Not exact matches
All for the sake of what is now a very
small number of
relatively wealthy dairy, poultry and
egg farmers.
I agree about wasting food, even if it's something
relatively small like an
egg yolk.
I
relatively small bird gave me 10 decent sized
egg rolls that I then halved.
(The amount of
egg they could tolerate was
relatively small, however: only about 5 grams, or one - eighth of a hard - boiled
egg.)
It is hard to obtain enough Vitamin D from dietary sources alone (
egg yolks, organ meats, and fatty fish are good sources, but still
relatively small).
In short, even a
relatively small dollop of stocks seems to be enough to provide decent assurance against running through one's savings too soon, while ratcheting up one's stock exposure doesn't appear to add a whole lot of additional protection against outliving your nest
egg.
Indeed, if your nest
egg is
relatively small, that feat may not be difficult at all, as new contributions alone could allow you to achieve your goal.
I recently had all my
eggs in one basket and haven't wanted to buy things when they're
relatively pricy, so I'm currently lagging in the
small - caps, bonds, and emerging stocks.