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AUSTRIAN ENTREPRENE­URS DEVELOP DEVICE TO BREED INSECTS THAT GO STRAIGHT TO THE DINNER TABLE

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Aseething mass of larvae in the kitchen is not everyone’s cup of tea, particular­ly for squeamish westerners. But for two young Austrian entreprene­urs, it’s a food revolution that can help save the planet.

Katharina Unger and Julia Kaisinger, 25 and 28, have developed a device to breed in the comfort of your own home the protein-rich grubs of the meal beetle, to then eat.

“With this current design you can make 200-500 grams of mealworms every week,” Unger said at a recent tasting and fundraisin­g event in Vienna.

“You freeze them and then you make them like any other type of meat. You can cook them, roast them, make them into burger patties and mix them into sauce for pasta,” she said.

Into the top of the sleek, white “desktop hive” go pupae, which then hatch into adults. In the next section, the “loveshack”, the insects mate and their eggs fall into the next layer.

Helped by a controlled microclima­te, the eggs hatch into larvae, which gradually grow and descend to a drawer at the bottom where, around three centimetre­s long and plump, they are “harvested”.

“Our team eats them almost every day,” Unger said, showing off some of her creations — Greek salads topped by toasted grubs, quinoa-and-mealworm meatballs and even chocolate (and worm) cake.

Eating insects — entomophag­y — is not new. Humans have been doing so for thousands of years and today they are a common food in many developing countries across Asia, Africa, Latin America and Oceania.

 ?? AFP ?? Care for a scoop? Mealworms from the Hive, a machine invented in Austria, which produces edible mealworms. Insects are a common food in many developing countries across Asia, Africa, Latin America and Oceania.
AFP Care for a scoop? Mealworms from the Hive, a machine invented in Austria, which produces edible mealworms. Insects are a common food in many developing countries across Asia, Africa, Latin America and Oceania.
 ?? AFP ?? Radical idea Entreprene­urs Katharina Unger (left) and Julia Kaisinger with food from their Hive machine. The pair have developed the device to breed, in the comfort of your own home, the protein-rich grubs of the meal beetle, to eat.
AFP Radical idea Entreprene­urs Katharina Unger (left) and Julia Kaisinger with food from their Hive machine. The pair have developed the device to breed, in the comfort of your own home, the protein-rich grubs of the meal beetle, to eat.
 ?? AFP ?? Chocolate factory Above: Jars with mealworms from the Hive. A 2013 report by the FAO noted the ‘huge potential’ of insects, not only for feeding people but also livestock. Left: Chocolate cakes with mealworms. The insects contain more vitamin B12 than...
AFP Chocolate factory Above: Jars with mealworms from the Hive. A 2013 report by the FAO noted the ‘huge potential’ of insects, not only for feeding people but also livestock. Left: Chocolate cakes with mealworms. The insects contain more vitamin B12 than...
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