It started as a simple breakfast.
My girlfriend made fried eggs for me, set the plate down, and everything looked perfect—until I noticed one thing:
She hadn’t rinsed the eggs before cracking them.
My mom ALWAYS washed eggs first. It was practically a rule in our house. So without thinking, I said:
“My mom rinses eggs before cooking. You should too.”
Her smile vanished. She looked offended, even hurt.
“It’s not necessary,” she said.
I pushed back, insisting it was safer and cleaner. The mood went cold instantly. Breakfast was ruined, and so was the morning.
Later, still convinced I was right, I looked it up.
And that’s when I learned the truth:
Rinsing eggs is actually a mistake.
According to food safety experts, store-bought eggs are already cleaned and sanitized. Washing them at home can:
- Spread bacteria around the sink
- Force germs through the shell’s pores
- Increase contamination risk
In other words, rinsing eggs can make them LESS safe—not more.
All my life, I thought my mom’s habit was the “right” way. Turns out it was just a habit… not a rule.
The correct method?
Crack the egg. Cook it thoroughly. Don’t wash it.
I felt awful.
I apologized to my girlfriend and told her she’d been right all along. She laughed, shook her head, and said:
“Next time, just trust me. And maybe… don’t bring your mom into breakfast.”
Lesson learned:
Not everything we grew up believing is fact.
And sometimes the biggest mess isn’t in the kitchen—
It’s when pride gets cracked before the eggs do.