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brandO
12-15-2007, 03:29 PM
The Health Benefits of Raw Eggs By John Claydon D.Hom

"The process of cooking eggs destroy the very goodness that our bodies so desperately need as the nature of proteins and fats is altered when exposed to heat. When cooked, the egg protein changes its chemical shape; it is often this process that can be the cause of allergies. Generally when eating raw eggs, any incidence of egg allergy will disappear.

Surprisingly, in spite of ‘bad press’ raw eggs, organic or at least from a known source of healthy free-range chickens, are an excellent health tonic. The regular consumption of raw eggs will do wonders for your overall health. Exceptionally easy to digest, raw eggs provide a wonderful boost to the immune system, and a completely balanced nutritional package. A good immune system is one of several things the body needs to overcome cancer.

Many people’s diets are deficient in high quality proteins and fats, and eggs are one the very best sources of these. Raw eggs have many benefits, they contain essential nutrients for the brain, nerves, glands and hormones, they are nutritionally balanced, and we highly recommend the addition of raw eggs to your nutritional programme. The sulphur amino acids help to keep you young, raw eggs also contain an abundance of other vital substances including protein, essential fatty acids along with niacin, riboflavin, biotin, choline, vitamins A, D and E, magnesium, potassium, phosphorous, manganese, iron, iodine, copper, zinc and sulphur. Egg yolks are one of the few foods that contain vitamin D.

Poisoning from salmonella has been exaggerated in the past. A study by the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 2002 indicated that only 2.3 million, of the 69 billion eggs produced annually, are contaminated with salmonella. In other words 0.003% or 1 in every 30,000 eggs. The bulk of these come from battery chicken eggs and chickens kept in unhealthy conditions - only sick chickens lay salmonella contaminated eggs. If only healthy chicken eggs (organic and free range ideally) are consumed, then far less than one in 30,000 eggs are contaminated. Salmonella is a common micro-organism found almost everywhere, and is just as likely, or more likely, to proliferate on cooked food kept in the fridge. Infection is normally mild gastric symptoms, but in rare cases where the immune system is very low such in the elderly who have had much anti-biotic use, and the source is greatly contaminated, death can result. But such a person is highly lightly to contract one of many common micro-organisms and die from that. To give some perspective, in the highly unusual situation of contracting Salmonella, in a healthy person, an infection is nothing to worry about and is easily treated with high quality pro-biotics every half an hour until you feel better.

Method of Consuming Raw Eggs

From day one of starting raw eggs, your immune system becomes stronger and health will improve. We recommend Zell Oxygen as a key supplement for overall health enhancement. Three raw eggs a day (this will take the place of one meal), seems to be the preferred amount taken by people who regularly consume raw eggs. It is sensible to build up the amount of raw eggs consumed gradually. They are best taken by breaking them into a cup and swallowing whole. It can be helpful to cut through the yolk with a knife to make it easier to swallow, If you have a mental problem with swallowing raw eggs, (they are almost tasteless and easy to swallow) blend with a little goats or sheep’s milk or even avocado, but ideally raw eggs should not be blended as the molecular structure is damaged. Inspect the egg, if it has been cracked do not use it, once broken into the cup or blender smell it, if it smells off do not use it.

It is best to keep eggs un-refrigerated, but in a cool place. Refrigeration can destroy the vital amino acids in raw eggs and can also disguise the distinctive smell of an egg that has gone off.

Raw Eggs and Cholesterol

There is no danger from the cholesterol build up since 2/3 of cholesterol in the body is produced by the liver. The amount of cholesterol consumed in the diet does not relate to the amount of cholesterol deposited. Many studies have shown that the cholesterol in eggs does not raise cholesterol level in the body. Furthermore, eggs contain Lecithin, a valuable nutrient that helps the body to process fats and cholesterol.

Eggs contain valuable fat needed to keep us healthy. On the other hand heated or processed fats are converted into Trans-fats - toxic chemicals that harden in the body, around every cell and clog the circulation. Margarine contains an abundance of Trans-fats and is not part of a healthy diet. Do not be afraid of that natural product that has been eaten with no adverse effects for thousands of years, butter. The initial report that cholesterol in foods leads to health problems was released to the press without scientific validation, and has since been proven by hundreds of scientists and studies around the world to be completely false. The only benefits from the initial press release were to the margarine and vegetable oil industries.

