• Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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    8 hours ago

    There’s a lot to unpack here:

    1. This is going to be one of things future generations look back on like we look back at the Great Depression (I’m trying not to think about Great Depression 2)
    2. The whole trend (potato or egg) is just a waste of food. Always has been.
    3. Why can’t people just use the reusable plastic eggs? Bonus is you can put candy inside.

    Edit: Okay, thank you. Apparently we just did “Easter Eggs” wrong growing up.

    • reiterationstation@lemm.ee
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      9 hours ago

      No one is using potatoes. Even the article confirms it when they tell you they saw online hacks make a video about how to do this for clicks. That’s their fucking source. TikTok.

    • ImADifferentBird@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      The whole trend (potato or egg) is just a waste of food. Always has been.

      How so? Did your family just throw out the eggs after Easter or something? Because we always just ate them in the days after when I was a kid.

    • celeste@kbin.earth
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      1 day ago

      We made pretty the eggs we would’ve boiled and eaten anyway. The week after easter we’d be all ‘dad, you ate the one i wanted to eat!!’ because we decorated it the prettiest so it was ours. It was incredibly rare the eggs didn’t get eaten. We also had hollowed out eggshells my grandmother painted that we’d put in a place of honor every year.

      • AlligatorBlizzard@sh.itjust.works
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        17 hours ago

        Eastern European or Slavic ancestry? My family is partly Czech and my aunt did kraslice eggs, they were hollowed out and painted with elaborate designs, we had a bunch in the breakfront cabinet.

        • celeste@kbin.earth
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          10 hours ago

          Polish! I never really thought about why she did it. That’s really neat! I’ll have to ask dad if that’s what inspired her to make them. We inherited them, and had a little stand, but she had a whole elaborate display I wish I could remember clearly.

      • ZagamTheVile@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        No. Not us or anyone I know anyway. We decorate eggs, and have some plastic hollow eggs we’ve used for maybe 10 years to hide stuff in. Then we eat egg salad for a couple of days.

      • catloaf@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        I personally don’t like hard boiled eggs, so I never ate them. I can’t speak for anyone else.

      • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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        1 day ago

        Usually, yeah. People will hide them for kids to find or they’ll sit out as decorations for a few days. By the time they’re done being “Easter eggs” they’re all kinds of nasty / spoiled. (American eggs require refrigeration)

        • ImADifferentBird@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          You hide them THE DAY OF the Easter egg hunt. And you go round up the ones the kids don’t find after. No spoilage unless you miss one.

          And you don’t just leave hard boiled eggs sitting out. If you want decorations you can leave out, you hollow out the eggs before decorating.

          Seriously, this all sounds like a you issue. Who just leaves eggs out as “decoration”?

        • waterbird@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          my family would dye the eggs as a big event, and then store them in the fridge and eat them. i never knew people would just throw them away.

          we are also german, though- we do the whole popping a hole in the shell and blowing the inside out in order to make the decorative ones that one leaves at room temperature.

          how irrational to dye them and then let them spoil.

          • reiterationstation@lemm.ee
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            9 hours ago

            My American experience was the same as your German one.

            Some of these people in my country ain’t right if you haven’t noticed.

        • ValiantDust@feddit.org
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          1 day ago

          Does this egg-washing thing Americans do mean you have to keep them refrigerated even if they are hard-boiled? Because where I live you can keep hard-boiled eggs for days or even weeks even at room temperature. I never heard of anyone just throwing away the eggs they hide for kids. You hide them, the kids find them, you put them in the fridge, you eat them.

          Edit: I don’t know if you added the part about refrigeration later or I just missed it before. That answers my question. I guess it makes sense because the shell will be porous. Wow, I never considered this affects easter customs.

        • angrystego@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          We put the hard boiled ones back to the fridge and use hollow ones as decoration - you make a small hole at the top and the bottom, blow out the good stuff, make an omelette or something and let the shell dry out. You can keep those as a decoration that doesn’t spoil.

    • CompactFlax@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 day ago
      1. Yes
      2. Don’t you drain them out? Weird. Make the patterns, make a tiny hole, drain it out. That way you get an omelette.
      3. Plastic is bad. Truthfully, I don’t know enough about the carbon footprint of a chicken egg, but the plastic will live forever.
    • CubitOom@infosec.pub
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      1 day ago

      I’d say use it would be better to make and decorate paper mache eggs so as to not add to the plastic demand. Also it sounds more fun to make with kids.

    • TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      The whole trend (potato or egg) is just a waste of food. Always has been.

      If you leave a potato in the yard forgotten you might end up with another potato.

      Alternatively, if you use fertilized chicken eggs, you might end up with a similar issue.