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How To Preserve Farm Fresh Eggs For A Year Or Longer Without Refrigeration (Video)

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Storing eggs for up 9 months in a refrigerator would be unthinkable to many people, yet in the old days eggs were stored up to a year or longer without a refrigerator.

Many people have wondered how their great-grandparents stored eggs? Perhaps their grand parents didn’t store eggs, perhaps they used only fresh eggs.  Yet for years many folks regularly stored their eggs and used them throughout the winter months.

Chickens normally respond to more daylight by laying more eggs. Oppositely, when there is little daylight, there are fewer eggs layed. So in the winter when days are shorter, it’s good to be able to depend on a fresh egg supply.  You can trick your chickens to lay in the winter months by placing a light in the hen house and making sure they have at least 12 hours of light a day.


There are two ways to store eggs without refrigeration. Both ways  require cool temperatures between 68 and 40 degrees. Therefore a cellar, cool basement or cool room in the house will suffice. The cooler the storage area, the longer your eggs will last.  People have claimed they have preserved eggs for up to 2 years under the right conditions.


The first method is to coat the eggs with a non-toxic substance such as lard, sealing the pores in the shell and thereby sealing out oxygen and moisture. When oxygen is present it allows bacteria to grow, thus spoiled eggs.

When using lard or shortening to coat the eggs, first melt the grease and cool it til it begins to solidify again. Dip each egg in the melted grease individually and then place them on a paper towel to dry. When the shortening or lard is dry on the eggs, rub the eggs with a clean towel, removing excess solid grease. Rub gently and buff each egg. Now repeat the process, before the shortening solidifies. Work fast, allowing the shortening to get almost solid before re-heating it.

Then either place your eggs in a egg carton small end down. Then every 30 days or so flip your egg cartons over so the large end of the egg is down, do thisuntil your eggs are use up. By rotating the position of your eggs you are preserving the yolk.

If you do not have egg cartons then line the bottom of a flat box with a clean soft towel. Place the eggs in the box in a single layer. Cover the box with either a lid or another towel. Place the box of eggs in a cool, dry environment. Eggs prepared this way will last up to 6 months, although I have heard people say that they have kept eggs this way for 1 year if they are kept very cool.


Another product used to coat eggs in this way, but that is supposed to keep the eggs fresh longer is K-Peg. The eggs are coated with this product much the same way they would be coated with the shortening, and prepared for storage the same way.

The other way to keep eggs works on the same principle, cover the pores and keep the eggs cool. However, the eggs must be kept immersed in a solution of Liquid Sodium Silicate. It is usually mixed with sterilie water.

Liquid Sodium Silicate is a non-toxic substance that will cover the pores of the egg shell so well that you will probably be able to keep fresh eggs for up tp 2 years! You can buy it as Sodium Silicate Solution at any pharmacy, however they may not have it on hand and have to order it for you.

Again, you will have to keep the temperatures very cool and the humidity low.

Place clean fresh eggs in a ceramic crock, one layer deep. Pour liquid sodium silicate over the eggs until the eggs are covered and completely immersed in the solution.
Place a towel over the crock and tie it into place. Place the crock of eggs in a cool, dry place and don’t disturb them til you are ready to use them. To use them, just take out how many eggs you need, wash them off in clear water and use as you normally would.

Two tips I would include are; 
When you crack your eggs after storage, crack them in a cup, not directly into your food. You might get an awful surprize and ruin a dish.
Practice these techniques before you think you might really need to store eggs. Practice makes perfect!

I have included this video on “How they preserved eggs in the old days”.  This gives you more insight on how people used to store their eggs years ago.

Here is some information from the USDA On Storing Eggs in Liquid Sodium Silicate:

“What Uncle Sam Says About Preserving Eggs. These are the months when the thrifty housewife who has her own hens, or who can draw upon the surplus supply of a nearby neighbor, puts away in water glass or limewater, eggs for next autumn and winter. (These months being Spring time when the chickens begin laying again after winter) 

To ensure success, care must be exercised in this operation.
Following directions are from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: In the first place, the eggs must be fresh, preferably not more than two or three days old.
This is the reason why it is much more satisfactory to put away eggs produced in one’s own chicken yard. Infertile eggs are best if they can be obtained-so, after the hatching, exclude roosters from the flock and kill them for table as needed. 

The shells must be clean. Washing an egg with a soiled shell lessens it keeping quality. The protective gelatinous covering over the shell is removed by water and when this is gone the egg spoils more rapidly.

The shells also must be free from even the tiniest crack. One cracked egg will spoil a large number of sound eggs when packed in water glass. Eathenware crocks are good containers. The crocks must be clean and sound. Scald them and let them cool completely before use. 
A crock holding six gallons will accomodate eighteen dozens of eggs and about twenty-two pints of solution. Too large crocks are not desirable, since they increase the liability of breaking some of the eggs, and spoiling the entire batch. It must be remembered that the eggs on the bottom crack first and that those in the bottom of the crocks are the last to be removed for use.

Eggs can be put up in smaller crocks and eggs put in the crock first should be used first in the household. Water Glass Method Water Glass is know to the chemist as sodium silicate. It can be purchased by the quart from druggist or poultry supply men. It is a pale yellow, odorless, syrupy liquid. It is diluted in the propotion of one part of silicate to nine parts of distilled water, rain water, or other water. In any case, the water should be boiled and then allowed to cool.
Half fill the vessel with this solution and place the eggs in it, being careful not to crack them. The eggs can be added a few at a time till the container is filled. Be sure to keep about two inches of water glass above the eggs. 
Cover the crock and place it in the coolest place available from which the crock will not have to be moved. Inspect the crock from time to time and replace any water that has evaporated with cool boiled water.

When the eggs are to be used, remove them as desired, rinse in clean, cold water and use immediately. Eggs preserved in water glass can be used for soft boiling or poaching, up to November. Before boiling such eggs prick a tiny hole in the large end of the shell with a needle to keep them from cracking. They are satisfactory for frying until about December. From that time until the end of the usual storage period-that is until March-they can be used for omelettes, scrambled eggs, custards, cakes and general cookery.

As the eggs age, the white becomes thinner and is harder to beat. The yolk membrane becomes more delicate and it is correspondingly difficult to separate the whites from the yolks.
Sometimes the white of the egg is tinged pink after very long keeping in water glass. This is due, probably, to a little iron which is in the sodium silicate, but which apparently does not injure the egg for food purposes.”

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    Total 11 comments
    • voiceofreason

      Cool info, our grandparents were smarter than we give them credit for, good report!

    • iamamerican

      Mineral oil can also be used to coat the eggs to keep out the oxygen.

    • wvbowhunter

      My hens are laying up to 13 a day.

      • Jeronimo Dan

        That Great!
        Now did you say you had over 400 hundred hens?

    • chefjim

      Why am I reading this?

    • FarmerX

      Thanks for the info, it may come in handy.

    • YellowRoseTx51

      That’s very cool, thank you for posting it. Powdered eggs just aren’t the same!

    • AmbrociousXP

      Good info! Thanks for this!

    • Anonymous

      Skylights in your hen house also help to bring in light.

    • Impeachment Now!

      Thanks…this even I can do!

    • LedaOhio9

      Never knew this!

      :)

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