1 / 52

Egg trivia:

Egg trivia:. http://www.incredibleegg.org/egg-facts/trivia. Egg Basics. Chap. 18-3. Why eat Eggs? 70 calories & loaded with Nutrition. Helps with weight management muscle strength healthy pregnancy (choline nutrient) brain function eye health. How eggs are processed:.

sissy
Télécharger la présentation

Egg trivia:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Egg trivia: • http://www.incredibleegg.org/egg-facts/trivia

  2. Egg Basics Chap. 18-3

  3. Why eat Eggs?70 calories & loaded with Nutrition • Helps with weight management • muscle strength • healthy pregnancy (choline nutrient) • brain function • eye health

  4. How eggs are processed: • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYhEbjhhcAg&feature=related • Discovery Channel’s “How it’s made”

  5. Draw an Egg: • Label each part: • Yolk • Albumen (egg white) • Chalazae • Air pocket • Shell

  6. Why eat egg yolks… • http://www.eggnutritioncenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/Egg-Yolk-Brochure-f.pdf

  7. Before You Eat That Breakfast Sandwich, Read This… ex:What is in McDonald’s eggs? • Pasteurized whole eggs with sodium phosphate (preservative), citric acid and monosodium phosphate (added to preserve color), nisin preparation (preservative). Prepared with liquid margarine: Liquid soybean oil and hydrogenated cottonseed and soybean oils, water, partially hydrogenated soybean oil, salt, soy lecithin, mono-and diglycerides, sodium benzoate and potassium sorbate (preservatives), artificial flavor, citric acid, vitamin A palmitate, beta carotene (color).

  8. Yolk: Fats, Protein & Cholesterol vitamin A, D, E,K and iron, calcium, and phosphorus. • White (albumen):Protein • Healthy adults can enjoy an egg a day without increasing their risk for heart disease, Dietary Guidelines for Americans and the American Heart Association recommend that individuals consume, on average, less than 300 mg of cholesterol per day. A single large egg contains 185 mg cholesterol.

  9. Egg Sizes: Recipes use size Large eggs 2 eggs whites = 1 large egg.

  10. 1 egg = 1 oz of meat serving.

  11. How can you tell if eggs are fresh?

  12. Fresh eggs: • Have small air pocket • Sink to bottom of bowl of water. Lay on side. • Whites are cloudy. • Older eggs: Have larger air pockets. Will float upright. ****If they float to top of bowl of water, discard.

  13. Fresh eggs are best for: • Frying & poaching Older eggs are best for: • Baked goods • Hard boiled eggs- easier to peel.

  14. Egg Grades • Grades are given to high-quality eggs that have: • Clean, unbroken shells • Small air cells • Egg whites are thick and clear • Egg yolks are firm and stand high above the whites.

  15. Egg Grades • Three Grades: • U.S. Grade AA • U.S. Grade A • U.S. Grade B What were grade B eggs used for?

  16. Egg Color and Type • The breed determines color • Types of eggs: • Chicken • Guinea • Duck • Geese

  17. Are brown-shelled eggs more nutritious than white-shelled eggs?

  18. Buy Right • Store eggs in their original carton and use them within 3 weeks for best quality. • Buy eggs only if sold from a refrigerator or refrigerated case. • Open the carton and make sure that the eggs are clean and the shells are not cracked. • Refrigerate promptly.

  19. Playing It Safe With Eggs • Salmonella Prevention: Safe Handling Instructions: To prevent illness from bacteria: keep eggs refrigerated, cook eggs until yolks are firm, and cook foods containing eggs thoroughly.

  20. Keep Everything Clean • Wash hands, utensils, equipment, and work surfaces with hot, soapy water before and after they come in contact with eggs and egg-containing foods

  21. Chill Properly • Cooked eggs, including hard-boiled eggs, and egg-containing foods should not sit out for more than 2 hours. Within 2 hours either reheat or refrigerate. • Use hard-cooked eggs (in the shell or peeled) within 1 week after cooking

  22. Preparing Eggs: • Coagulate: Eggs become firm during cooking. • Use Medium to Low heat when cooking eggs.

  23. Over cooked eggs: • Tough and rubbery texture • turn gray green

  24. Functions of Eggs as Ingredients • Emulsifiers • Structure • Thickeners • Binding Agents • Nutrition, Flavor, Color • Foams

  25. Emulsifiers • Emulsion: A mixture that forms when you combine liquids that ordinarily do not mix. • Egg yolk: excellent emulsifying agent Yolk surrounds the oil droplets in an emulsion Keeps the droplets suspended in the water-based liquid so the 2 liquids do not separate. • Example: mayonnaise

  26. Binding and Interfering Agents • Act as binding ingredients that hold together the ingredients in foods such meatloaf. • Act a interfering agent in foods such as ice cream and sherbet • Eggs inhibit formation of large ice crystals which would ruin the texture of frozen desserts.

  27. Thickeners • Heat causes egg proteins to coagulate (thicken). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezencQbQrvc Tempering Eggs: when a hot liquid (usually milk) is carefully streamed into them, bringing the eggs up to a very high temperature without cooking them. When properly incorporated, eggs have thickening properties that will help bring a custard to the appropriate consistency.

