24 Internal Quality of Egg
Kulsum Jan
Quality
- Quality : Degree of excellence
- Those conditions and characteristics that consumers want, and are willing to pay for, are, in a broad sense, factors of quality
- Egg is determined by comparing a number of factors
- Quality factors for eggs may be divided into two general groups
Introduction
- Interior quality :
- Contents of the egg as they appear before a candling light
- When the eggs are broken out
- Haugh unit method
- visual examination of the yolk
However, internal egg quality is relatively unstable and deteriorates from the time it is laid until it is consumed
The Air Space
- Laid Egg : Warmer than its surroundings
- On cooling : Contracts and a small air space is formed between the inner and the outer shell membrane
- The air space generally forms at the broad end of the egg as there are more pores in this part of the shell
- With age : moisture and carbon dioxide continue to be lost through the pores
- Air moves in and the air space increases in size
- The warmer and drier the air, the quicker the moisture loss from the egg.
- Size of air cell : As an approximate guide to the quality and age of an egg
- Judged objectively : Air-cell gauge
- In candling : Considered a relatively unimportant quality factor for determining internal quality when compared to the broken-out appearance of an egg
- Depth is the only quality factor considered with the air cell.
Descriptive terms for air cell
- Depth of air cell : distance from its top to its bottom when the egg is held air cell upward
- Free air cell : An air cell that moves freely towards the uppermost part in the egg as the egg is rotated slowly
- Bubbly air cell small, separate main air cell: A ruptured air cell resulting in one or more air bubbles, usually floating beneath the
Albumen Quality
- In fresh, good quality : Albumen is jelly-like and may have a cloudy appearance
- With age : Albumen becomes transparent and increasingly watery
- At higher temp : the rate of carbon dioxide loss is higher and the visible signs of ageing occur quicker
- Quality : Measured by the height in millimetres of the outer thick albumen
- During storage : It is the proteins in the thick albumen which begin to break down due to alkalinity
- At the same time, water slowly migrates into the yolk thus the yolk becomes enlarged and flattened on breakout.
- The yolk moves away from the centre of the egg and may eventually rest against the shell itself
- Breakdown of the albumen makes the egg extremely vulnerable to microbial invasion
Yolk
- The appearance of the yolk as the egg is twirled in candling is one of the best indicators of the interior quality of shell eggs
- Characteristics : Determined by shadow that it casts upon the shell before the candling light
- Appearance : Dependent on the condition of the white prior to packing
- With age : The rate of carbon dioxide and moisture loss in the white increases and affects the condition of the white
- Three factors : Distinctness of yolk shadow outline, size and shape of yolk, defects and germ development.
Quality Parameters of Yolk
- The thickness and consistency of the white. The thicker the white, the less distinct the outline appears, as yolk is prevented from moving close to the shell.
- Condition of the yolk : Determined by the presence or absence of blemishes that show up before the candling light as dark shadows on the yolk, or the presence or absence of an off-colored yolk appearance which shows as a greyish or greenish shadow
- Colour of the yolk : Difficult to determine the colour of the yolk before the candling light except off-coloUr. Sometimes yolk colour influences the candler’s judgment. An extremely deep-colored yolk, under some conditions, would cast a darker shadow than would a lighter yolk.
Size and shape of yolk.
- Freshly-laid egg : Round and firm
- Aged Egg : Yolk membrane weakens allowing water to be absorbed from the white
- Increase in size results in stretch and weaken the vitelline membrane and to assume a somewhat flattened shape on top and an “out of- round” shape generally, resembling a balloon partially filled with water
- Yolk size and shape are mentioned only in the lowest quality classification for eggs – B quality – where these factors become apparent
Standards of yolk quality
- Outline slightly defined — A yolk outline that is indistinctly indicated and appears to blend into the surrounding white as the egg is twirled (AA quality).
- Outline fairly well defined — A yolk outline that is discernible but not clearly outlined as the egg is twirled (A quality).
- Outline plainly visible — A yolk outline that is clearly visible as a dark shadow when the egg is twirled (B quality).
External quality
- Egg shell : quality is given throw the weight and the percentage of shell, thickness and the strength
- The differences in egg shell quality depend on the environmental conditions and the feed quality and also of strain of layers
- Egg weight : Affects egg shell thickness and egg size as well
- Brown egg layers produce higher shell weight in comparison with some other hybrids of white colour, but the egg shell deformation in brown eggs is usually higher
- However, negative correlation on egg shell deformation and the strength as well as thickness is found in brown eggs.
Conclusion
- Egg shell quality and egg internal quality are of major importance to the egg industry worldwide
- Eggs for processing should be visibly clean prior to breaking and separating. Cracked eggs may be processed
- Broken eggs should not be processed and should be disposed of in a safe manner
- Eggs deteriorate rapidly during storage under ambient conditions
- Dirty eggs should be disposed of in a safe manner or may be cleaned, separating of egg contents from the shell should be done in a manner
- Avoid contamination by personnel or from equipment, and that permits examination of egg contents.
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Suggested readings
- Baek S.B. (1990). Study on the estimation of genetic parameters for the compositions and egg qualities in Korean native ogol fowl. M.Sc. Thesis, Chung Nam National University.
- Dudusola. I. O. Comparative evaluation of internal and external qualities of eggs from quail and guinea fowl. International Research Journal of Plant Science (ISSN: 2141-5447) Vol. 1(5) pp. 112-115, November, 2010
- Lieu, Eng-Hwa, G. W. Froning, and R. Dam, 1978. Effect of storage on lipid composition and functional properties of dried egg products. Poultry Sci. 57:912–923.
- Song KT, Choi SH, Oh HR (2000). A Comparison of Egg quality of Pheasant, Chukar, Quail and Guinea fowl. Asian – Aus. J. Anim. Sci. 13 (7): 986 – 990).
- Stadelman WJ (1977). Quality preservation of shell eggs. In Egg Science and Technology (2nd edition) (Ed. W. J. Stadelman and O. J. Cotterill). AVI publ. Co., Inc., Westport, C. T. pp 41– 47.
- USDA (1983). Egg grading manual; USDA, AMS, Agriculture handbook 75. U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC.
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, “USDA Laboratory Methods for Egg Products,” (C&MS PY Notice, No. 150), U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C., March 1 S, 196.