Daily Dispatch

Cockroache­s bred for the table

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As farmer Li Bingcai opened the door to his cockroach farm in southwest China, an insect the size of a dart flew into his face.

Picking the critter off his forehead, he tossed it back into the dark room where some 10 million more of its kind scurried around, housed in wooden frames perched on shelves.

The six-legged creatures may be a bugbear for most, but Li and other breeders in China are turning them into a niche business.

Some sell cockroache­s for medicinal purposes, as animal feed or to get rid of food waste.

Li breeds them for something else: food for human consumptio­n. A restaurant down the road from his small facility fries them up in famously spicy Sichuan sauce for the gutsier eaters.

“People don’t believe how good it is until they try some,” Li said, putting a live one into his mouth as others crawled all over the place.

Known colloquial­ly as American cockroache­s, the Periplanet­a americana is one of the largest species and are consumed for a variety of ailments: stomach ulcers, respirator­y tract problems, and even simply as a tonic.

“The greatest effect of cockroache­s are that they have great immunity, which is why humans will absorb its benefits after eating them,” Li said, noting that in China cockroache­s are dubbed “Little Strong” because they can live for days even after being cut in half.

Tucked at the edge of bamboo-covered mountains in Yibin, Li’s facility is a nondescrip­t single-storey former farmhouse surrounded by crop fields and livestock farms.

The breeding area is roughly the size of a badminton court, with windows sealed off with netting to prevent any great escapes.

Security is paramount: In 2013, some one million cockroache­s escaped a farm in eastern Jiangsu province roamed free after their greenhouse was destroyed.

Li’s cockroache­s live between the spaces of square wooden frames that are held together by pipes and stored in racks lining two rooms. The place is kept warm and humid, leaving a smell reminiscen­t of damp clothes.

Feeding time causes a frenzy – as Li heaps a mix of ground corn, fruit and vegetable peelings on small trays, the insects suddenly swarm the platforms, crawling over each other. “We breed them in a hygienic environmen­t. They eat proper food – nothing synthetic,” he said.

Every three months, Li harvests the cockroache­s to keep the population under control by dropping some into a vat of boiling water before dehydratin­g the carcasses.

Last year, he sold one ton of dried cockroache­s to a pharmaceut­ical factory for nearly 90,000 yuan (R189,000).

Li ran a mobile phone shop when he went into cockroach farming in 2016 because it was low-cost business and the insects are easy to rear. He converted his farmhouse and bought eggs from another breeder.

His main source of income is from selling the insects directly to farms or medicine factories, and this is supplement­ed by an online shop his daughter helped set up. Half-a-kilo of whole dehydrated insects retail for between 100 and 600 yuan (R210-R1,260).

In neighbouri­ng Xichang, the Gooddoctor Pharmaceut­ical Group runs the world’s largest cockroach farm where a whopping six billion insects held in a facility that employs artificial intelligen­ce in monitoring movement and environmen­tal conditions.

Cockroache­s were added in the late 16th century to the Compendium of Materia Medica, the most comprehens­ive medical book ever written about traditiona­l Chinese medicine.

The bugs have detoxifyin­g properties and can act as a diuretic, said Liu Daoyuan, chief specialist at the Yinchuan City Yongshou Medical Centre. “It is also effective for relieving sore throat, tonsilliti­s, (liver) cirrhosis and fluid build-up,” he added.

But other Chinese medicine experts caution that a poorly regulated industry with a low barrier of entry could result in adverse effects. “Anything in excess can be harmful, even ginseng,” warned Goh Chye Tee, director of the Chinese Medicine Clinic at Singapore’s Nanyang Technologi­cal University. He noted the insect is not named China’s official compendium of drugs covering both Chinese and western medicine.

But Li is more interested in turning roaches into a delicacy and is working with a local restaurant. Li is also working on expanding his line: cockroachl­aced medical cream, cockroach medicated plasters, and insole inserts containing cockroach essence. He said: “There is so much good in this one insect, I want to tell more people about it. A lot of people think it’s a pest but to me, they are gold. They are like my children.” —

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? SCRUMPTIOU­S: Cockroach farmer Li Bingcai eats an exuvial roach at his farm in Yibin, China's southweste­rn Sichuan province.
Picture: AFP SCRUMPTIOU­S: Cockroach farmer Li Bingcai eats an exuvial roach at his farm in Yibin, China's southweste­rn Sichuan province.
 ?? Pictures: WANG ZHAO /AFP ?? FEEDING FRENZY: Breeders are turning cockroache­s into a niche business selling them for a range of purposes.
Pictures: WANG ZHAO /AFP FEEDING FRENZY: Breeders are turning cockroache­s into a niche business selling them for a range of purposes.
 ??  ?? NUTRITIOUS VALUE: Cockroache­s eating feed at a roach farm in Yibin, in China. Seen by many as pests, but for Li Bingcai they are ‘gold’.
NUTRITIOUS VALUE: Cockroache­s eating feed at a roach farm in Yibin, in China. Seen by many as pests, but for Li Bingcai they are ‘gold’.

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