Raw Eggs and Biotin Deficiency

Nature created an egg to be a balanced live food – as long as you eat the biotin rich yolk along with the white, there is no risk of a biotin deficiency.

Quote from the book “The Recipe for Living Without Disease” By Aajonus Vonderplanitz

Free range (ideally from healthy chickens, including organically certified, even better are fertile eggs).

“Raw eggs are one of the best compact foods in nature. Eggs are the ultimate, complete fast food. However the protein in eggs is not utilised for cellular reproduction. They are utilised for regeneration and maintenance. The relationship between raw eggs and salmonella poisoning is a myth"

(Reference the great egg panic by Emily Green, LA R times Jan 2000)

Eggs are remarkable for everyone especially the infirm. Three years ago a medical doctor called me on a Thursday evening about her 70 yr old female patient with emphysema. She explained that her patient had been mainly bed-ridden for two years, was on 100% oxygen and respiratory machines. She prognosed that her patient would die that weekend unless I could help. I told her that the only thing I thought might help at that late stage was eggs. I recommended that she get her patient 10 dozen raw eggs, and put them on her bed table. I suggested that she ask her patient to eat one as often as she could and that there was no limit. Very early Monday morning, I received a call from the patient. She told me that she was off the machines, out of bed and feeling stronger that she had in years. She had eaten 66 eggs over the weekend.

If eggs are whipped, beaten or blended without raw milk, raw cream, or coconut cream, many of the enzymes are oxidised and lost.” It is best to break open the egg into a cup or glass and swallow whole. Most people are repelled by this, but with a little courage it is found to be easy. There is almost no taste and the egg, even big ones are easily swallowed. Generally, I find, 3 to 4 eggs taken in the morning are an important part of my well-being programme. The cholesterol in raw eggs is not deposited in the arteries and is an essential nutrient for aiding health and well-being. The white of the egg has been said to interfere with biotin assimilation, but nature knows best by making the egg yolk very rich in biotin. The egg in its entirety is a very balanced food and only supports health and should be taken in its entirety, yolk and white together.

Disclaimer: Regenerative Nutrition advocates a holistic approach to natural health and wellbeing. The body's ability and power to heal depends upon the totality of diet, nutrition, lifestyle and environmental factors. No claims for the cure of any disease is intended, or implied. Always consult a health care practitioner when combating disease states. The statements in this article have not been approved by the FDA."

http://www.regenerativenutrition.com/content.asp?id=268

hardasnails1973
12-15-2007, 06:30 PM
Good post
I still would take biotin with raw eggs :) 10 mgs a day for saftey measures

seth64
12-16-2007, 04:25 PM
I have been eating RAW egg for quite some time. I agree the issue of Bacteria is over blown.

However : I take the yellow without cooking which has Omega 3/ Protein etc that will be lost in cooking. I cook the white to avoid losing Biotin

Master Khan
12-18-2007, 11:23 PM
I too have been using raw eggs for some time. I read somewhere once that you would have to consume something like 25,000 or more raw eggs to have a statistical chance of getting even a mild dose of food poisoning.

I do use mine in a blender, but what I do is make up my other blender contents first (2-3 cups of half and half, 1/2 cup coconut milk, and about a cup of pure whey protein). I blend that up really well and then add six raw eggs and blend on lowest setting very briefly. I keep that refrigerated and sip it throughout a time period of two days, and then repeat.

After a workout, I'll take about 8 ounces of this along with 5 grams of creatine.

Has worked well so far.

hardasnails1973
12-19-2007, 08:59 AM
Not good bro I did same thing and almosl ended up having in the hosptial stick. I would make my shakes night before and over 2 week peroid I got very ill and could not find out what was wrong. Wey protein that is not prepackage through proper vaccume methods will spoil in less then a day in the fridge. Its whey is not like regular milk it spoils at a faster rate. You been lucky so far, but I was not so lucky. My stomach looked like I was pregnent and I had so much sludge in my colon sticking to the walls it was causing alot of problems. After stopping for 2 weeks i was perfectly healthy again. So just becareful is all..

AJ SIMS
12-20-2007, 05:32 PM
Hey, Dumbass!

No one gave you permission to spam here.

hardasnails1973
12-20-2007, 06:18 PM
Yes they are good, but 60% of the nutrients are in the egg and when you cook them you loose alot of it. By eating it raw and lightly mixxing it together it preserves the nutritional value alot more.. I do 6 whole eggland raw a day ..I use them mainly for the cellular componet of choline to help repair cellmembranes. I'm going to start incorporating this in my nutritrional rebuilding program very soon.

