"Why aren't you just scrambling them and freezing that 'liquid' egg mixture in ice cube trays? 2 cubes = 1 egg for any recipe.
"LIQUIDFIED" eggs is what most restaurants/food service places order the most quantity in...they use very little 'CRACK EGG' per order." 2A
Thanks 2A.
I like your style.
"The neurotic has suspicions, the psychotic has convictions. psychiatrist Thomas Szasz
Thank you for asking, instead of assuming.
To answer, several reasons.
a) I live alone, in a tower, in the forest, ~70 miles round-trip from shopping.
My refrigerator is small, and the freezer unreliable; it shuts down in Winter, so I use it only for bottles of H2O. When the commercial power fails, I move the ice into the refrigerator, so I don't have to fire up the generator (for the first few hours).
b) We get commercial power failures here. We had two yesterday, the latter lasing hours. So frozen food here risks peril, particularly in my tiny freezer, that non-frozen refrigerated food does not.
c) Some of my neighbors live off the grid. And one of them told me eggs don't need refrigeration, and that she kept them out of direct sunlight, under the kitchen sink, without spoilage problem.
I don't remember how long she said they last that way, but she seems to think it's adequate.
d) While I like eggs prepared in a skillet, my kitchen isn't well suited to it. It's easier to boil them, and just grab a few hard-boiled ones when I need a snack.
e) While viable, I suspect me implementing your suggestion would result in a net increase in man-hours per egg.
I like simplicity, and durability. My way, no need to wash ice cube trays, do all the prep work, etc.
And my way is less mess. No liquids exposed, except the water they boil in.
I just boil them, and put them in the fridge. The next step is eating them.
mmmm yummy !
PS
If some of that still doesn't make sense, I used to do some efficiency work (Sir Fredrick Winslow Taylor type stuff) for a Fortune 500.
I like efficiency.
My previous two "cars" were trucks.
But I prefer my simple, comfortable, economical car.
It's a wonderful car for two, for a day trip, or whatever.
I could ride a Harley. But my Yamaha is a 250cc.
It's a wonderful machine, and I've gotten over 90 MPG with it.