  28. Structure • CREAM PUFFS: • Eggs are a leavening agent (makes it puff ) and the yolks add fat for a tender and light texture. Egg proteins add to the structure of the cream puff. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVElHU245no

  29. Nutrition, Flavor, and Color

  30. Foams • Egg foams are used to add air to foods: • Beat air into egg whites • Many air cells form • A thin film of egg white protein surrounds each cell. • As beating continues, cells become smaller and more numerous • Protein film becomes thinner • Result: the foam thickens

  31. Temperature on foams • Two temperatures needed: • Separate eggs when they are cold: • Use egg separator • Store egg yolks • Egg whites reach maximum volume when they are room temperature: • Let sit 20 minutes before beating

  32. Factors Affecting Egg Foams • Temperature • Beating time • Fat • Acid • Sugar • All affect the formation of egg white foams.

  33. Factors Affecting Egg Foams • Beating: • Too little or too much beating causes foam to lose volume and not hold shape • Fat and fat-containing ingredients: • Inhibit formation of egg white foam • Acid: • Makes foam more stable and adds whiteness • Example: Cream of Tarter • Sugar: • Increases the stability of egg white foam • Increases beating time: usually added after foam has reached most of the volume.

  34. Write directions for each type of egg cookery: • Page 478 in text. • Eggs cooked in shell: hard cooked • Fried Eggs • Poached eggs • Scrambled eggs ***Indicate heat settings, equipment, steps This will be your directions/recipe for Tomorrow’s Lab.

  35. How do you like your eggs?

  36. *Cook Thoroughly* • Cook eggs until both the yolk and the white are firm. Scrambled eggs should not be runny. • Casseroles and other dishes containing eggs should be cooked to 160°F (72°C). Use a food thermometer to be sure. • For recipes that call for eggs that are raw or undercooked when the dish is served—Caesar salad dressing and homemade ice cream are two examples—use either shell eggs that have been treated to destroy Salmonella, by pasteurization or another approved method, or pasteurized egg products.

  37. Serve Safely • Serve cooked eggs and egg-containing foods immediately after cooking. • For buffet-style serving, hot egg dishes should be kept hot, and cold egg dishes kept cold. • Eggs and egg dishes, such as quiches or soufflés, may be refrigerated for serving later but should be thoroughly reheated to 165°F (74°C) before serving.

  38. Chill Properly • Use frozen eggs within one year. Eggs should not be frozen in their shells. To freeze whole eggs, beat yolks and whites together. Egg whites can also be frozen by themselves. • Refrigerate leftover cooked egg dishes and use within 3-4 days. When refrigerating a large amount of a hot egg-containing leftover, divide it into several shallow containers so it will cool quickly.

  39. Nutritional Value of Eggs • MyPyramid: • 5-7 ounces equivalent/day of protein • one egg counts as 1 ounce • Complete Protein • Iron, vitamin A, vitamin D, phosphorus, calcium, thiamine, and riboflavin • Cholesterol: eggs whites are cholesterol free

  40. What could have gone wrong? • Did your water boil too long? • Lose moisture needed for steam to raise. • Did you let batter cool slightly before adding eggs? • Did you add eggs one at a time? • Beat quickly until shiny?

  41. What did you learn about making cream puffs? Pudding? • 3 tips for making the recipe turn out correctly. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMT_SmS7ik4&feature=related

  42. Complete Cream Puffs • Cut in half horizontally. • Fill with pudding. • Sift powdered sugar over top. • Serve on plate.

  43. 3 Stages of Egg Foamshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVcNDhwwFB8 • Foamy • Have bubbles and foam on the surface • Soft Peak • Form peaks that bend at the tips when you lift the beater • Stiff Peak • Form peaks that stand straight when you lift the beater

  44. Using Egg Foams • Soft meringues pie toppings Hard Meringues Kiss cookies

  45. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyM-Fm_j_h0&feature=fvsr angelfoodcake • http://www.foodnetwork.com/videos/altons-lemon-meringue-pie-video/83198.html • Use text complete lime meringue pie recipe.

  46. Using Raw Eggs • Pasteurized shell eggs: • Whole eggs that have been treated using the same heating process used to kill harmful bacteria in milk. • Process does not affect taste or cooking performance of eggs • Use pasteurized egg product

  47. Egg Substitutes • Option for people who want to limit cholesterol and saturated fat in diets. • Egg substitutes are pasteurized • Made largely from real egg whites, contain no egg yolks • Cholesterol-free, fat-free, lower in calories than whole eggs. • Cost factor: often 3 times more than eggs • Use ¼ c. of egg substitute for 1 whole egg or egg yolk

  48. Food Science Principles of Cooking Eggs • Coagulate: • To thicken or form a congealed mass. • Proteins are coagulated by heat and can cause a food to thicken • Temperature • Use low-moderate temp. when cooking eggs • High temps and cooking too long cause egg proteins to lose moisture, shrink, and toughen. • Time • Addition of other ingredients • Changes coagulation temperature because they dilute the proteins found in eggs. • Adding milk allows eggs to coagulate at higher temp. • Acid and salt lower coagulation temperature of eggs

  49. Methods of Cooking Eggs • Safety cooked eggs have completely set whites and thickened yolks • Internal temperature 160°F for casseroles, soufflés, and other egg dishes

  50. When Cooking In a Skillet • Pan should be moderately hot before adding the egg • Fat should be added to skillet before heating • Add the eggs and turn heat down to low to cook eggs

More Related