A Guide to Different Colored Chicken Eggs
Raise These Chicken Breeds for a Colorful Egg Basket
Reading Time: 4 minutes
Imagine the excitement of peering into your nesting boxes and finding a rainbow of different colored eggs every day. There are more than 60 breeds of chickens recognized by the American Poultry Association and hundreds of other chicken breeds that have been developed worldwide — many of whom lay gorgeous eggs in a rainbow of hues ranging from white to cream, green, pink, blue and even chocolate brown.
While the color of the eggshell doesn’t determine egg nutrient value or taste in the least, if you want to put some color in your egg basket, consider some of the following breeds that lay prettily hued eggs. Increasingly, these fairly rare breeds are becoming more widely available from hatcheries such as Chickens for Backyards and Meyer Hatchery, while others can still only be found from specialty breeders online.
Blue Eggs
Ever since Martha Stewart shared photos a couple of years ago in her magazine of her egg baskets bursting to the brim with beautiful blue eggs laid by her own flock, azure eggs have been coveted by backyard chicken keepers everywhere also wanting beautiful, sky blue eggs in their baskets. Ameraucanas, Araucanas, and Cream Legbars all lay blue eggs.
Green Eggs
To add a few green eggs in your basket, consider raising some aptly-named Easter Eggers. (In fact, a flock of this mixed breed of chickens can lay a rainbow of egg colors on their own including bluish, green, pinkish or cream!), Olive Eggers or Favaucanas. Several other breeds lay varying shades of green eggs. Olive Egger chickens (half Marans chickens and half Ameraucana chickens) lay olive green eggs, while a new breed developed by My Pet Chicken, the Favaucana (half Faverolle and half Ameraucana), lays a pale sage green egg. Isbars also lay a range of greenish-colored eggs from mossy to mint green.
Cream/Pinkish Eggs
A nice change from ordinary brown or tan eggs, cream or pale pink eggs will add some subtle variety to your egg basket. Light Sussex, Mottled Javas, Australorps, Buff Orpingtons, Silkies, and Faverolles all lay a pinkish-cream egg. As noted above, some Easter Eggers will also lay cream or pink eggs, while others will lay green or bluish eggs.
Dark Brown Eggs
Brown eggs are pretty common, but gorgeous dark chocolate brown eggs lend a pop of rich color to your egg basket. If you are wondering which chickens lay dark brown eggs, here’s your answer: Welsummers, Barnevelders, Penedesencas, and Marans are all brown egg layers.
White Eggs
If you’re still intent on dyeing some eggs for Easter, then you’ll want to add a few white eggs to the mix as well. Nestling in a basket with all the different colored chicken eggs from the chicken breeds listed above, white eggs also add a gorgeous contrast. Leghorns are the most common breed of white egg layer, but several other Mediterranean breeds of chickens including Andalusians and Anconas also lay white eggs, as do Lakenvelders, Polish, and Hamburg hens.
Once you have added some colorful egg layers to your flock, you might have friends and egg customers say they think that brown eggs taste better than white eggs. You might also have others look at your blue and green eggs and ask how they taste — if they taste different than white or brown eggs. So if you’re wondering how to respond to the question: Do different chicken egg colors taste different? The short answer is no. All chicken eggs are the same on the inside. Egg taste is dictated by what a hen eats. While a single food won’t change the taste of an egg, a diet high in grasses, seeds, vegetables, and herbs will result in a better tasting egg overall. And of course, the freshness of the egg matters the most.
Here are some additional interesting egg facts from Backyard Poultry: What do the egg facts on a store carton mean and Duck eggs vs. chicken eggs.
EGG COLOR BY BREED | White Eggs | Blue Eggs | Green Eggs | Dark Brown Eggs | Pinkish/Cream Eggs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ameraucana | X | ||||
Araucana | X | ||||
Cream Legbar | X | ||||
Easter Egger | X | X | X | ||
Olive Egger | X | ||||
Favaucana | X | ||||
Sussex | X | ||||
Java | X | ||||
Australorp | x | ||||
Silkie | X | ||||
Orpington | X | ||||
Faverolles | X | ||||
Welsummer | X | ||||
Barnevelder | X | ||||
Marans | X | ||||
Penedesenca | X | ||||
Leghorn | X | ||||
Andalusian | X | ||||
Ancona | X | ||||
Lakenvelder | X | ||||
Polish | X | ||||
Hamburg | X |
Dear Ms. Steele: Thank you for sharing your extensive knowledge of chickens with those of us who appreciate it.
BUT, I must say it is disappointing to see someone with your knowledge refer to hybrid chickens as “breeds.” They are not breeds. They will not breed true.
You have a responsibility to those less knowledgeable than you to provide accurate information so false information does not get accepted as truth and proliferate.
Again, thank you for your contributions to the poultry world. They are valuable.
This was very helpful thank you.
I have to agree with Leslie’s observation. Easter Eggers, Olive Eggers and all other cross bred chickens aren’t a breed since no 2 are consistent in color patterns or temperament. About half my flock are Easter Eggers or Sexlinks and while those of same name (prairie bluebell, olive egger, golden comet, red sexlink, etc.), they may look similar but temperaments aren’t. I have 3 Prairie Bluebells, one is fairly sweet, one somewhat handleable but can be distant and other is mean as can be. She is very standoffish and will attack if you near the nest when she’s in it. All 3 look similar but 2 have a beard and ear muffs, other has none. Now my one amberlink was bred with a black Australorp, hatching one egg. The offspring was a rooster that is white with red and has whiteish legs with black spots. He got his dad’s fighting attitude, smaller size and laugh. I can only handle him at night once on roosting bar.
I’ve heard the bird flu is high this year, especially in Mississippi, any thoughts as to what to do to help my chickens get through it? I give electrolyte and probiotic via water every day. They have sand in their house and access to the yard as well. Any experienced opinions would be greatly appreciated.
Wow keeping chickens is so much more fun than! At first I was interested in different breeds for their characters and appearances. Now im excited to have different coloured eggs. Thank you for your valuable information.