Mr. & Mrs. Smith
<font color=darkorchid>How can you not look? They'
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2007
- Messages
- 7,094
wouldn't that be a horrible waste not to eat them?!
I really don't see it as all that wasteful. We use them for our only Easter decorations. So, it's actually a lot cheaper and better for the environment to use them instead of buying plastic eggs, even if we do throw them out when we are done.
The dye stays on the shell unless the shell breaks while boiling them then alittle dye gets on the egg itself.
You must do it differently than us. We didn't boil the eggs in dye. We mixed dye from an Easter egg package with water and vinegar and put each colour into a bowl and let the children colour them that way.
Are you saying that the inside of the eggs don't end up coloured at all when you go to eat them?
When I was a kid, we always hunted for the real eggs and then ate them later.
I've never known anyone to use real eggs. Around here, we use chocolate eggs or plastic eggs filled with jelly beans. That way, when you find the eggs, it's like getting a yummy prize.
The coloring is basically food coloring same thing I use when I decorate cakes & the kids eat that for sure!
Maybe it depends on what you use to colour the eggs? Like I said, our dye came from a kit and it was pretty strong. We spilled some of it, diluted with water, on the counter and couldn't get it off. Even using cleaning products, it can still be faintly seen. I'm not sure I want that inside of me! I tend to avoid natural and artificial additives though, in general.
Well, it's good to hear that it's safe. I still would recommend refridgerating the eggs though. That doesn't work for us because we keep them out as decorations.



What can I say? I've managed to get through 39....um....uh.....I mean 29 years (yeah, that's it) without dying from the dyed eggs. I'm a thrill seeker I guess