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The Global Insight

Can you eat the first laid chicken egg?

Author

Robert Miller

Updated on March 26, 2026

Yep, you can eat the very first egg. It was an honor to be the one in the family who got to eat it. In the hot weather, it’s best to collect them more than once a day, and some hens will take to eating them if they’re left too long. Our hens seem to want to use the same nest.

What is a chicken’s first egg called?

Pullet eggs
Pullet eggs are the first eggs laid by hens at about 18 weeks old. These young hens are just getting into their egg-laying groove, meaning these eggs will be noticeably smaller than the usual eggs you come across. And that’s where the beauty in them lies – quite simply, they are delicious.

What do chickens first eggs look like?

Discovering a hen’s first egg from your own hand-raised chicks is a thrill. Pullet eggs are tiny and look like gems in the nest. Although the first eggs your birds lay may be small, irregularly shaped and/or inconsistent, don’t panic! The eggs should norm out over time in size and frequency.

What is a fart egg?

Fart eggs (also called fairy eggs, diminutive eggs, cock eggs, wind eggs, witch eggs, dwarf eggs) are teeny tiny eggs laid by normal-sized hens. They usually are just egg white, just egg yolk, or possibly a teeny tiny miniature egg. Like Teacup Poodles of the chicken world.

Can you eat an egg right after its laid?

Freshly laid eggs can be left out at room temperature for at least a month before your need to start thinking about moving them into the fridge. We like to make sure we eat ours in under two weeks (because they tend to taste better), but so long as the egg is eaten within one month of it being laid, you will be fine.

Do chickens fart?

The short answer is that yes, chickens fart. Just about any animal that has intestines is capable of farting, in fact. Chickens pass gas for the same reason that we do: They have pockets of air trapped inside their intestines. This air has to come out one way or another, and it usually picks the most reliable exit.

Do chickens get sad when you take their eggs?

The simplest answer to this is ‘no’. It’s something they need to do, but they are not doing it with thoughts of hatching chicks, and will leave their egg as soon as it has been laid. …

Do spiders fart?

This happens a number of times, as spider digestive systems can only handle liquids—which means no lumps! Since the stercoral sac contains bacteria, which helps break down the spider’s food, it seems likely that gas is produced during this process, and therefore there is certainly the possibility that spiders do fart.

Do we eat fertilized eggs?

The answer is yes. It is perfectly okay to eat fertilized eggs. Also, as mentioned in the previous paragraphs, once the fertilized egg is stored inside the fridge, the embryo no longer undergoes any change or development. Rest assured that you can eat your fertilized chicken eggs just fine like the unfertilized ones.

When did the first chicken have an egg?

Back to our original question: with amniotic eggs showing up roughly 340 million or so years ago, and the first chickens evolving at around 58 thousand years ago at the earliest, it’s a safe bet to say the egg came first.

Which is older, the chicken or the egg?

Eggs are much older than chickens. Dinosaurs laid eggs, the fish that first crawled out of the sea laid eggs, and the weird articulated monsters that swam in the warm shallow seas of the Cambrian Period 500 million years ago also laid eggs. They weren’t chicken’s eggs, but they were still eggs. So the egg definitely came first.

When was the question chicken or egg settled?

In the fifth century CE, Macrobius wrote that while the question seemed trivial, it “should be regarded as one of importance.” By the end of the 16th century, the well-known question seemed to have been regarded as settled in the Christian world, based on the origin story of the Bible.

Can a chicken grow up to be an egg?

Neil deGrasse Tyson has endorsed this idea of the not-quite-a-chicken bird laying the egg which would grow up to be a chicken, and Bill Nye agreed. A few years ago a group of scientists did write about how a particular protein required for chicken egg shell formation was only found in chicken ovaries.