US Easter eggs are so expensive, Americans are dyeing marshmallows, potatoes, and even onions

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Easter eggs are so expensive, Americans are dyeing marshmallows, potatoes, and even onions​

For four decades, Young’s Jersey Dairy in Yellow Springs, Ohio, has celebrated Easter with a cherished tradition—an annual egg hunt featuring 10,000 hand-dyed real eggs. The eggs were baked in standing ovens—“It’s much quicker than boiling that many,” said John Young, a fourth-generation member of the family-owned business—then cooled and dipped in dye by hand, all in preparation for the big day.

This year, however, the beloved event is taking a new turn. For the first time in its 40-year history, the Easter eggs scattered across the farm’s grassy fields will be plastic. Each egg will contain a coupon for a free ride on the carousel, reported the New York Times.

In February, the Young family began questioning whether continuing the tradition with real eggs made sense. Rising prices and limited availability in the U.S. egg market raised concerns. The event typically welcomes over 2,000 people, and the farm usually spends about $3,000 ( ₹256,350) on eggs.

“The responses have been pretty positive,” said Young, referring to social media reactions after the farm announced the change. “I think people were quietly scared we’d cancel the event because of egg prices currently. So they’re glad we’re still doing it.”

Chicken eggs, a staple of Easter celebrations across the country, have become more expensive than in previous years. Although prices have started to fall, the uncertainty has led many to explore alternatives.

On social media, videos on how to dye marshmallows, potatoes, and even onions have gone viral.

Food blogger Lexi Harrison, who runs Crowded Kitchen with her mother, decided to create a healthier version of the popular peanut butter chocolate Easter eggs sold in stores. She combined peanut butter, almond flour, and maple syrup, then dipped the egg-shaped mix in white chocolate coloured with blue spirulina powder and matcha.

Her video showcasing the pastel blue, cocoa-speckled eggs has been viewed over 64 million times and received more than 30 ,000 comments across Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok.

“The experience reminds people of the joyful experiences they had in their own childhoods, and people want to keep that alive,” Harrison said, noting that egg dyeing kits have seen a 20 percent increase in sales this year.

In Michigan, where Harrison is based, eggs have been hard to find. “More than half the time I’ve been to the store in the last month there’s been no eggs,” she said. “I’ve never really been a fan of boiled eggs.”

Young said the shift at their farm wasn’t driven solely by price concerns. “It wasn’t the cost as much as it was the fear of wiping out local inventories,” he said. The $3,000 typically spent on eggs will instead be donated to two local food banks.

Still, the heart of the event remains unchanged.

“Plastic eggs can be just as fun,” Mr. Young said. “But I’m hoping we can get back to the tradition next year.”
 
I don't know what this guy is on, but onions are considerably more expensive than eggs.

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Who the fuck uses real eggs for an outdoor Easter egg hunt? I've been to way too many Easter egg hunts, cause kids, and it's ALWAYS cheap plastic eggs.
When I was a kid they were real eggs.
Wholesale egg prices went from average $8/dozen in January to $3 now, retail prices from $10-$13/dozen to $4-$6/dozen. What the fuck is this article talking about lol
I was wondering that myself. Probably just hoping to cash in on the topic while it is turd warm and easter is coming.
 
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How To Make Great Depression Meals was a big trend on the YouTube and the TikTok.
Even the "apolitical"* Townsends did 18th century poverty cooking episodes.

Jon sperged about politics infesting his channel's comment section around the time of the first Trump presidency
 
I don't know what this guy is on, but onions are considerably more expensive than eggs.
Wholesale egg prices went from average $8/dozen in January to $3 now, retail prices from $10-$13/dozen to $4-$6/dozen. What the fuck is this article talking about lol
This article is from hindustan times. They may be salty they not very well liked now and Indian companies are crashing hard.
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havent seen an easter egg hunts with real eggs in a long while. mostly because they got sick of us hiding them in crooks and corners and leaving them to rot. feels like they jumped toward plastic as soon it was a thing.
 
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Walmart sells a dozen dyeable plastic eggs for $2.

Considering that same Walmart is selling a dozen real eggs for $8?

Yes I did buy the plastic dozen for the annual egg dyeing. Very curious to see how they turn out.

(We do the actual hunt with plastic eggs with scavenger hunt clues inside; the egg dyeing is just fun times.)
 
No mention of the current price of eggs in the article, I wonder why. The whole article is an emotional manipulation tactic.

I was in Wawa and they had a dozen eggs advertised at $4.49. Not exactly cheap. But better than the supermarket I went to. I haven't been to Walmart in ages so I don't know what the prices are there.

I can understand marshmallows. But onions and potatoes? No one is going to eat them. It's a waste of food. If you go and dye a bag of onions then just throw them away in a few days you would get more value out of plunking down a little more on the cheapest eggs you can find. At least you will eat them. I imagine dyed potatoes would be raw. Cooking them would be a mess because the dye would come off in the water or pan ect... No one's going to want to eat that. Wasted food. Just splurge on the damn eggs.
 
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