Kuwait Times

Plague to protein: Israeli firm seeks to put locusts on the menu

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From biblical plague to modern day protein, one Israeli firm wants to make locusts a sustainabl­e food choice in the Holy Land and beyond. As for whether or not the insects are kosher, the answer is not so simple. At Hargol Foodtech’s farm in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, a rectangula­r enclosure that once served as a chicken coop is filled with thousands of locusts, a grasshoppe­r species that has a highly destructiv­e swarming phase.

Contained in a series of meticulous­ly stacked, climate-controlled mesh cages, the insects are served wheatgrass through their three-month life-cycle, before being cooled, killed and baked. Hargol’s chief executive Dror Tamir told AFP that he grew up hearing stories of how locusts destroyed the fields of his kibbutz in the 1950s. Yet the Yemenite Jews in the area did not view locusts as crop-ruining pests, but as an edible source of nutrients, Tamir recalled.

Grasshoppe­rs the ‘solution’

As an adult, Tamir became a food and nutrition entreprene­ur increasing­ly concerned about the environmen­tal cost of providing the world’s growing population with enough animal protein. Tamir said he founded Hargol-Hebrew for grasshoppe­r-six and a half years ago after realising the insects were the solution. The company’s goal is to be “the first in the world to grow grasshoppe­rs on a commercial scale, and provide the world with a healthier and more sustainabl­e source of protein”. Ram Reifen, a professor of human nutrition at Hebrew University, agreed that the planet is facing growing food supply challenges. With Earth’s population expected to hit 10 billion by 2050, raising livestock to feed the planet will become increasing­ly unsustaina­ble, given the massive water and land resources required. “The fear is there will be a scarcity of protein,” Reifen told AFP.

‘Yuck’ factor

Tamir said that unprocesse­d locusts consist of more than 70 percent protein and contain all amino acids, along with other nutrients. “What they do lack is saturated fat and cholestero­l,” he said. “They have the good stuff. They don’t have the bad stuff.” According to his own estimate, around 2.5 billion people-mainly in developing nations-consume insects as part of their regular diet. And, the “most widely-eaten insects in the world are grasshoppe­rs,” Tamir said. But, he added, “when trying to target North American and European customers, it’s really hard to overcome the ‘yuck’ factor”. To make their product more palatable to Westerners, Hargol turns locusts into powder, which can be mixed into various foods.

Tamir said they were about to launch sales of locust-enhanced pancake mix and smoothie powders worldwide. Some goods produced in the Golan Heights face export restrictio­ns, including strict labeling requiremen­ts, because most of the internatio­nal community does not recognize Israeli sovereignt­y in the area. But Tamir said that while the locusts are grown in the Golan and another site in the Galilee, the powder is produced elsewhere within Israel, enabling him to avoid export restrictio­ns. Investor support has helped sustain the company before sales tick up, he added.

But is it kosher?

In the Bible, locusts appear in the Old Testament Book of Exodus as one of the Ten Plagues unleashed on the Egyptians to force the Pharaoh to free the Israelites from slavery. In Leviticus, there is a passage stating that certain kinds of grasshoppe­r, including locusts, are kosher. Jews in Yemen and North Africa have been eating locusts for generation­s, but European, or Ashkenazi Jews have not.

Tamir said he hoped that he could bring locusts into mainstream Israeli cuisine by getting a kosher certificat­ion for his product from the country’s chief rabbinate. Rabbi Eliezer Simcha Weisz, a member of the Chief Rabbinate Council, Israel’s top religious adjudicati­on body, told AFP the “phenomenal issue” of whether locusts are kosher had been discussed at “great length”. And while the Torah designates some species as kosher-including the one raised by Tamirit forbids others, he said.—AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? A worker at the Hargol grasshoppe­rs breeding farm watches grasshoppe­rs at the farm in the Kidmat Tzvi settlement in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.
— AFP photos A worker at the Hargol grasshoppe­rs breeding farm watches grasshoppe­rs at the farm in the Kidmat Tzvi settlement in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.
 ??  ?? A worker at the Hargol grasshoppe­rs breeding farm holds a grasshoppe­r at the farm in the Kidmat Tzvi settlement in the Israeliann­exed Golan Heights.
A worker at the Hargol grasshoppe­rs breeding farm holds a grasshoppe­r at the farm in the Kidmat Tzvi settlement in the Israeliann­exed Golan Heights.
 ??  ?? Dror Tamir, founder and the CEO of Hargol grasshoppe­rs breeding farm, eats a grasshoppe­r at his farm in the Kidmat Tzvi settlement in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.
Dror Tamir, founder and the CEO of Hargol grasshoppe­rs breeding farm, eats a grasshoppe­r at his farm in the Kidmat Tzvi settlement in the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights.

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