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Rewilding your Diet by Closing Loops, Waste Steams on the Homestead: Egg Shell Series

RewilderLife Posted on March 22, 2024 by Rachel JamisonMarch 22, 2024
Affiliate links to Amazon below, I do make some financial gain from those. Thanks for your support.

 

I thought I’d talk a little about the subject of waste steams here on the blog. Waste is something we all have. Toilet paper tubes, boxes, packaging, and so on. We can also waste things like water, electric, food, and even time. We can close the gap in waste streams by being creative and by avoiding bringing things home to begin with. One way I do this is by using boxes to make new gardening beds, toilet paper tubes to start seeds, etc.. You know this drill, it’s been talked about a lot for years. One of the things I want to talk about today is egg shells. Not just saving them to give them back to your chickens or composting them but using them for your own calcium intake. Yes, you read right. You can bake or boil, grind and consume the egg shell yourself for your own nutrition.

 

First let’s talk about what is in an egg shell?

The shell itself contains many minerals like calcium, magnesium, sodium, copper, iron, manganese, zinc, amino acids and so on. I will post a few links below for you to read about this yourself. One of the things we often don’t pay attention to is the membrane of the egg. It contains some important nutrition as well. Things like collagen, glucosamine, chondroitin, and again amino acids. All of these you see on store shelves and we as homesteaders have access to without ever leaving the homestead or paying money to companies we often don’t support. This is closing the waste stream loop AND rewilding. The WHOLE egg is literally a nutritional supplement, it grows and sustains a whole life without any input! A baby chick! As the old commercial from years ago stated , “the incredible, edible egg.” It really is incredible. I often eat 4 to 6 a day.

 





I am going to post a few notes below with studies done on egg shells and membranes specifically. I will not cover the egg itself because this is about waste streams. One important things to consider is bioavailability of the nutrition we consume. Animal based products are some of the most well absorbed nutrition on the planet for humans. Eggs should be a huge part of anyones diet, especially if you are a vegetarian or low animal consumption (for any reason). For those with allergies you may want to consider the feed the animal is getting or even trying a different egg type (often soy, corn, or wheat can cause issues for some). In our family we have a couple folks who can’t eat chicken eggs but do tolerate duck eggs (this is more due to different protein and enzymes).

 

Notes on safe consumption:

I save the shells in the freezer until I have enough to do a bigger batch. It works best if you can keep the eggs from stacking inside each other. I bake mine in the oven at 225F for 20 minutes in a single layer (to kill salmonella you need to cook at 150F for 12 minutes according to this) . I then grind them in my Ninja and run them through my coffee grinder. The finer the powder the better you will absorb the vitamins and minerals. I then put them in a jelly jar and keep them in the fridge or freezer. I add them to smoothies, which for me usually contains raw eggs (do so at your own risk, not saying its safe).


How much to take?

We are supposed to get anywhere from 1,000 to 1,300 mg a day to ward off deficiency. The RDA however is the minimum to avoid major issues. Most of the world is deficient in many vitamins due to our modern diets and low stomach acid (caused also by diet, medications, etc). So depending on your diet and need you may want to consume more, and possibly take in some digestive enzymes or apple cider vinegar to create an environment that helps you absorb. One thing to remember is, calcium is absorbed and put into the bones best if you have optimal vitamin D, K, A, and other mineral levels. Guess what contains those things? The EGG! And if your birds are getting quality forage, bugs, grains, and sunshine you have a beautiful nutritionally dense food source wrapped up on a tidy portable and somewhat storable package! Its a beautiful thing isn’t it?!


Folks, those eggs aren’t just for the birds and the worms! They are for us too! So save those shells and membranes, bake them and eat them! Your skin, your bones, your body and your wallet will love you for it!!

 

Links:

Egg Shell Membrane Amino Acid Analysis 

Egg Shell Membrane on Hair, Skin, Nails

Egg Shell to Improve Dietary Calcium

Egg Shell Powder in cakes

Benefits and Risks of Eating

How to Make Calcium Supplement

Calcium Bioavailability (I added this despite it not talking about egg shell or membrane because it does show Calcium Carbonate’s bioavailability. 

Time-Temperature Effects on Salmonella 

Eggs and K2

Egg Nutrition 

 

Amazon Links:

Hand Coffee Grinder: https://amzn.to/4ak7ghC

 

I speculate you can make the egg shell more bioavailable by soaking egg shell powder in apple cider vinegar and then if you consume vitamin C foods like rose hips or citrus peels into the diet. These contain natural vitamin C or Citric Acid (not all forms of this are the same). But this is my non-scientific speculation. ideally we work on proper stomach PH. 

Posted in Blogs, Permaculture, Recipes, Rewilding, Zone 00 | Tagged calcium, chickens, egg shell membrane, egg shells, waste steams

What’s Up on The Homestead?

RewilderLife Posted on January 21, 2024 by Rachel JamisonJanuary 21, 2024
I am an Amazon affiliate and do make some money off any purchases made through my link. RWL

CRANBERRIES


Cranberries are what is up!  The holidays are over so there are some deals to be had.  I love dried cranberries on a salad or with some nuts,  but what I don’t love is the oils and the sugars they add to them.  So when the store had a sale, I bought a bunch of fresh raw cranberries and made some juice and dried berries.

 

  Of course they needed a good wash and sort, some of the berries had gone bad and I wanted to wash and soak them in vinegar water to be sure they were clean.

 

 

 

After that I blanched them for about a minute in boiling water to break them open.  This helps them dry faster.

I didn’t take a photo but I did toss them with some maple syrup before I put them in the dehydrator.  I like cranberries but they are quite tart!

 

I put them on the sheets because they are easier to clean, you can put them on the tray and they will probably dry faster.  The amount of time you dry them will depend on the temperature you set it at and how dry you want your product.  I wanted mine very dry to store in the pantry for as long as possible so it took about 36 hours.  At my electric rate it cost me $1.18 for 9 trays of cranberries to dry $.03 KWH).  I dried 11 pounds of berries, which I purchased at half price. Of course there is my time and efforts as well.  To me it is worth it to have the better product without oils or sugar (usually gmo beet sugar).

 

SNOW & COLD

 

What else is up around here? Snow and lots of it.  Isn’t that the story everywhere? We have gotten about 2.5 feet in the last week, which honestly is pretty normal here.  It is also normal for January to be so cold.  I am actually thankful. The snow adds water to our gardens and orchards, it adds protection from the cold.  It does however create a nice tunnel system for mice and such to chew on trees.  So, hopefully my fruit and nut trees are tucked safely in without that issue. The cold often kills bugs and pests that plague us in the summer if it stays long enough. Time will tell.

 

Baking & Being Cozy

I have been baking and reading the last week.  I am developing some allergen friendly recipes for family and friends with celiac and or other food issues. This recipe is a a gluten, egg, and dairy free cinnamon raisin bread.  It got a strong pass by my two testers so I think it may make the recipe list for what might become a local baked goods CSA.

Reading, I have been reading Ben Falk’s book, The Resilient Farm and Homestead with book club.  He recently updated the book and on Feb 8th is releasing the new  edition. We are covering the old edition currently. Harold is running this one as I have stepped down from running them for a bit. To join you will need to get ahold of me, Harold or join The Homestead Front Porch on Facebook, it is our group, be sure to answer the questions to get approved. This Wednesday we are covering Chapters 2 & 3.

 

That will have to be it for now!  Enjoy your week and go BE WILDER!

RWL

Posted in Blogs, Diary | Tagged Baking CSA, book club, cold, cranberries, Dehydrator, KWH, snow, The Homestead Front Porch

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