I resurrected this very interesting thread because I'd like to hear more opinions about yolk color, what things determine it, and how much of a determinant factor it can be in deciding which eggs are or aren't healthy.
I currently have tried 5 sources of organic/pastured eggs, the eggs from one of the suppliers (A) have yolks that are clearly the most intense orange and look firm. Two others (B and C) are orange but less intense, and seem less firm. And two others (D and E) look a dark yellow, similar to regular eggs, just not as bright maybe. I'm a bit skeptical about whether D and E two are even organic or pastured raised, or if the sellers are just lying. The eggs from D and E also sometimes have that white thing sticking to the side(s) of the yolk, I don't know if that's healthy or not, but eggs from A, B and C don't have that, or at least I haven't noticed. Eggs from A definitely don't (I've had a lot of them). Eggs from C are refrigerated, and those from B might be (not sure). Those from A, D and E are kept at room temperature. B and C look like they might be cleaned, but those from A, D and E are not. None of them are particularly dirty anyway (about 50% of conventional eggs where I live are not cleaned, since it's not required by law. Conventional eggs that aren't cleaned can be a lot more dirty than any of these)
I'm leaning towards only having eggs from A supplier, I hope that's the right decision. What do you guys think?
Another issue is which provider to choose for chicken meat. I figure that healthy eggs means healthy chicken meat (is that correct?). Supplier A doesn't sell chicken meat, B doesn't sell chicken meat either. C does, but it's kept at -2 degrees C (28.4 F), and I believe that makes it lose nutrients. I tried C's chicken, their chickens are small, quite fatty, and it was tasty but the smell was a little strong, and the taste a little bland. E also sells chicken meat, their chickens are huge, not as fatty, have thicker and more gelatinous connective tissue inbetween the skin and the meat, are fresh (never-frozen) and taste good without a strong smell. I've never had conventional chicken raw to be able to tell the difference; and I don't think I can bring myself to do it (though chicken has become my favorite raw meat, possibly because of all the fat in the skin, and also because of the cartilage, spongy bone and marrow, but I think those things from a regular chicken would be super loaded with toxicity and just thinking of that makes me nauseous)