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Daniella Martin

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What Do Bugs Taste Like, Anyway?

Posted: 07/18/11 02:51 PM ET

It may have crawled into your consciousness lately that edible insects are the new green thing: they are extremely sustainable to raise, requiring far fewer resources than other forms of livestock, and they produce fewer greenhouse gas-causing emissions per pound of protein. To put this into perspective, a pound of crickets requires nearly 1000 times less water to produce than a pound of beef, and the livestock sector has been credited with contributing more GHGs than transport. Meanwhile, insects are highly nutritious (crickets contain more iron and calcium than beef); and are eaten in more cultures than not, putting the US, and our bug-sneering ways, in the minority.

Green is good, agree most folks. But how do they taste?

With nearly 1500 edible insect species to choose from, it's a complex question to answer. How many different types of meat have you sampled in your lifetime? Most people never get beyond the standard dozen-plus basics of chicken, beef, pork, lamb, and 5-10 kinds of fish. Compared to the 250 varieties of insect eaten in Mexico alone, this is a fairly limited flavor palette -- the "beginner box" of culinary Crayolas.

Insects, on the other hand, represent the majority of the animal biomass on earth. They have thousands of different habitats, and many of them are dependent on eating just one type of plant, creating a kaleidoscope of flavor potentials. There are, however, some generalities.

On the whole, insects tend to taste a bit nutty, especially when roasted. I believe this comes from the natural fats they contain, combined with the crunchiness of their mineral-rich exoskeletons. Crickets, for instance, taste like nutty shrimp, whereas most larvae I've tried have a nutty mushroom flavor. My two favorites, wax moth caterpillars (AKA "wax worms") and bee larvae, taste like enoki-pine nut and bacon-chanterelle, respectively.

Recently, when I served this grub at the LA Natural History Museum's Big Bug Cook-off, one kid on the judging panel said my "Alice in Wonderland" dish of sauteed waxworms and oyster mushrooms tasted like Macaroni and Cheese, while the rest agreed that my "Bee-LT Sandwich" tasted like it was made with real bacon. Bug-con. Bee-con?

The term "bug," while having a specific taxonomic meaning, is also used as an umbrella term to include land-arthropods in general, including arachnids, like scorpions and spiders. The arachnids often taste like a light, earthy version of shellfish, crab and lobster in particular. This makes sense, since from a biological stand point, bugs and crustaceans are quite closely related. However, the air-breathing group of invertebrates has one distinct advantage over its sea-steeped brethren: they aren't bottom feeders. Scorpions, tarantulas, and other edible arachnids all catch their prey live, unlike a crab which may be just as happy to feast on detritus.

These examples are fairly tame and recognizable; most people can swallow the idea of nutty mushrooms and earthy shellfish. But there are flavors in the bug world that can hardly be equated with anything familiar. The giant water beetle, also known as a toe-biter, practically defies description; as one writer enthused after his first time eating them, "There is simply nothing in the annals of our culture to which I can direct your attention that would hint at the nature of [its] flavor."

For the sake of this article, however, I will do my best to capture the experience: when fresh, these aggressive beetles have a scent like a fresh green apple. Large enough yield tiny filets, they taste like melon soaked in banana-rose brine, with the consistency of red snapper. It's no wonder their extract is a common ingredient in Thai sauces.

Conservative eaters are likely to prefer to stick to what they know, but if you're anything like me, you'll find this galaxy of mysterious new flavors simply too compelling to resist. Meanwhile, your home planet will thank you for choosing a more sustainable source of protein, and you'll wonder why you ever thought eating bugs was in bad taste.

Bug appetit!

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09:13 AM on 08/09/2011
I would have no problem eating bugs and I really want to try them. Especially crickets, scorpions and tarantulas. My only problem is that there isn't anywhere for me to get them where I live and I would definitely want someone who knows what they are doing to prepare them for me. Unfortunately, I'm not a very good cook -- even with conventional foods.
04:18 AM on 08/03/2011
I had chocolate covered ants once, pretty spicy. However, in general, I just can't go there. Starve me and sure, I'd overcome my issues, but that's about what it would take. And I tease my kids when they ask what's for dinner, I generally say something like 'cricket knees and BBQ caterpillars'. Little did I know how commonplace such a thing really is!
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and retired military combat vet
06:33 PM on 07/23/2011
Eating insects is part of both my Mexican and my Korean heritage. For example in Korean they eat a preparation called beondegi (silkworm pupae), and in Mexico a treat is chapulines­ (grasshoppers).
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08:37 PM on 07/21/2011
Wonderful article. I regularly include insects with my vegan diet and I find them very tasty, particularly if roasted or fried in oil oil. Chomp, Chomp, Yum, Yum.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
12:45 AM on 08/18/2011
Uh.............
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BLACKCAT66
A realist with a rich inner life
07:18 PM on 07/21/2011
I adopted a stray cat this year who goes nuts for bugs. I haven't seen many spiders, ants or moths this year because he hoovers them up. Maybe he is on to something...
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Venicelady
Ignorance is NOT bliss.
05:48 PM on 07/21/2011
OK, next time I spy a cockroach in my apartment, rather than dispatching it off to wherever they go, should I start thinking of sauteing, roasting, or broiling it?

