Subtitle: The strange discovery that almost ruined breakfast—and what I learned about the eggs I've been eating my whole life.
I was standing in my kitchen this morning, preparing a simple breakfast, when something unusual caught my attention.
As I cracked an egg into a bowl, I noticed a strange white strand floating through the egg white. It was thin, slightly twisted, and looked almost like a tiny piece of string or a worm. My stomach immediately tightened. I froze, spatula in hand, and stared at the bowl like it contained something dangerous.
I do that thing that everyone does when they're scared about food: I immediately assume the worst. Is it a parasite? A worm? Some kind of contamination? I thought about the salmonella warnings, the recalls, the things I'd read online about food safety. I could feel my appetite slipping away.
I almost threw the whole thing out. I was this close to trashing the bowl, the egg, and the entire idea of breakfast.
But something stopped me. Maybe it was my natural curiosity. Maybe it was the fact that I'd already poured my coffee and I wasn't ready to give up. I pulled out my phone and started researching.
Twenty minutes later, I was laughing at myself.
Because that white string—the one I thought might be a parasite or a contamination—is completely natural. It's not dangerous. It's not a worm. And I'd been eating it my entire life without ever noticing it before.
Let me tell you what it actually is, why it's there, and why you should stop worrying about it immediately.
What Is That White String in Your Egg?
That white, twisty, slightly opaque strand is called the chalaza (pronounced kuh-LAY-zuh). Plural: chalazae.
It's a natural protein structure that holds the yolk in the center of the egg. Think of it as an internal suspension system—a set of tiny ropes that anchor the yolk to the membrane of the eggshell. It keeps the yolk from bouncing around and rupturing.
The chalazae are made of the same protein (keratin) as egg white. They are completely edible, completely safe, and actually a sign of a fresh, high-quality egg.
In fresh eggs, the chalazae are thick and prominent. As eggs age, the chalazae dissolve and become less visible. So if you see a prominent white strand in your egg, congratulations—you're eating a fresh egg.
The word "chalaza" comes from the Greek word for "hailstone," referring to the way the strand looks like a small, white pebble suspended in the white.

