Naked Eggs (Shell less Eggs) by sillymommy
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Sometimes while an egg is being created by a bird, the step for making the hard outer shell is skipped, thus creating a shell less egg.  A Shell less or naked egg is soft, squishy and feels almost rubbery. I will show you how to make your own shell less egg using vinegar and a chicken egg.

 
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Step 1: Equipment

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Tools:
Clear jar
White vinegar
egg
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LaffyDuck187 says: Apr 9, 2012. 7:53 AM
Is the egg edible after it becomes shell-less?
Sparkyrob says: Apr 12, 2012. 7:52 AM
I think the best answer to your question is itself a question - How many times have you eaten an egg shell?

I think what you might be asking is - Is it edible after being soaked in Vinegar for so long? That is a good question. Pickles are edible after soaking in vinegar. I would guess these would be too. That would be something to test.
LaffyDuck187 says: Apr 12, 2012. 8:51 AM
It would probably be a good idea to boil the egg before eating.
PearlZenith says: Apr 12, 2012. 11:45 PM
If you're worried about the egg sitting at room temperature, I wouldn't, as that's the way eggs are stored. Refrigeration isn't necessary.
lperkins says: Apr 13, 2012. 12:08 AM
Refrigeration helps them last longer. They're good for about a week unrefrigerated usually. Of course, with commercially produced eggs it can be a little difficult to know precisely how old they are when you get your hands on them. Soaking in vinegar, however, should do a reasonable job of pickling them. Just be sure to cook them thoroughly before you eat them.
mdshann says: May 10, 2013. 7:57 PM
I love pickled eggs! Of course those are usually boiled then pickled...
PearlZenith says: Apr 13, 2012. 7:28 PM
You're right about them lasting longer. I don't worry, since my eggs are fresh from chickens, but from a supermarket, a fridge might be a good idea. Once they're boiled, I always refrigerate them, though.
wold630 says: Apr 24, 2012. 8:27 PM
This is fascinating, but what is the purpose?
voodoopunchie says: Apr 29, 2012. 5:38 PM
When I taking biology in elementary school, we used this project to learn osmosis; after removing the shell, we placed the "naked egg" alternately in corn syrup and fresh water for a few days each and observed the results. It was a really neat way to learn something that may otherwise have been boring for young children.
TallTrav says: Apr 25, 2012. 6:51 PM
We used to call them Rubber Eggs. We used to do this and toss them to unsuspecting folks or leave them about for someone to discover. We left them in a bottle of ink once too, but that was not only smelly, but really messy. The stains were visible for ages....lol
triumphman says: Apr 12, 2012. 10:22 AM
Do you know why there is an air pocket at the top of most eggs ? I do! Take a guess!
DehiXeM says: Apr 24, 2012. 6:42 AM
I don't know, perhaps is it a bit of free oxygen for when it spawns?
triumphman says: Apr 24, 2012. 2:52 PM
You got it! It is an air pocket so when the chic starts to hatch it has a bit of air . Then it pecks a hole in the shell and breathes the first outside air of its new life. Awesome! I know who created these wonderful things! Thank you!
DehiXeM says: Apr 24, 2012. 3:06 PM
Thanks for the fact :D
flyingfox567 says: Apr 20, 2012. 4:46 PM
why?
spylock says: Apr 18, 2012. 2:09 PM
I had chickens that would every so often lay an egg like that,they got tossed into the compost.
rrkrose says: Apr 20, 2012. 2:00 PM
1 of my chickens also laid an egg like this once too.
ryckmans_t says: Apr 12, 2012. 1:28 PM
no, sorry. The carbonate reacts with the acid to form carbonic acid, which looses a molecule of water to form bubbles of carbon dioxide.
CO3-- + H+ ---> H2CO3 ---> CO2 + H2O

there is no "combination with oxygen"
Shanball says: Apr 19, 2012. 1:59 PM
this is why i love Instructables. :)

