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Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Are Expensive Eggs Really Worth It?

Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Dr. Eric Berg

Health & Fitness

4.61.6K Ratings

🗓️ 22 April 2024

⏱️ 6 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this podcast, we’ll examine all of the different types of chicken eggs available in the store. The different labels and classifications can be confusing.


Around 65% of all chickens used for laying chicken eggs are in cages. Caged chickens are required to get at least 67 square inches of space, which is a little over 8 x 8 inches. New California caged chickens get a few more inches but not even one square foot of space.


Cage-free chickens are not in a cage but are generally confined to a barn with many other chickens. Each chicken gets one square foot of space.


Free-range chickens get 2 square feet of space. They have free range in a barn and typically have access to the outdoors, but it’s unclear if they have access to outdoor grass or if the area is cement.


Pasture-raised chickens get 10 feet by 10 feet of outdoor space.


When chickens don’t get enough space, their cortisol and adrenaline levels increase. This is unhealthy for the chickens and causes them to produce less healthy chicken eggs.


When looking for chicken eggs at the store, terms like “natural,” “vegetarian-fed,” and different grades of chicken eggs mean nothing!


Conventional eggs come from chickens that are fed chicken feed made of corn and soy. This means their food is GMO, sprayed with chemicals, and very high in omega-6 fatty acids. The eggs are then much higher in omega-6 fatty acids. Foods high in omega-6 fatty acids affect the mitochondria, the nervous system, and the heart. They also create inflammation in the body.


If you can't raise backyard chickens and you can't get to a farmer’s market, look for organic pasture-raised eggs. It will be more expensive, but it's worth the investment in your health.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Which one of these would you buy? The $2 per dozen version or the $7 a dozen version?

0:08.0

Well, I have an excellent presentation for you because I am an expert at this topic.

0:16.0

Of course it's not an exact science, but I want to share with you some data on eggs that I think will help you

0:22.4

choose the right type of egg.

0:24.9

So when evaluating eggs, there's a lot of these different terms that are confusing.

0:27.8

I'm going to make it extremely simple.

0:30.0

The first part of this is just going to be mainly talking about space, how much space the

0:35.0

chicken gets, okay?

0:36.5

Unfortunately, 65% of all chickens are in cages.

0:42.4

Caged chickens, which is the great majority of all the chickens, are required

0:46.8

to get at least 67 square inches. So that's a little bit over 8 inches by 8 inches of space.

0:55.0

Then you get something else called New California Caged Chickens.

0:59.0

They get another couple inches, so that's like a space of 10 and a half inches

1:04.5

and again not even a square foot of space then you graduate into something called

1:09.8

cage free right they're out of the cage but the question is how much space do they usually get?

1:15.0

They're in a barn with a lot of other chickens.

1:18.0

Cage-free chickens get 12 inches by 12 inches so they get a square foot.

1:22.0

Then we get something called free range or... inches by 12 inches so they get a square foot.

1:22.6

Then we get something called free-range or something called free roaming.

1:26.8

So they get to go around the barn and they get actually two feet by two feet.

1:32.1

So it's 24 inches by 24 inches, a little more space. And I think

1:36.9

they're also allowed to go outside the barn. There's some hole outside the barn.

...

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