By feeding hens certain dyes they can be made to lay eggs with multi-colored yolks.

Chickens Can Lay Rainbow Eggs With Dyed Food

1k viewsPosted 16 years agoUpdated 2 hours ago

If you've ever cracked open a farm-fresh egg and noticed a deep orange yolk instead of the pale yellow from store-bought eggs, you've already seen how diet affects egg color. But it goes way beyond orange.

Chicken keepers have discovered they can create rainbow-striped yolks by feeding hens gel caps filled with paste food coloring. Feed blue for a week, switch to red, then green—and the yolk develops stripes in the order you fed the colors. It looks like a tie-dye egg when you crack it open.

Why This Works: Yolk Formation 101

Egg yolks don't form all at once. They build up in concentric layers over several days, like an onion. Each layer reflects what the hen ate that day. Normally this creates a uniform color because chickens eat the same diet daily. But alternate the colors in their food, and you're basically painting layers into the yolk.

This isn't some backyard myth—it's the same science behind why pasture-raised eggs have darker yolks. Hens eating lots of grass and insects consume more carotenoids (yellow-orange pigments), which concentrate in the yolk. Store-bought eggs are pale because industrial hens eat beige feed.

Natural Yolk Colors

You don't need artificial dyes to get interesting yolks. Chicken farmers manipulate yolk color naturally all the time:

  • Chili peppers create red yolks (chickens can't taste capsaicin)
  • Marigold petals produce deep orange
  • Tomato powder intensifies yellow-orange tones
  • Carrots deepen the color but may reduce egg size slightly

Industrial egg producers actually standardize yolk color because consumers associate darker yolks with higher quality. They achieve this by adding specific pigments to chicken feed—usually marigold extract or paprika.

Shell Color Is Different

Important distinction: diet only affects yolk color, never shell color. Eggshell color is determined entirely by genetics. Blue eggs come from Araucana chickens, brown from Rhode Island Reds, and so on. You could feed a white Leghorn hen nothing but beets and blueberries—she'll still lay white eggs with weirdly colored yolks.

So yes, rainbow yolks are real. Your chickens are basically edible 3D printers, and food coloring is the ink.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can chickens lay rainbow colored eggs?
Chickens can lay eggs with rainbow-striped yolks by feeding them different colored dyes in sequence. The yolk forms in layers, so each color creates a stripe. However, shell color is genetic and cannot be changed by diet.
What makes egg yolks different colors?
Egg yolk color depends entirely on the hen's diet. Carotenoid-rich foods like grass, marigolds, and peppers create darker orange yolks, while pale feed produces light yellow yolks.
How do you get dark orange egg yolks?
Feed chickens foods high in carotenoids like fresh grass, marigold petals, chili peppers, or tomato powder. Pasture-raised hens naturally produce darker yolks from eating grass and insects.
Does diet affect eggshell color?
No, eggshell color is determined entirely by genetics. Diet only affects yolk color, not the shell.
Are rainbow egg yolks safe to eat?
Rainbow yolks created with food-grade dyes are safe to eat, though most farmers use natural foods instead. The technique is more of a novelty than a common practice.

Related Topics

More from Food & Cuisine