EXTRA BITE
Why our eight-legged friends are the hottest thing on the menu
B
oldly making a fine jewellery statement courtesy of a glittering insect—even if it happens to be a David Webb jewelled grasshopper brooch—may not be everyone’s thing. But in the same way that fashion can tantalise the adventurous and terrify the traditional, the culinary world has spawned a new trend designed to delight the daredevils. Farm to table? So last season. The latest foodie movement has seen grasshoppers, cicadas, crickets, silkworms, beetles, spiders, and the like, wriggling their way out of the garden and onto the menus at upmarket dining establishments in major epicenters in the West, like London and New York. Experts are calling insects the way of the future: bugs are now being recognised as a tasty, low-fat fare and an excellent source of protein, minerals, vitamins, fatty acids, and fibre. What’s more, given that bugs are available in vast supply, they have been hailed as a sustainable food source.
According to a recent United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization report, “Edible Insects: Future Prospects for Food and Feed Security,” we should all be dining on the critters for both health and environmental reasons (insect farming produces smaller quantities of greenhouse gases than livestock farming). “There is an experimental, almost flirty, approach to food right now,” says Culinary Tides trend forecaster Suzy Badaracco, a chef and registered dietitian. “Global cuisines are particularly popular, and eating insects has that sexy factor. And the omega-3 fatty acids found in mealworms are comparable to those in fish,” she adds.You heard it here first: Insects are the new salmon.
Crunching on crickets is something that Asians are quite familiar with, but it’s hardly a new phenomenon outside Asia. At least two billion people worldwide, predominantly in Latin America, Africa, Australia and New Zealand, eat insects as a key component of their diet. “I’ve eaten a lot of bugs,” says author and former magazine Editor-in-Chief Ruth Reichl.“Worm larvae and ant eggs have a soft texture like minced sweetbreads and grasshoppers are crunchy.” Reichl believes that insects are a “perfectly good source of protein that have been completely overlooked.” Until now. Denmark’s vaunted Noma restaurant, which topped 2014’s list of the World’s 50 Best Restaurants, serves up beef tartare topped with ants and a bee larvae pastry brushed with grasshopper garum.“It’s not about theatrics, it’s all about flavour,” says Noma spokesman Avre Krognes.
Similarly, at London’s Archipelago restaurant, you can order the Love-Bug Salad, featuring pan-fried crickets, sprinkle weaver ants over mash; or satisfy a sweet tooth with chocolate-covered locusts. In New York, Toloche offers Tacos de Chapulines—a.k.a grasshopper tacos—and tacos with worms from agave plants, while Maya serves Sur Guacamole, flavoured with tomatillo, cotija cheese, chilli and ground grasshoppers. Reichl cites the ethical food movement and the rise of nose-to-tail eating championed by author Michael Pollan as a catalyst. “Why is eating a pig’s leg any weirder than a bug?” she says. For some, it’s not.“I’ve eaten snakes, tarantulas and masses of insects, and I’ve seen creepy crawlies on menus around the world,” says British adventurer and host Bear Grylls. “But I wouldn’t pay for a plate of bugs, not when I can get a handful at work.”