Cricket Casserole? Cambodia’s Baked
Insects Gain Popularity in the West
Insects, rich in protein and highly
sustainable, could be the future of food.
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According to the United Nations, approximately two billion people across the globe practice entomophagy – the consumption of insects as food. While many Westerners struggle with the idea of introducing bugs to their diet, it appears that attitudes are changing.
Cambodia
is the center of cricket cuisine culture, and for a good reason. Under Khmer
Rouge control in the 1970s, Cambodians faced genocide and famine due to the
communist regime’s agricultural reforms. Many began eating crickets to avoid
starvation.
Thun
Mong is a cattle farmer turned cricket farmer who grew up under the
ultra-Maoist regime. He uses a combination of black lights, plastic sheeting
and bamboo to lure crickets into water-filled holes that he digs around his
farm. Mong says that a good night can yield 30 kilograms of the chirping
insects – which he can sell to a middleman for about a dollar per kilogram.
“We
started eating crickets during Pol Pot’s regime, but back then … we didn’t have
these lamps,” he told CamboGuide.
“If the crickets come, I can make a really good profit.”
One of
Mong’s middlemen, Nong Sovann, is a two-year veteran of the cricket business.
He claimed that “demand is skyrocketing.”
Two
French expats living in Cambodia, Gerard Thevenet and Philippe Lenain, see the
cricket’s potential as a sustainable source of protein. Though they didn’t
intend for their insect snacks to be a hit with Western tourists, Thevenet and
Lenain prepare the unappetizing insect in a way that suits Western palates.
The
pair’s company, Khmer Iron Cricket, sells four different flavors of cricket
cookies, as well as offering rehydrated crickets that are baked for 14 hours
with a special blend of garlic and spices. The creepy crawly treats are
packaged in attractive boxes with transparent tops, emblazoned with the Khmer
Iron Cricket slogan – Powerfully Delicious!
But the
duo also has an ulterior motive: eradicating malnourishment among Cambodian
children.
“We
also sell powder made from ground crickets and down the road I’d like to use
this as a nutritional compliment, to mix with food. That’s our main aim – to
sell it to feed malnourished children,” Lenain told The Phnom Penh Post.
“Everybody eats insects – except us, except the Western world.”
The
company’s farm is home to one and a half million crickets. They are fed a diet
of eggplant and pumpkin, and harvesting takes place every six weeks. Lenain
describes the taste of a plain, dehydrated cricket as “similar to a chestnut.”
Thanks
to their high sustainability, crickets and other insects could be the answer to
a future food crisis. 100 grams of cricket powder contains 69 percent protein – the
same amount of dried beef contains only 45 percent. Crickets require 12 times
less feed than cattle and a fraction of the water – agriculture and livestock
production has taken over 40 percent of the Earth’s land and uses 70 percent of the planet’s freshwater.
Crickets also produce 80 times less methane than cows, and when ground into a
powder, crickets can provide nearly as much calcium as cow’s milk.
In
September, a “Future Food Salon” in
New York City promoted insects as food. The event offered everything from
cricket kebabs to cricket chocolate. A popular Mexican restaurant in the city’s
SoHo neighborhood is struggling to meet demand for a cricket burger – selling
up to 100 a day. A
pop-up “Pestaurant” in London attracted curious passerby with barbecued
tarantulas and sun-dried caterpillars – but a mealworm-topped pigeon burger
appeared to steal the show.
Aside
from the health and environmental benefits, there is karmic incentive for eating
bugs: There is evidence that suggests insects don’t feel pain.
From
being eaten out of desperation to their recent culinary rise in the West,
crickets may someday make mouths water.
The original link to this
article can be found at:
http://thediplomat.com/2013/12/cricket-casserole-cambodias-baked-insects-gain-popularity-in-the-west/
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