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Posted

Does anyone have experience using goose eggs in baking or pastry? Yesterday, a friend gave me two newly-laid African goose eggs. I'm thinking of making a lemon icebox pie, and I'm wondering if the these eggs will behave like chicken eggs. TIA.

Posted

If the yolk:white ratio is pretty close (I don't know where you could find this information, however) to that of a chicken egg, you could just beat them, and then measure out an amount of beaten egg that equals that required by the recipe.

Michaela, aka "Mjx"
Manager, eG Forums
mscioscia@egstaff.org

Posted

I use duck eggs regularly in baking, but not goose eggs. The duck egg yolks have more fat per gram than chicken eggs and the whites have more albumin per gram. As a result, baked goods are noticably fluffier.

I found this document which looks like it will most likely tell you the albumin and fat breakdown of a goose egg, but it is quite riddled with ads so I lost my patience looking. It looks like that information is somewhere around the 40 page mark.

http://www.scribd.com/doc/30164876/EGG-AND-EGG-PRODUCTS

Posted

I have never used goose, but I have used quail and duck eggs, they both work just fine. I would imagine goose eggs making a very interesting end product.

Dean Anthony Anderson

"If all you have to eat is an egg, you had better know how to cook it properly" ~ Herve This

Pastry Chef: One If By Land Two If By Sea

Posted

When I have used goose eggs in baking, I have to shorten the baking time quite a bit, or cakes come out overdone and dry. I don't know whether this is because goose eggs have a higher protein content, as hathor said, or because they set at a lower temperature than chicken eggs, or some other reason, but I've consistently experienced that difference.

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