GuitarCrazyo
11-07-2009, 07:30 PM
I am going to buy the regular R9 460 not the TP and aquire a FCT .335 sleeve and install my own shaft. Does anyone know the raw shaft length before gluing in the sleeve? Or if you have any tips thay would be appreciated.

Dadoo
11-07-2009, 07:35 PM
Not good bro I did same thing and almosl ended up having in the hosptial stick. I would make my shakes night before and over 2 week peroid I got very ill and could not find out what was wrong. Wey protein that is not prepackage through proper vaccume methods will spoil in less then a day in the fridge. Its whey is not like regular milk it spoils at a faster rate. You been lucky so far, but I was not so lucky. My stomach looked like I was pregnent and I had so much sludge in my colon sticking to the walls it was causing alot of problems. After stopping for 2 weeks i was perfectly healthy again. So just becareful is all..

you should taste the good mix after 3-4 days being in the refrigerator ;))))))

JanSz
11-13-2009, 03:38 PM
you should taste the good mix after 3-4 days being in the refrigerator ;))))))

Keep eggs in refrigerator or not.

With a sharp and pointy knife poke tiny hole on one end of an egg (vent),
on the other end make a small (1/8") hole.
Suck up one swallow, swallow it, repeat 2-3 time until empty.
----------

The above method is the best but have a draw back.
I use food to help me swallow my pills.

Divide the swallowing egg into many small portions.
Egg, lubricates pills, much easier to swallow pills with egg chaser.
.

mobrien
12-18-2009, 12:36 PM
Yes they are good, but 60% of the nutrients are in the egg and when you cook them you loose alot of it. By eating it raw and lightly mixxing it together it preserves the nutritional value alot more.. I do 6 whole eggland raw a day ..I use them mainly for the cellular componet of choline to help repair cellmembranes. I'm going to start incorporating this in my nutritrional rebuilding program very soon.

Raw, as opposed to cooked, egg whites contain a substance called avidin, which prevents the body from absorbing biotin, an important vitamin. (You'd have to ingest 26 raw egg whites a day for a month to develop a biotin deficiency.)

brandO
01-11-2010, 12:33 PM
I have heard fertile organic eggs contain Less Avidin than factory eggs..

i been trying todo 12-20 whole raw eggs a day..

i heard the raw egg whites are only about 53% digestible whereas cooked whites are 92%

JRA
02-22-2010, 10:30 AM
I have been eating RAW egg for quite some time. I agree the issue of Bacteria is over blown.

However : I take the yellow without cooking which has Omega 3/ Protein etc that will be lost in cooking. I cook the white to avoid losing Biotin

The bacteria issue is not over blown when you get a bad case of Salmonella from eating raw eggs and lose 10 pounds of hard gained muscle.

From now on I will just cook my eggs.
No more raw eggs for me:ack2:

Master Khan
02-23-2010, 03:38 PM
I have heard fertile organic eggs contain Less Avidin than factory eggs..

i been trying todo 12-20 whole raw eggs a day..

i heard the raw egg whites are only about 53% digestible whereas cooked whites are 92%

Just read a book about two weeks ago in regards to cooked foods versus raw foods. It did not address so much the bacteria or infectious elements in one versus the other as much as it did the degree of digestibility and absorption (and interestingly in how cooking cancels out the mineral-binding phytates to varying degrees in grains and legumes - except for soybeans which only fermenting will accomplish) AND its main point in that how developing the ability to cook foods and the desired preference of cooked food over raw foods was the final step that led from advanced primates to homo sapiens.

One of the parts that caught my attention was that (when they were showing the various comparisons) raw eggs had a digestion and absorption of nutrients rate of 51% whereas cooked eggs had a digestion and absorption of nutrients rate of 97%... Now I had always been a big believer myself of the "advantages of raw eggs" but here I am reading absolute pure scientifically measured results and realizing that I can get the same level of nutrients (amino acids, omega fats, etc.) from 6 cooked eggs as I can from a dozen raw eggs. And while I have been eating (in blended protein shakes) raw eggs for probably 20 - 25 years and never had a problem with food poisoning from doing so, there is always that 1 chance in 150,000... So since then I have been cooking up 3 scrambled eggs (mixed with a dash of cream and sprinkled with real shredded cheese) in the morning and then again as a late night snack - and finding that I like it better (something about having a warm snack an hour before bedtime rather than a cold blender shake).

brandO
03-02-2010, 04:34 PM
The white is half the protein content of an entire egg..