btw, doesn't it "lose" the molecule? though "loose" is also appropriate!
50-50 says: Apr 12, 2012. 7:46 AM
stick it in water and it will get very firm.put it in glucose syrup and it will shrink and be very hard to break.
sugarsnout says: Apr 15, 2012. 6:06 AM
? missed this reference...sounds cool tell me more please
50-50 says: Apr 16, 2012. 6:30 PM
the egg white is less dense than glucose but more than water.when put in water osmosis causes the membrane to try to equle out the dencity.thus transfering the dence egg white to the water untill they reach the same dencity.this causes the egg to shrink. when in glucose the membrane transfers from the outside to the inside.this causes the egg to expand,drop this one and it will bounce of the floor like a ball.Add food couloring to ether mix and the egg will change colour.
BLUEBLOBS2 says: Apr 15, 2012. 3:56 PM
This instructable is amazing! :0
mattttttty says: Apr 12, 2012. 12:36 PM
This may sound odd - but could you do the same with a partially fertilised chickens egg so you would have like a mini baby chicken (not a live one I'd assume) in a little in-utero ball ?
da.cappina says: Apr 15, 2012. 2:35 PM
eeeewwwwww....
erm, yes, it saunds odd.
(is there something like 'partially fertilised'?)
;o)
KindaLost says: Apr 15, 2012. 11:19 AM
Awesome!
tacamaral says: Apr 12, 2012. 2:23 PM
You can do the same with bones - same principle, it will leave only the gelatinous part of the bone. Try it with chicken bones, for example.
astrong0 says: Apr 12, 2012. 9:41 PM
Oh chicken bones.... I thought you meant human bones and was a little worried.
asghdf says: Apr 15, 2012. 8:59 AM
lol
nanaverm says: Apr 12, 2012. 6:36 PM
That's why it's good to cook ham or other bones with an acid in the water, like lemon juice or vinegar. It actually dissolves the collagen and tendons into gelatin, and leaches out calcium. The finished broth is very nutritious (especially if made with organically raised animals), the fat at the top can be removed after refrigerating, and you can add baking soda a little at a time when using until it no longer foams. Thus you've neutralized the acid, but still have all the benefits of the good nutrition.
chicopluma says: Apr 15, 2012. 8:37 AM
you made a chicken-fish egg XD
saharvey2 says: Apr 14, 2012. 6:39 PM
Great instructable! My daughter and I did it this weekend. I started out with some baking soda and vinegar to discuss the reaction. Then we stripped our egg naked. Thank You!
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mskillasmile says: Apr 14, 2012. 11:19 AM
This is cool. Thank you for sharing.
jerbear1978 says: Apr 12, 2012. 11:15 PM
Would this work on deer antlers?
Thoth says: Apr 13, 2012. 9:02 PM
It should.

It would dissolve the antler but since they are dead bone they would not have a collagen matrix so they would dissolve into nothing you would not have a flexible antler. Unless you manage to harvest an antler while its still in the velvet.

I wonder how acid etching a design on an antler button would work out.
Janus Horus says: Apr 13, 2012. 7:23 PM
Problems with vinegar? What about Coke?
alejandroro5 says: Apr 13, 2012. 11:35 AM
Nice idea!!
tauhid says: Apr 12, 2012. 11:58 PM
Since my child time in Indonesia such a "technology" has been used to put an egg into a bottle. The egg is pushed into the bottle before the white calcium lost all.
wickedchild says: Apr 10, 2012. 9:02 AM
Nice!! Can you hard boil them after that or cook them as you would with normal egg. And the last question does it taste like vinegar. I would love not to peal the shell off my hard boiled eggs. Oh before I for get how long will they stay fresh? Thanks for teaching me something knew.
dwei1019 says: Apr 12, 2012. 6:08 PM
I would recommend not boiling / consuming them in general.. If we take a trip back to biology, the egg itself has grown in size due to osmosis and has absorbed the vinegar into the egg (process to get to equilibrium). You can try it.... If you do.. please be careful..
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