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  1. #1
    Mini's Avatar
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    Notice the price of eggs lately?

    INDIANAPOLIS - Low-carbohydrate, high-protein diets adopted by millions of people hoping to lose weight have contributed to sharply rising egg prices, industry experts agree.

    Egg prices have spiked across the nation in recent weeks, reaching 20-year highs. Holiday baking and thinning chicken flocks are partly responsible, but protein-conscious dieters, including those on the popular if controversial Atkins diet, have created new demand.

    "Proteins have gone through the roof, and eggs have gone along for the ride," said Tom Kruchten, a spokesman at the National Agricultural Statistics Service. "Eggs are a heck of a lot cheaper protein than beef."

    In the past two months, egg prices have climbed to as much as $1.40 a dozen, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (news - web sites). That price may be cheap compared with most grocery items, but some say the demand reflects a broader shift in thinking.

    With high cholesterol and fat-filled yolks, eggs once suffered from a reputation as artery cloggers. But recent reports have shown they are healthier than previously thought.

    Research published this year in the New England Journal of Medicine and elsewhere found that people on the high-protein, low-carbohydrate Atkins diet lost twice as much weight over six months as those on standard low-fat diets.

    "The egg is being held up as a model food today, whereas in the last 20 or 30 years, it has been dragged through the mud," said Don Bell, a professor at the University of California and consultant to United Egg Producers, a national cooperative of egg producers.

    In Indiana, the fourth-largest egg-producing state behind Iowa, Ohio and Pennsylvania, October production was down about 1 percent from last year. Industry specialists agree that may contribute to rising costs.

    Others have suggested the price increase may be linked to the holiday season, as family kitchens turn out extra pies, cookies and cakes.

    But some experts say the record prices show eggs are acceptable again and not limited to the breakfast table.

    "It's the perfect food, one of nature's perfect foods. And it packs a nutritional pound for its dollar," said Colette Heimowitz, a nutritionist and spokeswoman for Atkins Nutritionals Inc., started by Robert Atkins, the physician who created the most popular of the low-carb diets.

    At O'Malia's Food Market in downtown Indianapolis, an announcement sounds over the intercom to inform shoppers of the store's low-carb, no-carb and high-protein products.

    A sign above the egg cooler lists prices ranging from $1 a dozen to just below $2.

    But price isn't an issue for Tobin Wilkerson, who said he wasn't sure whether to believe eggs are healthy. And he doesn't care.

    "I eat eggs because I like eggs," Wilkerson said. "If the whole egg is healthier, it just means I can eat the whole egg."
    To see the future you must forget your past...otherwise your past will become your future

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    Circuit advertisement Notice the price of eggs lately?
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    Shancopp's Avatar
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    I bought a dozen large eggs yesterday at Kroger (I'm in IN) for $1.15. Isn't that about normal??
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    We only buy large brown eggs, which have always been pricy compared to the rest... but I will only eat brown and hubby likes 'em large.
    Lord, keep your arm around my shoulder and your hand over my mouth.

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    Man, tell me about it!!! Sometimes, during the holidays u can get a dozen for like 99cents....

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    I paid $4.06 for a flat of large eggs at Wal-Mart the other night. If the dang coons would leave my chickens alone, I could raise my own. They taste better anyway out of the yard. I'm going to see if I can start getting them from the local egg houses we have around here. I know they use to sell them to me for a $1.00 a flat for like double yokes, but they will get in trouble if they get caught doing it.
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    Store around here had medium eggs for $.68 a dozen. They ran out so they let me have large eggs for the $.68. I did good bought 4 dozen I also bought Eckrich bacon for $1.18 a pound.
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    missing my daughter I love you steph

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    tsquared's Avatar
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    The word that come from our supplier is that An organization similar to the Humane Society made the farmers make larger areas per chicken so this cut down on the chickens that could lay eggs and thus raising the prices......however did see that prices are to start dropping.
    It works just like gas and the holidays.......cheap until the holidays gets here and then up we go with the prices....
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    "In Indiana, the fourth-largest egg-producing state behind Iowa, Ohio and Pennsylvania, October production was down about 1 percent from last year. Industry specialists agree that may contribute to rising costs."

    well i live in ohio, i shop in ashland and some of the eggs they sell are "raised" in ashland. so i guess that keeps our costs pretty low, i mean there is no real shipping involved there. and the amish raise eggs too, they have to sell them right away in the summer because of no refrigeration so they are always cheap, i know the ashland college buys from the amish, they just take a van over there and load it up. 100's of eggs at a time.

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    I hadn't really notied the prices were going up, but I did notice that no one had really good sales on eggs around Thanksgiving. Ususally you can get them for .49 a dozen near the holidays, but not this year.

    DH grew up on a farm with chicken houses....you can't pay him to eat an egg or chicken......kinda makes me wonder sometimes.
    Níl gach uile fhánaí caillte

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    We have chickens that lay our eggs!!! I cannot imagine paying that much!! We sell ours for .75 a dozen!!!
    RIP ~NICK~

  12. #11

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    I only buy brown eggs. We have a monastary in this area that supplies eggs to most of the grocery stores. I haven't seen a big price change in eggs but then maybe monks don't need that much cash.
    I'd rather laugh with the sinners than cry with the saints.

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