Eat Eggs. Your body will love you

Ironside

Well-known member
For many years the egg had a bad rep from the medical community. In recent years though, the egg has been gaining some more traction in the health and fitness community.

Here’s 15 different ways that eating eggs can benefit your life

Eggs might just be the easiest, cheapest and most versatile way to up your protein intake.
Beyond easily upping your daily protein count—each 85-calorie egg packs a solid 7 grams of the muscle-builder—egg protein also improve your health. They’re loaded with amino acids, antioxidants, and healthy fats. Don’t just reach for the whites, though; the yolks boast a fat-fighting nutrient called choline, so opting for whole eggs can actually help you trim down. When you’re shopping for eggs, pay attention to the labels. You should opt for organic, when possible. These are certified by the USDA and are free from antibiotics, vaccines and hormones. As for color, that’s your call. The difference in color just varies based on the type of chicken or if the shell has been bleached which should be avoided however, they both have the same nutritional value.

Eggs can help boost your immune system.
If you don’t want to play chicken with infections, viruses, and diseases, add an egg or two to your diet daily. Just one large egg contains almost a quarter (22%) of your RDA of selenium, a nutrient that helps support your immune system and regulate thyroid hormones. Kids should eat eggs, especially. If children and adolescents don’t get enough selenium, they could develop Keshan disease and Kashin-Beck disease, two conditions that can affect the heart, bones, and joints.

Believe it or not, eggs can help boost your cholesterol profile. There are three ideas about cholesterol that practically everyone knows: 1) High cholesterol is a bad thing; 2) There are good and bad kinds of cholesterol; 3) Eggs contain plenty of it. Doctors are generally most concerned with the ratio of “good” cholesterol (HDL) to bad cholesterol (LDL). One large egg contains 212 mg of cholesterol, but this doesn’t mean that eggs will raise the “bad” kind in the blood. The body constantly produces cholesterol on its own, and a large body of evidence indicates that eggs can actually improve your cholesterol profile. How? Eggs seem to raise HDL (good) cholesterol while increasing the size of LDL particles (which are thought to be less dangerous than small particles).

Eggs can help reduce your risk for heart disease. Not only have eggs been found to not increase risk of coronary heart disease, but they might actually decrease your risk. LDL cholesterol became known as “bad” cholesterol because LDL particles transport their fat molecules into artery walls, and drive atherosclerosis: basically, the gumming up of the arteries. (HDL particles, by contrast, can remove fat molecules from artery walls.) But not all LDL particles are made equal, and there are various subtypes that differ in size. Bigger is definitely better — many studies have shown that people who have predominantly small, dense LDL particles have a higher risk of heart disease than people who have mostly large LDL particles. Here’s the best part: Even if eggs tend to raise LDL cholesterol in some people, studies show that the LDL particles change from small and dense to large, slashing the risk of cardiovascular problems.

Eggs can result in more energy! Just one egg contains about 15% of your RDA of vitamin B2, also called riboflavin. It’s just one of eight B vitamins, which all help the body to convert food into fuel, which in turn is used to produce energy.

Eggs can help improve your skin and hair
B-complex vitamins are also necessary for healthy skin, hair, eyes, and liver. (In addition to vitamin B2, eggs are also rich in B5 and B12.) They also help to ensure the proper function of the nervous system.

Feed your brain eggs and it will love you. Eggs are brain food. That’s largely because of an essential nutrient called choline. It’s a component of cell membranes and is required to synthesize acetylcholine: a neurotransmitter. Studies show that a lack of choline has been linked to neurological disorders and decreased cognitive function. Shockingly, more than 90% of Americans eat less than the daily recommended amount of choline, according to a U.S. dietary survey.

Eggs can help reduce stress and anxiety. If you’re deficient in the 9 amino acids that can be found in an egg, it can have mental effects. A 2004 study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences described how supplementing a population’s diet with lysine significantly reduced anxiety and stress levels, possibly by modulating serotonin in the nervous system.

Help give your body the gift of life by eating more eggs. Among the lesser-known amazing things the body can do: It can make 11 essential amino acids, which are necessary to sustain life. Thing is, there are 20 essential amino acids that your body needs. Guess where the other 9 can be found? That’s right. A lack of those 9 amino acids can lead to muscle wasting, decreased immune response, weakness, fatigue, and changes to the texture of your skin and hair.

