Farmer Vicki’s Fresh Eggs
I used to think of eggs as a commodity product – if they were cheapest at Dominick’s, then that’s where I bought them, because, after all, what's the difference?
A lot, of course. I now know that.
Recently, I’ve started buying my eggs from Farmer Vicki of Genesis Farms, who delivers in Oak Park every now and again. Opening the box, you can see right off that they’re different; I like that they’re inconsistently colored; sometimes there are green ones and others that are almost blue:
Cracking one into a pan, you can see that it has life in it; the yolk has tensile strength, structuring into a semi-circular bubble rather than collapsing like a deflated basketball, and the white portion is milkier, more liquid, as though the component elements have not yet grown old and tired and congealed. They are, in a word, “fresh” in a way that most grocery eggs have not been for a long time.
When cooked, these genuinely fresh eggs are very soft, almost airy, with a tender delicacy of texture not possible with eggs held one week or more, which I believe is average for most that arrive along a massive nationwide distribution system.
I cook my eggs very slowly. The one in the above shot had been on low heat for maybe 3-4 minutes when I snapped the pic. I like to cook eggs at such a reduced heat that you can barely see the whites whitening.
These fresh eggs are three bucks a dozen, which seems an incredible value. When I go to pick them up, I return home and immediately eat a few. Even if I’m not exactly in an egg mood, I know I’ll enjoy these beautiful little orbs, which were so recently laid on Vicki’s farm, and so taste and feel especially wonderful and real.
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins