How to Store Farm Fresh Eggs: Keep Them Fresh Longer
You just picked up a dozen beautiful farm fresh eggs from Legacy Land and Livestock. Now how do you keep them at peak freshness? Proper storage makes a real difference — farm eggs can last significantly longer than store-bought when handled correctly.
The Bloom: Nature’s Protective Coating
When a hen lays an egg, it comes out with a thin natural coating called the bloom (or cuticle). This invisible layer seals the shell pores and keeps bacteria out while slowing moisture loss. It’s the egg’s built-in preservation system.
Store-bought eggs are washed before sale, which removes the bloom. At Legacy Land and Livestock, we also wash our eggs before they go to you — it’s part of our commitment to clean, safe, farm-fresh eggs. That means your eggs should be refrigerated for best quality, just like store-bought.
Room Temperature vs. Refrigerated
Washed Farm Eggs (Like Ours)
- Room temperature: Not recommended — eggs are washed
- Refrigerated: 4-5 weeks in the fridge
Washed / Store-Bought Eggs
- Room temperature: Not recommended — bloom is gone
- Refrigerated: 4-5 weeks
Our recommendation: Always refrigerate your eggs for maximum shelf life. For the best baking results, take them out 20-30 minutes before using to bring them to room temperature.

Best Refrigerator Storage Practices
- Use the original carton — It prevents moisture loss and protects against absorbing odors from other foods
- Store in the main body of the fridge — Not the door, where temperatures fluctuate
- Keep them pointed-end down — This centers the yolk and keeps the air cell stable
- Already washed and ready — Our eggs come to you clean and refrigerated
How to Test Egg Freshness
Not sure if your eggs are still good? Try the float test:
- Sinks and lies flat on the bottom — Very fresh (1-2 weeks)
- Sinks but stands upright — Still good (2-3 weeks)
- Floats to the top — Time to toss it
As an egg ages, moisture escapes through the shell and the air cell inside grows larger — that’s what makes it float.
Freezing Eggs for Long-Term Storage
Got more eggs than you can use? You can freeze them:
- Crack eggs into a bowl and gently whisk (don’t incorporate too much air)
- Pour into ice cube trays — each cube is roughly 1 egg
- Once frozen, transfer to a freezer bag
- Label with date and use within 6 months
Frozen eggs work great for baking, scrambled eggs, and omelets — not so great for frying or poaching.
Get the Freshest Eggs in Durant, OK
The best way to maximize egg freshness is to start with the freshest eggs possible. At Legacy Land and Livestock, our eggs are collected daily and available for pickup within days of being laid. Reserve yours today.