1 egg = 6 g protein
2.75 or (3g) is contained the in the yolk.
The yolk is 100% digestible in terms of protein.
that means 1.5g of protein is maybe waste in 1 egg.

that means 1 raw egg has about 4.5 grams of digestible protein.

So eat eggs in all forms, raw, cooked however you like it.

I pick raw because its quick and easy.

n00bs
03-02-2010, 06:17 PM
Good news, I drink 4-6 a day for breakfast.

Master Khan
03-03-2010, 02:26 PM
Research and Clinical Studies

http://jn.nutrition.org/cgi/content/full/128/10/1716

Taking into account these data and the amount of N ingested, it was possible to calculate the true ileal digestibility of egg protein, i.e., the percentage of exogenous egg protein assimilated in the small intestine. The true ileal digestibility of raw egg protein was significantly impaired compared with that of cooked egg protein (51.3 ± 9.8 vs. 90.9 ± 0.8%, P < 0.05).

...In this study, it was shown that after ingestion of 25 g of raw egg protein, almost 50% is malabsorbed over 24 h.(i.e., NOT absorbed - MK) The higher digestibility of cooked egg protein presumably results from structural changes in the protein molecule induced by heating, thereby enabling the digestive enzymes to gain broader access to the peptide bonds. It has been suggested that the reduced digestibility of raw egg white is at least partially related to the presence of trypsin inhibitors in raw egg white (Matthews 1990). (Also published in NIH Research Center PubMed)



http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10564098

Amount and fate of egg protein escaping assimilation in the small intestine of humans.

Ten healthy volunteers were studied once after ingestion of a cooked test meal, consisting of 25 g of (13)C-, (15)N-, and (2)H-labeled egg protein, and once after ingestion of the same but raw meal. Amounts of 5.73% and 35.10% (P < 0.005) of cooked and raw test meal, respectively, escaped digestion and absorption in the small intestine. A significantly higher percentage of the malabsorbed (unabsorbed -MK) raw egg protein was recovered in urine as fermentation metabolites.


http://www.cbass.com/Faq%288%29.htm

(From the desk of Clarence Bass!!!!)

Surprising as it may be to many bodybuilders (including me), eating eggs raw can get in the way of muscle growth. I can’t tell you how many raw eggs I’ve eaten over the years, but it’s a bunch. In my early years of lifting and right through law school, it was not unusual for me to plop six raw eggs in my breakfast malt. My doctor dad also swallowed eggs raw from time to time. We were not alone, of course. Steve Reeves famously ate raw eggs for breakfast every morning. Arnold mixed raw eggs with thick cream. Sly Stallone’s boxing hero Rocky Balboa downed eggs raw in the Rocky movies; my guess is that Stallone did/does as well. Vince Gironda probably tops the list by recommending up to 36 raw eggs a day....

...but recent studies described by Harvard biological anthropologist Richard Wrangham indicate that we were squandering much of the high-quality protein in eggs. That seems strange, because eggs require no chewing and their chemical composition is almost perfect. “The amino acids of chicken eggs come in about forty proteins in almost exactly the proportions human require,” Dr. Wrangham writes in his groundbreaking book "Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human" by Basic Books 2009 (an EXCELLENT book by the way - MK). “The match gives eggs a higher biological value—a measure of the rate at which the protein in food supports growth — than the protein of any other known food, even milk, meat, or soybeans (which contrary to food myths are NOT a "complete protein" - MK).”

