from the egg lady down the road.
$6.00 for 18 eggs.
Assorted colors.
:oldfogey:
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#3
I do the liquid egg whites in my breakfast sandwich maker.
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#4
Paid $8.50 for 18 large eggs the other day. That works out to $5.70 per dozen.
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#5
I get it.

Some of you don't need to save on egg purchases.
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#6
At Costco this week, they didn't have any regular eggs. But they did have 32 hardboiled eggs for the equivalent of a $4.75 a dozen. We bought some because we do hard boil eggs regularly. It looks like they're medium eggs but we saved a bit.
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#7
Forrest wrote:
Paid $8.50 for 18 large eggs the other day. That works out to $5.70 per dozen.

For several weeks that $8.50 would get 1 dozen store brand large white or brown eggs here. Just seeing the first breaks from those price levels, a dozen large white eggs are down to $8 a dozen, and medium brown eggs for $6.50 a dozen
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#8
Things have definitely changed. We use both real eggs and Eggbeaters in our house. The price of Eggbeaters has climbed, as well. A 32 oz carton (equivalent to 18 eggs) is $7.36 at Wally's. If normal supermarkets have them (they often don't), I've seen them as high as $8.99 for the 32 oz carton.

We paid $6.49 for an 18 pack of fresh eggs last week.
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#9
Our Costco has 24 pack, limit 3, for $7.69..... they put out a pallet like 3 or 4 X/day, then the (seems-like-almost) free-for-all begins.


:yum:
==
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#10
I noticed prices all over the place. From $4.99 to $12.99 for a dozen.
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