The Peterborough Examiner

Bread made of insects to be sold in Finnish supermarke­ts

‘Finns are known to be willing to try new things,’ bakery official says

- JAN M. OLSEN

COPENHAGEN — One of Finland’s largest food companies is selling what it claims to be a first: insect bread.

Markus Hellstrom, head of the Fazer group’s bakery division, said that one loaf contains about 70 dried house crickets, ground into powder and added to the flour. The crickets represent three per cent of the bread’s weight, Hellstrom said.

“Finns are known to be willing to try new things,” he said, and according to a survey commission­ed by Fazer “good taste, freshness” were among the main criteria for bread.

According to recent surveys of the Nordic countries, “Finns have the most positive attitudes toward insects,” said Juhani Sibakov, head of Fazer Bakery Finland’s innovation department.

“We made crunchy dough to enhance taste. The result was “delicious and nutritious,” he said, adding that the Fazer Sirkkaleip­a (Finnish for Fazer Cricket Bread) “is a good source of protein and insects also contain good fatty acids, calcium, iron and vitamin B12.”

“Mankind needs new and sustainabl­e sources of nutrition,” Sibakov said in a statement.

Hellstrom noted that Finnish legislatio­n was changed on Nov. 1 to allow the sale of insects as food.

Starting Friday, the first batch of cricket breads will be sold in major Finnish cities.

The company said there is not enough cricket flour available for now to support sales nationwide but the aim is to have the bread available in 47 bakeries in Finland in a subsequent round of sales.

In Switzerlan­d, supermarke­t chain Coop began selling burgers and balls made from insects in September. Insects can also be found on supermarke­t shelves in Belgium, Britain, Denmark and the Netherland­s.

The United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­al Organizati­on has promoted insects as a source of human food, saying they are healthy and high in protein and minerals. The agency says many types of insects produce less greenhouse gases and ammonia than most livestock — such as methane-spewing cattle — and require less land and money to cultivate.

 ?? BILL KEAY/VANCOUVER SUN ?? Amarjeet Gill shows cricket dough. It’s made by roasting crickets and grinding them into a flour mixture. The dough will be baked into a spicy paratha, an Indian flatbread.
BILL KEAY/VANCOUVER SUN Amarjeet Gill shows cricket dough. It’s made by roasting crickets and grinding them into a flour mixture. The dough will be baked into a spicy paratha, an Indian flatbread.
 ?? HOANG DINH NAM/GETTY IMAGES ?? Plates of fried insects, including crickets and grasshoppe­rs, for sale at a local market in Vientiane.
HOANG DINH NAM/GETTY IMAGES Plates of fried insects, including crickets and grasshoppe­rs, for sale at a local market in Vientiane.

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