Why are eggs considered "Dairy" products?!
Answers: Sainsburys and Morrisons and other major grocery supermarkets have always classified them as Dairy like milk, cheese, and butter. They can't all be wrong. (Perhaps Americans think differently?)
Good question. Because if you dont cook them, and just chomp a bunch of them, you get dairrya
they arent dairy
they are poultry.
Because they come from cows.
Who ever said they were dairy products?
Because they are....I don't know...because they go so well with milk/cheese etc?!!
The ones the Easter bunny stole!!!
Their not considered dairy, but when meat is fasted from, eggs are also because as milk, eggs pass through the animals body.
They're not.
I don't think they are classed as Dairy, they are classed as Poultry.
Dairy is anything to do with milk and it's by-products,cream, cheese, butter etc
Hope this helps
They aren't.
a dairy product is a milk based product for human consumpsion. like butter, milk, yogurt, cheese etc, etc, but it's not necessarily limited milk from cows, goats or even sheep. It can also be stuff like like horses and few other animals.
dairy products, in common definition, are those that come from milk. Eggs are not really dairy products, they belong to the "meat, poultry,fish, eggs, dry beans, and nuts" group. but sometimes, eggs are placed under dairy products when dairy products are defined as those products coming from animals... : )
Eggs come from poultry, milk and cream come from mammals and we call this 'dairy' because they are removed from females born in nature and entrapped by humans working in the field of agriculture.
they are not dairy, but are poultry...............some people classify them as dairy as they have the same protein constituents as milk
They're not
Are they? I thought they come under protien. Oh well their digusting anyway!!
Some people may define dairy as "food that is produced by animals (other than meat)" rather than as milk specifically. Under this definition, eggs are grouped with milk products.
Defining dairy as limited to milk products, however, is more common and definitely right. Eggs are not dairy, rather they belong to the "meat, poultry, fish, eggs, dry beans, and nuts" group on the food pyramid.