Quail eggs weigh about 9 grams each — roughly one-fifth the weight of a chicken egg. They have a higher yolk-to-white ratio and are considered a delicacy in many cuisines.
Quail eggs, produced primarily by the Japanese quail, Coturnix japonica, in commercial settings, weigh approximately 9 to 10 grams each, roughly one-fifth the mass of a large chicken egg. Despite their small size, they are nutritionally dense and have a higher yolk-to-white ratio than chicken eggs: the yolk comprises around 40 to 45 percent of the egg's interior volume compared to roughly 30 percent in a chicken egg. This ratio produces a richer, more intensely flavored result in cooking, which contributes to their culinary status in numerous cuisines across Asia, Europe, and South America.
## Nutritional Composition
Per gram, quail eggs contain slightly higher concentrations of several micronutrients compared to chicken eggs, including vitamin B12, riboflavin, and iron. The cholesterol content per egg is lower in absolute terms, approximately 76 mg versus 186 mg in a large chicken egg, simply because the egg is smaller. Normalized by weight, the cholesterol concentration is roughly comparable. The protein quality is similar: both egg types provide all essential amino acids in proportions close to human dietary requirements, making them high biological value proteins.
The elevated yolk proportion in quail eggs reflects the species' relatively large yolk to support precocial chick development. Japanese quail chicks hatch in 17 to 18 days and are capable of feeding themselves within hours. The large yolk is the energetic reserve that supports this rapid, highly developed hatch state.
## Culinary Status and Global Use
Quail eggs are consumed across a wide geographic range and occupy an elevated status in multiple culinary traditions. In Japan, pickled quail eggs are a common component of bento boxes and ramen; the small size makes them ideal for single-bite preparation. In Korea, hard-boiled quail eggs are sold as street food. In Brazil, quail eggs (ovos de codorna) are used extensively in appetizers and salads. In France and the United Kingdom, quail eggs are served hard-boiled with celery salt as a classic canape at formal events.
The visual appeal of quail egg shells, covered in brown spots and blotches on a cream or tan background, contributes to their presentation value. The patterning is produced by pigment deposition during shell formation and varies substantially between individual birds and even between eggs from the same bird, making each egg visually distinct.
## Quail Farming and Production
The Japanese quail is the most farmed quail species globally. It reaches sexual maturity at 6 to 7 weeks and can produce 250 to 300 eggs per year under commercial conditions, a production efficiency comparable to chickens relative to body size. The birds weigh only 100 to 150 grams, require less feed and space than chickens, and are resistant to many avian diseases. These characteristics have made quail farming a commercially viable enterprise in countries with established demand, and an attractive option in smallholder agricultural contexts where investment capital is limited.
Wild quail of numerous species, including the common quail, Coturnix coturnix, are migratory birds whose eggs have been collected and eaten throughout human history across the Mediterranean, the Middle East, and Asia. The transition to farmed production followed the same trajectory as chicken domestication, driven by the predictability and density of supply that only managed breeding enables.