For foodie thrill seekers, cicadas add crunch and protein to lunch
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| New York
Cicadas are poised to infest whole swaths of American backyards this summer. Maybe it鈥檚 time they invaded your kitchen.
Swarms of the red-eyed bugs, who are reemerging after 17 years below ground, offer a chance for home cooks to turn the tables and make them into snacks.
Full of protein, gluten-free, low-fat, and low-carb, cicadas were used as a food source by Native Americans and are still eaten by humans in many countries.
鈥淲e really have to get over our dislike of insects, which is really strong and deep-seated in most people in our culture,鈥 said David George Gordon, author of 鈥淓at-a-Bug Cookbook鈥 and known as the Bug Chef.
鈥淵ou could make stir fry. You can mix them into dough to make bread 鈥 make banana bread, let鈥檚 say. You can batter them and deep fry them, which I think would be my favorite way,鈥 he said.
This year鈥檚 group is called Brood X, and they can be seen in 15 Eastern states from Indiana to Georgia to New York. Their cacophonous mating song can drown out the noise of passing jets.
When the soil warms up enough, cicadas emerge from the ground, where they鈥檝e been sucking moisture from tree roots for the past 13 or 17 years, depending on species. They shed their exoskeletons, attach themselves to branches, mate, and lay eggs before dying off in about six weeks.
When eating adult cicadas, it鈥檚 advised to pull the wings and legs off to reduce the crunchiness. But Mr. Gordon advises home cooks to gather the cicadas when they鈥檙e nymphs, before their body armor hardens and while they are still soft and chewy, like soft shell crab.
He puts them in the freezer, a humane way to kill them. Once defrosted, cicadas can become a pizza topping like sundried tomatoes, or replace shrimp in any recipe. Others have followed his lead, including a University of Maryland cookbook dedicated to the cicada.
鈥淧eople can鈥檛 really deal with the idea of looking at a bug and eating it. So that鈥檚 why I like tempura batter or something that just conceals the features of the nymph,鈥 Mr. Gordon said. 鈥淧lus, I鈥檒l eat anything that鈥檚 deep fried. I have a recipe in my book for a deep-fried tarantula spider and they鈥檙e really good.鈥
Mr. Gordon describes the taste of cicadas as akin to asparagus. University of Maryland entomologist Mike Raupp goes further: 鈥淭hey have a buttery texture, a delicious, nutty flavor, probably from the tannins, from the roots of the trees on which they fed,鈥 Mr. Raupp said. 鈥淎nd they鈥檙e going to be really good with a Merlot.鈥
Mr. Gordon鈥檚 鈥淓at-a-Bug Cookbook鈥 came out in 1998 and was greeted by hostility and jokes from late-night TV hosts. 鈥淏ut of course, over the last 20 years, this is moving in the direction of being normalized,鈥 he said.
Mr. Gordon pointed to the rise of foodie culture and thrill-seeking eaters like chef Andrew Zimmern, but especially to a 2013 report from the United Nation鈥檚 Food and Agriculture Organization as a turning point in interest in edible insects. The report estimated that insect-eating is practiced regularly by at least 2 billion people around the world, and that dozens of species have been documented as edible, including cicadas.
It also declared that edible insects are rich in protein and good fats, high in calcium, iron, and zinc, emit fewer greenhouse gases than most livestock, and take very little farming space or water.
鈥淣ow people were taking what I had been saying all along more seriously,鈥 Mr. Gordon said. In America, 鈥淲e鈥檙e kind of the weirdos: 80% of the world鈥檚 cultures eat insects, but we鈥檙e in that 20% that thinks it鈥檚 an abomination.鈥
The number of mass-produced foods containing insects 鈥 from protein bars to chips and pasta sauce 鈥 has been rising. In parts of Asia, some insects are sold in bags like salted peanuts or in tubes like stacked potato chips. A German company makes burgers out of mealworms.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e a much healthier option for the planet,鈥 said Dr. Jenna Jadin, an evolutionary biologist and ecologist who has worked as a climate change adviser for UN agencies like the Food and Agriculture Organization. 鈥淓specially in light of the fact that we will shortly have to feed 9 billion people.鈥
Ms. Jadin notes with a laugh that once the mighty, high-cost lobster was deemed so repulsive in the West that it was fed to prisoners. 鈥淧erceptions change,鈥 she said.
She notes that the Food and Agriculture Organization estimates about 18% of the world鈥檚 greenhouse gas emissions are due to animal agriculture.
Adventurous eaters might start with insects at the Newport Jerky Company, which has stores in Massachusetts and Rhode Island and a vibrant online presence. Its insect section includes a bag of grasshoppers for $9.99 or chocolate-covered crickets for $6.99.
Co-owner Derek Medico said he sells one item 鈥 a $9.99 mixed bag of dehydrated grasshoppers, mole crickets, silkworms, crickets, and sago worms 鈥 thousands of times a year. 鈥淚 think a lot of it just the novelty,鈥 he said.
And he doesn鈥檛 expect to see consistent demand for insects anytime soon.
鈥淚n other countries and other cultures, that鈥檚 much more accepted and much more normal,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut here, I just think it鈥檚 just going to take a while.鈥
This story was reported by The Associated Press.聽