If you’re running a café, restaurant, or food stall, eggs are probably a staple on your menu — from silky hollandaise to fluffy pancakes and all-day brekkies. But, if you don’t handle eggs properly, you’re not just putting breakfast at risk, you’re putting your entire business on the line.
Let’s talk about egg safety before someone ends up with more than just egg on their face.
There’s no legal requirement in NZ or Australia to refrigerate eggs, but if you’re not doing it, you’re playing a dangerous game. The pros recommend keeping eggs at or below 4°C. Why? Because cold eggs last longer, stay safer, and make you look like a professional who gives a cluck.
Pro tip: Keep eggs in their cartons — the packaging protects them from absorbing odours (eggshells are porous, not just posers) and helps maintain that sweet, consistent fridge temp. Oh, and middle or lower shelves only.
Eggs should come with a Best Before date — usually around 35 days after being laid. That’s your golden window for poaching, scrambling, or serving them sunny-side up.
Cracked eggs can only be used if they’re going to be thoroughly cooked or pasteurised. No exceptions.
Aioli, mayo, caesar dressing — they’re delicious but deadly if mishandled. These are potentially hazardous foods (PHFs) and need strict temperature control:
Better yet, acidify to a pH ≤ 4.2 using a verified recipe — or get scientific and test each batch. Not keen on the lab coat lifestyle? Buy pasteurised eggs — if you can find them.
Got leftover yolks or whites? Don’t just toss them in the fridge and forget.
Let’s get cracking on the cooking temps:
Cross-contamination is a silent killer. Always:
A single food safety slip can cost you more than a fine — it can crack your reputation wide open. Label correctly, store smart, and treat eggs like the high-risk food they are.
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