Yes, you can add raw egg whites to a protein shake when they’re pasteurized; raw shell whites raise Salmonella risk and absorb less efficiently.
Shakes are a fast way to hit protein targets, and egg whites are a lean source with zero fat and almost no carbs. The catch is safety and how much of that protein your body can actually use. This guide shows when egg whites work in a shake, how to choose the right product, what the science says about absorption, and smart ways to blend them so the drink tastes clean, not eggy.
Raw Egg Whites In Shakes: Safety, Absorption, Taste
There are three questions to cover before you pour: Is it safe? Does your body make use of the protein? Will it taste okay? Safety depends on whether the eggs are pasteurized. Absorption favors cooked protein, but pasteurized liquid whites can still fit a plan if you know the trade-offs. Taste is a blender and recipe problem you can solve with the right ratios.
Raw Vs. Pasteurized For Shakes (Broad Comparison)
The table below contrasts shell whites with the cartons sold as liquid egg whites. It sets the baseline for both safety and performance in a shake.
| Factor | Shell Whites (Raw) | Carton Whites (Pasteurized) |
|---|---|---|
| Food Safety | Risk of Salmonella from raw eggs; not advised for high-risk groups | Heat-treated to kill Salmonella; labeled “pasteurized” |
| Protein Use | Lower absorption than cooked egg protein | Better safety than raw shells; absorption still below cooked |
| Convenience | Crack and separate; messy | Ready to pour; consistent volume |
| Flavor/Texture | Can taste sulfurous; can gel in cold shakes | Mild; blends thin, neutral base |
| Biotin Tie-Up (Avidin) | Avidin binds biotin until heated | Still liquid, so avidin remains; see tips below |
Adding Raw Egg Whites To A Protein Shake: What Matters
For most people who want speed and lean protein, pasteurized liquid whites are the only practical way to use egg whites in a shake without cooking them first. Shell eggs that haven’t been heated carry a real food-safety risk. If you lift, run, or just chase macros, a carton gives you the grams you want with far less hassle.
Safety Rules For Egg-White Shakes
- Pick pasteurized cartons. Look for “pasteurized” on the front. These products are heat-treated to destroy Salmonella.
- Avoid raw shell whites in drinks. Using shell eggs raw raises the chance of foodborne illness, especially for kids, older adults, anyone pregnant, or anyone with a lowered immune system.
- Keep it cold. Store cartons at fridge temps and use within the “use by” window. Don’t leave your shake at room temp.
- Use clean tools. Rinse blender parts right after mixing. Cross-contamination ruins good handling.
If you want a reference point for the heat step that makes cartons safer, see the USDA’s page on egg products and pasteurization. That treatment is designed to reduce or eliminate Salmonella in liquid whites while keeping them pourable for recipes.
Protein Absorption: Raw Vs. Cooked
Human data shows that your body absorbs egg protein better when the egg is cooked. In classic tracer studies, cooked egg protein delivered far more digestible amino acids than raw. That doesn’t mean a pasteurized liquid white is “bad”; it just means you’ll get more out of eggs when heat fully sets the proteins.
What to do with that insight? If you rely on egg whites for most of your daily protein, cooked forms (omelets, microwaved whites, or a quick scramble) give you stronger payoff per gram. If you only use a small pour in a shake to top up protein, pasteurized liquid whites are fine within a balanced plan.
Biotin And Avidin: A Small But Real Detail
Raw egg whites contain avidin, a protein that binds biotin in the gut. Heat breaks this bond. Liquid whites in cartons are pasteurized, not fully cooked, so avidin activity can persist. If you drink egg-white shakes often, pair them with biotin-rich foods or rotate proteins. For background, see the NIH’s page on biotin and dietary avidin.
How Much Protein Do Egg Whites Add To A Shake?
A large egg white (about 33 g) gives roughly 3–4 grams of protein with negligible fat and carbs. A half-cup pour of liquid whites lands in the teens. That makes them a flexible “top-up” when your scoop doesn’t quite hit your target.
Practical Pour Guide
- 1 large egg white: ~3–4 g protein
- 1/2 cup liquid whites: ~13 g protein
- 1 cup liquid whites: ~26 g protein
Use these numbers to back into your goal. If your whey scoop is 24 g protein and you want ~35 g, a 1/3–1/2 cup pour gets you there.
Best Practices For A Smooth, Safe Egg-White Shake
Pick A Base That Masks Sulfur Notes
Egg whites are neutral but can carry faint sulfur notes. Cold temps and bold flavors fix that fast. Cocoa, peanut butter powder, or frozen berries do the heavy lifting. Vanilla extract rounds out dairy bases.
