Benefits abound for those with stomach for insects
By Gary Raham
Nature Writer and Illustrator
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Today, people often freak out when insects arrive at a picnic, but sometime
--perhaps soon--such once--unwelcome guests may just be extra salad garnish.
Individuals like David Gracer, owner of Small Stock Food Strategies, encourage
entomophagy (the fancy scientific term for eating insects) because of economic
and ecological benefits. Scientists like Gene DeFoliart at www.food-insects.com
also promote them for nutritional reasons. After all, they assert, bugs
are a regular part of the human diet in over a hundred countries.
Gracer describes insects as a kind of "land shrimp," no ickier than crab
or lobster, and provides insights into their preparation as food on both
www.smallstockfoods.com and on his blog
http://bugsfordinner.blobspot.com/.
To overcome the natural resistance to popping a grub in your mouth, benefits
need to be substantial. Here are a few for consideration.
High nutritional value
Most insects can claim protein concentrations above 60 percent. House
cricket protein beats soy protein for necessary amino acids. According
to DeFoliart, insects tend to be high in lysine and threonine, amino acids
that tend to be deficient in wheat, rice, cassava and maize-based diets
prevalent in many parts of the world.
While insects vary considerably in fat content, those fats do tend to be
the long-chained, unsaturated, heart-healthy variety. Insects all tend
to score highly as vitamin and mineral sources. Just three crickets a day
can fulfill a person's iron requirements. They are also high in zinc and
calcium. The Angolan caterpillar, Usta Terpsichore, proved to be a rich
source of iron, copper, zinc and vitamins B1 and B2. Termites rank high
for magnesium and copper, and palm weevil larvae provide zinc, thiamin
and riboflavin.
Lucrative business
In Japan, young grasshoppers boiled in soy sauce are sold as luxury items.
Mitsuhashi, a Japanese author, thinks collecting young grasshoppers by
school students and their parents "is an activity that adds poetic charm
to rice paddies in autumn." Another Japanese treat, cooked wasps, provided
a favorite meal for the late Emperor Hirohito, when mixed with cooked rice.
Raising insects (or other arthropods) as small cash crops, for example
locusts in Thailand, can be a boon to many families in developing countries.
Mexicans can cash in beetle grubs because of their popularity as an ingredient
in tequila-flavored lollipops. Cambodians collect tarantulas, defang them,
fry them in oil, and sell them as crunchy and nutritious roadside snacks.
It takes a lot less real estate to make a boarding house for breeding crickets
than for raising cattle, pigs and other large vertebrates.
A 'green' industry
Those crickets discussed above prove to be about 20 times more efficient
than beef in converting grass into food, according to DeFoliart.
As Gracer said, "Cows and pigs are the SUVs of the food world" (when it
comes to metabolically burning grass). "And bugs-they're the Priuses, maybe
even the bicycles."
Unlike pigs, for example, insects are mostly vegans. They eat a wide variety
of plants, which may help explain why insects provide such a good mix of
vitamins and minerals. One of the reasons the Spanish Conquistadores may
have been surprised at the cleanliness of large towns in Mexico is that
the Indians relied much more on insects and small mammals for food rather
than pigs and cattle.
And entomophagy may be a great way to control certain pests. Don't spray
'em; eat 'em instead. It worked to good effect in Thailand 30 years ago
when the government convinced its population that eating locusts was a
good way to keep them from devastating crops. (The locust then wasn't on
the list of 150 bugs the Thais preferred to eat.) Now, not a pest, some
farmers plant corn to attract locusts, which they harvest and take to market.
Indians in the American west used to make good use of Mormon cricket outbreaks
by herding them into deep, crescent-shaped ditches, adding some dried grass,
and setting it on fire to create roasted treats.
A few drawbacks
Gracer calls insects "land shrimp," and they have some of the same drawbacks.
People allergic to shellfish will probably also be allergic to insects
in their diet because the chitin in their exoskeletons is nearly identical.
And not all insects are edible. Some produce poisons of various sorts designed
to discourage predators, or they pick up potentially dangerous plant chemicals.
Monarch butterflies, for example, store glycosides from their milkweed
food plants that would be bad for one's heart. Nevertheless, DeFoliart
fills five pages on his web site with just some of the edible species used
worldwide. He put together a series of display cases as a traveling exhibit
for elementary schools in 1991.
Need a place to test out insect cuisine? As of last June, a New Orleans
restaurant offers buggy dining as a spin off from the Audubon Nature Institute's
Insectarium. Cornell University offers insect eating at their fall Insectapalooza.
North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences has an autumn BugFest, and Purdue
offers a spring Bug Bowl.
Besides, you've sampled bugs already. Even the FDA allows 60 insect fragments
in six 100-gram chocolate samples and 30 fragments per 100 grams of peanut
butter.
Bug Appetit!
Chocolate Chirpie Chip Cookies
From the Iowa State University Entomology Department
(http://www.ent.iastate.edu/misc/insectsasfood/chirpie.html)
Ingredients:
2 1/4 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup butter, softened
3/4 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 eggs
12 ounces chocolate chips
1 cup chopped nuts
1/2 cup dry-roasted crickets
Directions: Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In small bowl, combine flour,
baking soda and salt; set aside. In large bowl, combine butter, sugar,
brown sugar and vanilla; beat until creamy. Beat in eggs. Gradually add
flour mixture and insects, mix well. Stir in chocolate chips. Drop by rounded
measuring teaspoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheet. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes.
Note: one source of insects is www.grubco.com. Crickets cost $15 for 500.
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