© 2024 WYPR
WYPR 88.1 FM Baltimore WYPF 88.1 FM Frederick WYPO 106.9 FM Ocean City
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Hunting For The Tastiest Egg: Duck, Goose, Chicken Or Quail?

Quail, chicken, duck, goose.
Meg Vogel/NPR
Quail, chicken, duck, goose.

The chicken clearly rules the roost of American egg production. Our hens laid 95.2 billion eggs in 2013, according to government figures. And we'll be awash in them Easter weekend: beating them into yolk-laden desserts, hiding them in backyards for small hunters and gobbling candy made in their image.

But many other birds lay tasty eggs, among them the ostrich, quail, duck and goose. Other cultures have long recognized their virtue. The Chinese salt and preserve duck eggs to make "1,000-year eggs"; the Italians, Spaniards and Japanese all have their own take on the quail egg.

I recently had the chance to eat a dozen duck eggs over the course of a few days (while visiting my friends at Abounding Harvest Mountain Farm who raise ducks) and I was immediately won over by their rich flavor and texture. Since then, I've cooked them every which way and am thoroughly smitten.

I wondered how they would stand up in a blind taste test against the chicken egg. To push the test even further, I got my hands on some goose eggs (shipped courtesy of one of the country's few producers, Metzer Farms, in Gonzales, Calif.) and quail eggs.

Sixteen colleagues joined me. Would the duck emerge as the clear victor? I felt pretty certain it would.

The materials.
/ Eliza Barclay/NPR
/
Eliza Barclay/NPR
The materials.

To run as scientific a trial as possible, I hard-boiled all four sets of eggs, staggering the time based on the size. We peeled the eggs, marveling at the pastel blue inside the quail eggs and the heaviness of the goose shell. Then we cut the alabaster ovals into half-inch wedges.

Shells
/ Meg Vogel/NPR
/
Meg Vogel/NPR
Shells

I blindfolded the tasters one by one and fed them a sample from each egg. Their task? To identify the bird species and choose their favorite.

From left: The yolks of quail, chicken, duck and goose eggs.
/ Meg Vogel/NPR
/
Meg Vogel/NPR
From left: The yolks of quail, chicken, duck and goose eggs.

The results of this study — in which I participated, blindly, as well — are revealing:

  • The duck egg was described as: "gooey," "creamy," "really good," "like a chicken egg on steroids."
  • The goose egg: "weird," "dense yolk," "bland," "funky," "sticky yolk."
  • The quail egg: "tangy," "earthy," "briny," "dense," "sandy," "delicate and grassy."
  • And good old chicken: "ordinary," "like my mom makes," "earthy."
  • On average, my colleagues and I guessed correctly 48 percent of the time. Guess it's not that easy to tell the difference between all these birds.
  • The egg with the highest number of correct guesses? Not so surprisingly, chicken, with 58 percent.
  • NPR staff members blindly taste test quail, goose, chicken and duck eggs.
    / Meg Vogel/NPR
    /
    Meg Vogel/NPR
    NPR staff members blindly taste test quail, goose, chicken and duck eggs.

    The point of the exercise, of course, was to find out which egg people liked best.

    The winner was ... drumroll ... chicken by a hair!

    Final results: chicken with 6 points, duck with 5 points, quail with 4 points and goose with just 1. (One colleague refused to play along.)

    Since our sample size wasn't that big, I can't draw any major conclusions except that people prefer familiar flavors. Still, I was pretty happy to see I'd won over four people with duck. I was one of the duck endorsers, and I must confess that I recognized the tasteas soon as the yolk hit my tongue.

    I wondered, if people like duck eggs, why are they so little known in the U.S. — and so hard to come by? (They're expensive, too, at $5 or more a dozen.)

    I sought out of Metzer Farms, the largest egg-laying duck hatchery in the U.S. and supplier of my friend's flock (and the goose eggs).

    "Chickens are more efficient — they can make more eggs per pound of feed than ducks, and feed is a major cost in producing eggs," says Metzer. "And ducks don't do well in wire cages that chickens are in. Their feet can't handle it."

    So until we can breed a more efficient duck with chicken-like claws, there's little hope the duck egg will overtake the chicken.

    In the meantime, anyone know where I can get an ostrich egg?

    Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.