Eggsarecool
Next time you crack one open, take a moment to appreciate the humble egg. It’s affordable, sustainable (especially from local farms), and genuinely one of the most useful foods in your kitchen. So join the movement: post your sunrise fried eggs, your midnight omelets, your perfect custards. Tag it #eggsarecool.
From ancient Roman recipes to the world’s largest Easter egg hunts, eggs have been symbols of new life, spring, and sometimes practical jokes (sorry, itchy sweater guy). They’ve starred in art, literature, and even the phrase “walking on eggshells.” Few foods come with their own metaphorical weight. eggsarecool
Before you toss that shell, know this: crushed eggshells make excellent garden fertilizer (calcium boost for tomatoes!), can help clean narrow-necked bottles, and even act as a natural abrasive for scrubbing pots. Cool? Very. Next time you crack one open, take a
Eggs take on whatever flavor you throw at them. Go savory with soy sauce and scallions, or sweet with cinnamon and vanilla in a custard. Leftover veggies? Toss them into an omelet. Half an avocado? Top it with a baked egg. Eggs don’t judge—they elevate. Tag it #eggsarecool
One large egg packs about 6 grams of high-quality protein, plus vitamins D, B12, selenium, and choline (a brain-boosting nutrient many of us don’t get enough of). And yes, the yolk is your friend. Most of the good stuff is in there.
Want fluffy scrambled eggs? Done. A jammy soft-boiled egg on toast? Easy. A silky carbonara that tastes like Rome? Eggs make it happen. They can be poached, fried, baked, shirred, or turned into a soufflé. You can even eat them raw (though we recommend pasteurized if you go that route). That’s not cool—that’s legendary .