write an article about This morning, I woke up and decided to make fried eggs. When I cracked an egg into a plate, it came out with this white ribbon-like thing attached to it. I instantly lost my appetite. I’ve been sitting in the kitchen for half an hour now, staring at it and trying to figure out what it is. Does anyone know – All Recipes Healthy Food

write an article about This morning, I woke up and decided to make fried eggs. When I cracked an egg into a plate, it came out with this white ribbon-like thing attached to it. I instantly lost my appetite. I’ve been sitting in the kitchen for half an hour now, staring at it and trying to figure out what it is. Does anyone know

 

Is It Dangerous to Humans?

If you managed to look at the picture without losing your appetite completely, here is the silver lining: it is entirely harmless to humans.

Ascaridia galli is highly host-specific, meaning it can only survive, mature, and cause an infection inside birds like chickens and turkeys. Even if someone were to accidentally cook and consume an egg containing one of these worms, it poses absolutely zero risk of infecting a human body.

Israel Journal of Veterinary Medicine

 

What You Should Do

While it may be biologically fascinating and medically harmless, nobody is expecting you to scrape it into a hot skillet.This is an incredibly rare occurrence—especially in commercially produced eggs that undergo rigorous quality candling—but it does happen occasionally, particularly with small-scale backyard flocks or organic farms.

Israel Journal of Veterinary Medicine+ 1

 

If you ever encounter an egg like the one in 730001582_1005499335690932_256350666895127830_n.png.jpeg, the protocol is simple:

  • Toss the egg (and the rest of the carton if it makes you feel better) into the trash.

  • Wash the plate or bowl thoroughly with hot, soapy water.

  • Take a deep breath, accept that nature is occasionally weird, and maybe switch to oatmeal for the morning