Improve your eyesight by eating eggs! Two antioxidants found in eggs — lutein and zeaxanthin — have powerful protective effects on the eyes. You won’t find them in a carton of Egg Beaters — they only exist in the yolk. The antioxidants significantly reduce the risk of macular degeneration and cataracts, which are among the leading causes of vision impairment and blindness in the elderly. In a study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, participants who ate 1.3 egg yolks per day for four-and-a-half weeks saw increased blood levels of zeaxanthin by 114-142% and lutein by 28-50%!

Eggs contain nutrients that could help keep your bones and teeth stronger. Eggs are one of the few natural sources of Vitamin D, which is important for the health and strength of bones and teeth. It does this primarily by aiding the absorption of calcium. (Calcium, incidentally, is important for a healthy heart, colon and metabolism.)

If you’re trying to diet and lose weight, eggs can help you feel fuller thus helping you to eat less. Eggs are such a good source of quality protein that all other sources of protein are measured against them. (Eggs get a perfect score of 100.) Many studies have demonstrated the effect of high-protein foods on appetite. Simply put, they take the edge off. You might not be surprised to learn that eggs score high on a scale called the Satiety Index: a measure of how much foods contribute to the feeling of fullness.

Eggs can help you lose or maintain weight.
Largely because of their satiating power, eggs have been linked with fat loss. A study on this produced some remarkable results: Over an eight-week period, people ate a breakfast of either two eggs or a bagel, which contained the same amount of calories. The egg group lost 65% more body weight, 16% more body fat, experienced a 61% greater reduction in BMI and saw a 34% greater reduction in waist circumference!

Eating eggs daily can help to keep your liver happy. B-vitamins aren’t the only ovular micronutrients that contribute to eggs’ beneficial effects on liver health. Eggs are also rich in the nutrient choline. (One large egg contains between 117 and 147 milligrams of the nutrient, depending on your cooking method of choice). A recent review explained that choline deficiency is linked to the accumulation of hepatic lipid, which can cause non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Luckily, a Journal of Nutrition study found that a higher dietary choline intake may be associated with a lower risk of non-alcoholic fatty liver in women.

If you’re already susceptible to type 2 diabetes, eating eggs can help reduce the risk of getting type 2 diabetes. Another side effect of choline deficiency and the subsequent accumulation of hepatic lipid is an increase in your risk of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes.

Last but not least, including eggs in your day to day nutrition can help your body reduce inflammation. Eggs are a major source of dietary phospholipids: bioactive compounds which studies show have widespread effects on inflammation. A recent review published in the journal Nutrients connected dietary intake of egg phospholipids and choline with a reduction in countless biomarkers of inflammation. Lowering inflammation has widespread health benefits that range from lowering risk of cardiovascular disease to improving the body’s ability to break down fat.

So there you have it. Even more reasons they call it “the incredible, edible, egg.”
 
I have at least 4 eggs a day and add egg whites to my protein shakes daily. On a bulk I can eat upwards of 8 to 10 eggs a day
 
I go through 12 eggs a day then chicken and once in awhile beef.
I like to scramble eggs for breakfast but also for dinner with Brown rice and vegetables
 
I hard boil 4 dz to bring to work for the week every Sunday…My dad gets me duck eggs to their a lil bigger but yes eggs are great
 
Did you know they have blue chickens their eggs look like light blue dyed Easter eggs
 
I had a Philipino dude as a roommate for a bit in the Corps. He used to bring in Belut. It’s basically an almost ready to hatch duck egg that gets hardboiled. When you crack it open it looks like a baby duck inside. Feathers, a beak, eyes but it still has the yolk around it and the whites of the egg. You eat the whole thing. Sounds gross but man it’s delicious
 
I’ve seen those Belut before but not in person. I’d definitely give it a go. Lil hot sauce action.

I have at least 4 eggs a day but sounds like I should up my intake. Dude 4 dozen hard boiled, that would take several hours but I am loving that idea.
 
It’s fast and easy if you steam them vs hard boiling. Plus steaming makes peeling them super easy. Since I started doing that, I’ve never had an egg fall apart on me while peeling.
 
Take a big pot and a spaghetti strainer. Put the spaghetti strainer in the big pot and fill the pot with cold water up to the bottom of the strainer. Put the cold eggs in the strainer and turn on the heat. Cover the pot with a lid. Bring the water to a boil. With the pot covered and the water boiling it will steam the eggs. It takes 25min to steam the eggs vs 8min boiling them but it’s worth it.
 
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