Peeled quail eggs can be packed in tin cans using a process similar to canned chicken eggs or canned specialty foods. The goal is to achieve commercial sterility while maintaining egg texture and appearance.
Production Process
Quail Egg Washing
Cooking
Shell Removal
Sorting and Inspection
Can Filling
Brine or Sauce Filling
Common filling liquids:
Salt brine
Seasoned brine
Soy sauce marinade
Pickling solution
Exhausting / Deaeration
Can Seaming
Retort Sterilization
Cooling
Labeling and Cartoning
Typical Equipment Line
Egg Washer
↓
Egg Cooker
↓
Egg Cooling
↓
Egg Peeling Machine
↓
Inspection Conveyor
↓
Can Filling Machine
↓
Brine Filling Machine
↓
Can Exhausting
↓
Can Seaming Machine
↓
Retort Sterilizer
↓
Drying
↓
Labeling
↓
Carton Packing
Equipment Examples
Egg peeling machine
Automatic can filler
Liquid filling machine
Vacuum or steam exhaust system
Can seamer
Retort sterilizer (steam, water spray, or water immersion)
Labeling machine
Key Quality Considerations
Minimize egg breakage during filling.
Use gentle handling and appropriate guide systems.
Validate the retort process for food safety.
Monitor seam integrity with regular seam inspections.
Control brine concentration and fill weight consistently.
For small quail eggs (typically 9–12 g each), automatic counting fillers can be configured to load a specific number of eggs per can before brine filling and seaming. This is common for export canned quail egg products sold in Asian, European, and Middle Eastern markets.