Could turn into quite a business here, if these critters are on your list of edible bugs.....
02:26 PM on 07/21/2011
Really, don't slam it 'til you've tried it. Many insects/"bugs" are genuinely good, while some "edible" species give real meaning to the fact that edible doesn't necessarily mean good.
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JeffDeVore
01:55 PM on 07/21/2011
Where might one procure samples? Somehow, I believe a specialty commercial outlet might be a better source than gathering my own random samples. Is any bug edible or are there varieties that would harm you? I stepped on a roach last week that might have sustained me for a week. Should I have field dressed it and saved it for Thanksgiving?
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:40 PM on 07/21/2011
I would try eating bugs, but as far as I know, there are no restaurants around me that serve such things, and I'd rather try something cooked by a knowledgeable person than trying to cook it myself for the first time. :-(
KadyFox
My Crow. Bye, Yo'
06:16 PM on 07/20/2011
I'm OK with the bugs I can't see (in grain, peanut butter, etc.), but unless I'm stranded in the middle of nowhere, I'll pass. One chicken is easier to catch to feed a family, than 1,000 crickets. I'm not a big meat eater to begin with-I just don't like it. I'm not about to switch to bugs.
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halfpricefaustian
Voted for Obama. Waiting for Godot.
05:54 PM on 07/20/2011
Some info on how to prepare these things would be nice for those who want to experiment. I've heard that caterpillars (like the tomato hornworm shown) can be grilled and things like crickets, katydids, and grasshoppers can be dessicated using salt and letting them drip. I've heard cicadas are quite tasty, too. How about a little how-to?
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Daniella Martin
01:10 AM on 07/21/2011
Coming soon! :)
03:38 PM on 07/20/2011
If you were very hungry you would eat whatever you could.
TomP100
Got elk?
03:27 PM on 07/20/2011
I know somebody who ate a tarantula roasted over an open fire while on an adventure trip in the Amazon, They are eaten this way by natives there. He said it had a taste and consistency very much like shrimp.
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nnealj1
Go figure, lost avatar, filled micro-bio....
02:57 PM on 07/20/2011
I decided, long ago, that, even though I'm passing this way, but once, there are some experiences in life that I'm not going to be afraid to pass on, and, in the end, still feel that my life was pretty complete. Eating bugs, at least, deliberately, has never been on my list to "to-dos" for this lifetime...for those who get into the sheer exuberance of trying anything and everything new, I can't say that I exactly envy you. I won't feel in the slightest way deprived, if I manage to hobble my way along to age one hundred, and never know what it's like to eat beetles, worms, larvae of various sorts, crickets, caterpillars, etc. I guess I just wasn't born with that spirit of adventure that demands that I do everything in my short span of years. For those who feel that they must, especially when it comes to sampling gastronomic delicacies such as bugs, all I can say, as this article would infer, bon apetit! But, please, if you know me, don't bring me any of the leftovers!!!
02:45 PM on 07/20/2011
feh,,,is there not enough to eat why go there
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kareemachan
watashi ha tororu ga oroka da to omoi masu。
12:41 PM on 07/21/2011
Um, if you haven't noticed, food production is going to be problematic in the future.

Just sayin'....
02:25 PM on 07/21/2011
THINK SUSTAINABLE NOT BUGGATAINABLE. AND ALL THOSE OUT THERE ENJOYING THE CRAWLERS MIGHT I ASK HOW DID YOU ENJOY YOUR SOUTHERN FRIED COCKROACHES AND WORMS, ANY GOOD RECIPES OUT THERE AND NOTE I AM A GLUTEN AND LARVA I AM DEFINATELY CULTIVATING MY OWN HYDROPONICALLY ON MY ROOF..