This situation causes arguments in kitchens all the time — and almost always for no reason. That white, cloudy, stringy stuff your husband saw inside the cracked eggs is completely normal and does not mean the eggs were bad.
What you’re seeing is called the chalaza.
The chalaza is a natural part of every fresh egg. It’s a pair of twisted, rope-like strands made of protein that help hold the yolk centered inside the egg. Think of it like a seatbelt for the yolk. The more visible the chalaza is, the fresher the egg actually is.
Fresh eggs often have:
• Thick, cloudy whites
• Prominent chalaza strands
• Yolks that sit high and firm
As eggs age, the whites become clearer and thinner, and the chalaza fades or disappears. So throwing out eggs because of visible white strands is the opposite of what should happen.
That white material is not mold, not bacteria, not fertilization, and not spoilage. It’s safe to eat, safe to cook, and disappears completely when the egg is cooked.
How to actually tell if an egg is bad:
• It smells strongly like sulfur or rotten eggs
• The shell is cracked and leaking before opening
• It floats in water (a sign it’s old, not always bad, but questionable)
If the egg has no foul smell, it’s almost always safe to eat — even with cloudy whites or stringy bits.
So unfortunately, that whole carton of eggs didn’t need to go in the trash. They were almost certainly perfectly fine — possibly even very fresh.
Next time this happens, you can confidently say:
“That white stuff means the egg is fresh — not spoiled.”