The executive chef of dine by Peter Gordon at SkyCity answers your cuisine questions.
I received a booklet with some health supplements I purchased recently and they had a article on eggs and it said, "A conventional egg from a battery hen is a completely different food biochemically - they are health damaging, ageing and toxic". Any truth in this?
- Nick Mills
Ed's Note: Peter Gordon recently presented the inaugural New Zealand SPCA Blue Tick Good Egg Awards that recognise food businesses supporting animal welfare by sourcing cage-free eggs. Because educating customers requires both good information and good taste, Weekend Life asked Massey University's Institute of Food, Nutrition and Human Health Director of Education and Research Professor V. (Ravi) Ravindran to clarify the science:
Eggs are wholesome and packed with essential nutrients, irrespective of the type of housing used to rear the hens (cages vs free range). One egg has all essential vitamins and minerals in varying amounts, high-quality protein, unsaturated fats and antioxidants, all for 70 calories. Irrespective of the source, eggs contain no undesirable components which are health damaging. So there is no truth in the claims made in the article.