It’s no secret that eggs are at the top of the totem poll in protein quality. Few, however, know that ancient man and more recent hunter-gathers probably ate most of their eggs cooked. The details are in Wrangham’s book. They apparently sensed what we now know to be a scientific fact. Wrangham explains that we now have research tools that assess the fate of egg protein as it passes through our digestive tract. Isotopic tracers are fed to hens that attach to the protein in their eggs, allowing scientists to monitor what happens to the protein when the eggs are eaten. Any protein that comes out of the body undigested is “metabolically useless to the person who ate it.” That’s a simple explanation of a complex process, but the logic is clear. Researchers fed healthy subjects raw or cooked eggs. “When the eggs were cooked, the proportion of protein digested averaged 91 percent to 94 percent," Wrangham reports. On the other hand, the digestibility of raw eggs was a meager 65 percent. "The results showed that 35 percent…of the ingested protein was leaving the small intestine undigested. Cooking increases the protein value of eggs by around 40 percent.” For those who are interested, Wrangham provides a detailed explanation of how cooking improves the digestion of eggs. (I personally would strongly recommend reading the book as it gets into the advantages of eating most foods cooked, not simply eggs - MK)... The bottom line is clear: Maximize the growth potential of the ideal protein in eggs. Cook them. (Also, The danger of food poisoning from eating raw eggs, even with the shell intact, is discussed in my book "The Lean Advantage 2". In a section called “Raw-Egg Danger,” I explained why I stopped eating raw eggs. - Clarence Bass)


http://blog.jonudell.net/2010/01/19/we-what-we-eat-what-they-eat/

RE: As based on "Catching fire: how cooking made us human" (MK) - Cooking, he says, has long been thought to be an optional cultural practice, like wearing jewelry. But really, he argues, cooking was the essential technological innovation that enabled us to produce the metabolic energy we needed to become human.

Cooked food is more digestible than raw food. And not just by a little, but by a lot. Learn how to control fire, use it to cook your food, and you free up extra energy — plus time that would otherwise be spent masticating. Spend that time hunting, and your metabolic equation gets even better.

...Everything we thought we knew about absorption of energy from food is wrong.

To this day, Wrangham says, the USDA website publishes tables that make no distinction between the nutritional value of cooked and raw food. On this page, for example, the energy content of one large raw egg is given as 75 kcal. The value for one large hard-boiled egg is almost the same: 78 kcal. This is wrong, Wrangham says. A cooked egg delivers way more energy than a raw egg. How could this be? And how could we not know it? Here’s the explanation. We have traditionally measured the energy content of food by comparing input (the food we eat) and output (the feces we excrete). Burn both in a calorimeter, subtract, and the difference is the energy that was extracted from the food.

Yes, but extracted by whom? Or rather, by what? The energy that we humans take from our food has almost all been extracted by the time it reaches the end of the small intestine. But it has a long way to go yet. It must also pass through the large intestine, where dwell a myriad of gut flora. And they, Wrangham says, are hungry. If you eat a raw banana you only get some of its energy, and they get most of the remainder. If you eat a cooked banana, though, you get a lot more of its energy and leave less for them. The end result looks the same, but the internal distribution is quite different.

So you need to compare the energy in food entering the mouth to the energy remaining in the digestive products leaving the small intestine. Only then does the dramatic difference between the energies we get from raw versus cooked food become evident.

brandO
03-03-2010, 03:46 PM
Until Richard Wrangham or whoever can start benching as much as Arnold, Stallone or Vince Gironda i'll continue to eat my eggs raw..

anways who wants to sit there and cook a dozen eggs a day? Btw eating that many cooked eggs can cause an egg allergy as noted by dr. mercola.


Id say cook the whites, eat the yolks raw... Dont cook to many whites though maybe just a few a day.. eat as many raw yolks as you want.

I dont think it'll hurt to eat the whole egg raw though

Master Khan
03-04-2010, 01:14 PM
Until Richard Wrangham or whoever can start benching as much as Arnold, Stallone or Vince Gironda i'll continue to eat my eggs raw..

anways who wants to sit there and cook a dozen eggs a day? Btw eating that many cooked eggs can cause an egg allergy as noted by dr. mercola.


Id say cook the whites, eat the yolks raw... Dont cook to many whites though maybe just a few a day.. eat as many raw yolks as you want.

I dont think it'll hurt to eat the whole egg raw though

************************************************** *****

LOL... But I really think that it was the AAS / PEDs that these individuals were doing that permitted these individuals to lift the level of weights that they did, and NOT the raw eggs that they consumed. (BTW, was Stallone known as major bench pressers? I knew that he wwas really big into all-around fitness training and especially getting shredded and lean muscularity but have never read anything about his benching supremacy).

And I note that one of the article authors was the well-known and highly credible Charles Bass, a professional bodybuilder and bodybuilding author of some note. And also an individual who himself admitted was a big consumer of raw eggs.