Blend Order For Cleaner Texture
- Start with liquid: milk or a dairy-free base.
- Add powders and flavor boosters.
- Add pasteurized egg whites.
- Finish with ice or frozen fruit, then blend until glossy.
Smart Flavor Combos
- Chocolate-Peanut Crunch: Milk, cocoa, peanut butter powder, pinch of salt, 1/2 cup egg whites, ice.
- Berry Vanilla: Greek yogurt, frozen mixed berries, vanilla, 1/3 cup egg whites, water to thin.
- Mocha: Cold brew, milk, cocoa, vanilla, 1/2 cup egg whites, ice.
When A Shake With Egg Whites Makes Sense
Use a carton pour when you need lean grams and you don’t want another scoop of powder. It shines at breakfast with oats on the side, post-workout if your stomach prefers light drinks, or as a snack later in the day when you’re chasing a macro target without extra fat.
When To Skip It
- You’re in a high-risk group for foodborne illness.
- You need the most efficient amino acid delivery per gram and can cook: go with cooked eggs or a complete dairy protein.
- You already eat a lot of raw liquid whites daily and notice brittle nails, a rash, or low energy; talk to a clinician and swap to cooked sources for a while.
Dialing In Portion, Macros, And Cost
Carton whites are budget-friendly per gram of protein. They also stretch a tub of powder and keep fat grams low. The table below shows common pour sizes next to an easy macro snapshot so you can mix and match with what’s in your pantry.
| Pour Size | Protein (Approx.) | How To Use |
|---|---|---|
| 1/4 cup | ~6–7 g | Small bump to a yogurt-based blend |
| 1/3 cup | ~9 g | Brings a 20–24 g scoop near 30 g |
| 1/2 cup | ~13 g | Staple add-in for post-workout shakes |
| 3/4 cup | ~19–20 g | Meal-size shake without extra powder |
| 1 cup | ~26 g | High-protein base for breakfast blends |
Egg Whites Vs. Whey, Casein, Or Plant Protein In Shakes
Digestibility and speed: Whey is fast and complete. Casein is slow and keeps you full. Egg white is lactose-free, light, and easy to sip, but absorption trails cooked eggs.
Allergies and tolerance: Egg white avoids lactose but still comes from egg. If you react to egg, skip it. If dairy is the issue, egg whites can be a simple swap.
Texture: Whey gives a fluffy blend. Casein thickens. Egg white keeps things thin and clean, which suits berry and coffee blends.
Simple Recipes That Work Right Away
Lean Chocolate Shake (~35 g protein)
- 8–10 oz milk or dairy-free milk
- 1 scoop chocolate whey or a plant blend
- 1/2 cup pasteurized egg whites
- 1 tbsp cocoa, ice, pinch of salt, vanilla
Blend until smooth. Cocoa and salt mute any egg note; ice gives body.
Berry-Greek Smoothie (~30–40 g protein)
- 6 oz Greek yogurt
- 1/3–1/2 cup pasteurized egg whites
- 1 cup frozen berries
- Water or milk to thin; vanilla
Tart berries and vanilla wash out sulfur notes and balance sweetness.
Make It Safer And More Effective
Five Fast Tips
- Use pasteurized only. Carton whites are the standard for raw applications like shakes.
- Keep portions sensible. Start with 1/3–1/2 cup per shake and adjust based on protein needs.
- Rotate proteins. Mix in dairy or plant options during the week. This counters any biotin binding from raw whites.
- Chill everything. Cold base and ice make flavor cleaner.
- Cook when you can. If you want peak absorption from eggs, heat them. A quick microwave in a mug turns liquid whites into a fluffy, high-yield side you can eat with the shake.
Frequently Missed Points
“Pasteurized” Doesn’t Mean Fully Cooked
Carton whites are heat-treated long enough to control bacteria, yet not enough to set the proteins. That’s why they still pour. The label tells you they’re suitable for recipes that call for uncooked whites, including smoothies.
Why Your Shake Might Foam
Egg white proteins trap air when whipped. In a blender, that can lead to a frothy cap. To limit foam, add whites last and blend on medium, not max. Let the shake rest one minute and the bubbles settle.
What To Do If You Only Have Shell Eggs
Skip adding them raw. Either cook the whites first and chill, or pick another protein for that shake. That small change cuts risk while keeping the rest of your plan intact.
Bottom Line For Shakers
You can pour egg whites into a shake when they come from a pasteurized carton and you handle them cold and clean. They bring lean protein with little flavor, blend fast, and fit many recipes. For pure absorption, cooked eggs or whey win. For convenience and a gentle sip, pasteurized whites work—just rotate proteins during the week and keep an eye on overall variety.