Science is science and researched conclusions are just that (as versus anecdotal commentaries - especially by competitive athletes who "enhance" their diet - no matter what it might be - with AAS and PEDs... I have a feeling that "Ahnold" could have lifted what he did and achieved his muscularity and awards on a diet of Ho-Hos, Oreo Cookies, and Coors Light as long as he was getting sufficient protein intake through consuming sufficient generic protein drinks daily to permit muscular growth!)

(BTW, I just scrambled up 12 eggs with some added cream and sprinkled with shredded cheddar cheese towards the end -- all in just under 8 minutes... just doesn't seem to be that long of a time to be... getting my protein blender shake ingredients together - as I use multiple ingredients - and doing the blending process takes at least 5 minutes so for me, anyway, it really isn't a time issue...)

But, then some say "tomAto" and some say "tomatoh"....

brandO
03-04-2010, 02:00 PM
this is from dr. ron


I do not agree at all that raw eggs are a problem. Your question is an important one, because most so-called authorities recommend against eating the whole egg raw. There really is very little basis for this, though. There were a couple of studies in the 1930s that Edward Howell mentioned in his book Enzyme Nutrition indicating there may be enzyme inhibitors in raw egg white, and of course there is the business about the binding of B-vitamins, a much overrated issue.

But I had a fascinating conversation about this with Nick Gonzalez, MD, who is I believe the world’s foremost authority on alternative treatment of cancer. He told me about some studies done in recent years at medical centers on individuals who had consumed a dozen or two raw eggs daily for many years – who were found to be in excellent health, with no problems. Dr. Gonzalez believes raw eggs, even in large quantities, are an outstanding food. That convinced me that the alleged problems were much overblown.

For several years, I have intermittently eaten up to two dozen raw eggs daily, averaging around a dozen often for months at a time. I find them invigorating and and an important part of my diet, rich in all sorts of key nutrients, including lots of enzymes.

mcs5309
03-29-2011, 03:51 AM
I'm surprised that no one else has complained of the horrible sulfur-smelling bout of flatulence after a few hours of ingesting raw eggs. I also believed in the benefits of eating them raw, but the gas just got worse and I had no choice but to stop. This despite taking enzymes and hcl. It happens like clockwork every time I eat 2 or more - the more, the worse the gas. Any thoughts on this???

n00bs
03-29-2011, 05:37 AM
Until Richard Wrangham or whoever can start benching as much as Arnold, Stallone or Vince Gironda i'll continue to eat my eggs raw..

anways who wants to sit there and cook a dozen eggs a day? Btw eating that many cooked eggs can cause an egg allergy as noted by dr. mercola.


Id say cook the whites, eat the yolks raw... Dont cook to many whites though maybe just a few a day.. eat as many raw yolks as you want.

I dont think it'll hurt to eat the whole egg raw though


You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to brandO again.


:(

Too many lab coats... Drink raw eggs , STFU and SQUAT!

hardasnails1973
03-30-2011, 10:01 AM
Raw eggs are great and for me they act just like steroid due to my biochemistry.
Since I just started back eating them again I can feel the difference in my hair and skin. Plus my muscle fill alot fuller and more vascular.
The raw eggs I eat would be grass feed and would not worry about samenella poisoning. 1 in 30,000 eggs which are non organic you are at risk. Obviously the chances are even less with organic ones.

mcs5309
03-30-2011, 05:53 PM
Guys, I also believe and enjoy the benefits everyone's talking about, but how can I prevent the gas?

virtuosa150
04-24-2011, 08:42 AM
I'm surprised that no one else has complained of the horrible sulfur-smelling bout of flatulence after a few hours of ingesting raw eggs. I also believed in the benefits of eating them raw, but the gas just got worse and I had no choice but to stop. This despite taking enzymes and hcl. It happens like clockwork every time I eat 2 or more - the more, the worse the gas. Any thoughts on this???

I eat raw eggs everyday. I don't have any foul smelling gas. Possibly you have some gut issues that need to be addressed.

mcs5309
05-21-2011, 12:40 AM
I eat raw eggs everyday. I don't have any foul smelling gas. Possibly you have some gut issues that need to be addressed.

Well, I think I've found a solution to the gas problem. Before, I was eating them raw by just stirring them up until liquified in a glass and drinking them down straight. With blending at a much higher speed and mixing them as part of a whey smoothie, I can down as many raw eggs as possible - and voila - great tasting and little or no gassss! What this tells me is a problem with digestion. Blending obviously breaks down the raw components, making them easier to digest and assimilate further. It's probably similar to cooking, but without the heat.