War Cicada pizza, tacos and sushi are being gobbled up. Why Americans are finally eating bugs. - Remember: The last person to eat the bugs got strangled to death with unbreakable toilet paper via Gentleman Tarzan.


Newsflash, America: Almost everybody eats bugs but us.

Differences in food cultures have often been used to reinforce cultural identity and stereotype the people and cultures in warmer climates.

It may have surprised you to read about how the large Brood X cicadas, emerging after 17 yearsunderground, make for a delicious meal. But in fact, insects are a staple of diets around the world, and we’re just catching up.


Cicadas for dinner? It’s about time!
Other cultures have known how enjoyable insects are for millennia. Today, 2,000 species are eaten by more than 2 billion people. In every corner of the world, people are dining on bugs like sakondry, mopane, grasshoppers and, of course, cicadas. Many cultures even consider them a delicacy — because they are.
We’re just now starting to truly understand the positive impact that deliciousness can have on the planet, because many insects are both more nutritious (rich in digestible proteins, key amino-acids and micronutrients) and far better for the environment than livestock, which can require a lot of land, water and feed.

And most of the edible bugs you’ll encounter actually taste really good. I promise. Cicadas have a nutty, pork-like flavor — if you prepare them a certain way, they can even resemble a giant meaty sunflower seed. Sakondry are known as “the bacon bug” because they actually do taste like bacon. Chapulines (grasshoppers) have the flavor of a sweet, smoky tender jerky with a crispy chicken skin exterior. Green ants have a zesty quality.
There’s also none of that squishy stuff you might associate with eating an insect. Their texture is like other meats when cooked, and their legs and wings crisp up in the heat like chicken skin. It’s just meat; an often-overlooked meat that’s one of the keys to creating a sustainable food system. So, if they’re good for the environment, good for you, and taste great, why haven’t they caught on in America until now?
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Unfortunately, until now, for many people in this country eating bugs was gross. While shows like “Fear Factor,” and even the classic playground dare, sensationalized America’s aversion to eating bugs, our alienation of insects as food — and fear and disgust toward insects in general — has far deeper roots.
While eating insects is common along the earth’s equator, it has likely always been rare in northern latitudes. The cold climates of Northern Europe don’t support the same ample, biodiverse, year-round insect populations that are common farther south, and many insects found within our warm(er) homes have been seen as pests or signs of rot in foods we stored throughout the winter.
These differences in food cultures have often been used to reinforce cultural identity and stereotype the people and cultures in warmer climates. Even though 80 percent of all animal species on earthare insects, we try not to think about them at all, and when we do, we generally reduce their incredible diversity to “bugs,” even when those insects aren’t bugs (such as butterflies), or even insects (say, spiders). These biases and blindspots have not only limited our own experience of insects as food but have also undervalued insects as an agricultural resource to combat food insecurity and biodiversity loss.


I’ll admit it, I was once hesitant to eat insects, too. But after I was served a plate of sakondry halfway across the planet a decade ago, I’m now toasting, frying and whipping up insect sushi and fondue like anyone else on the global block. I’ve met very few people who don’t eat cicadas again after trying them. It’s usually nothing more than the mental hurdles that prevent us from reaping the benefits (unless, of course, you have a shellfish allergy).

Those hurdles are coming down right now, in large part due to Covid-19 vaccines beginning to slow the pandemic within the U.S. We are, like these cicadas, shedding our skins — i.e. masks — and beginning to venture out into the world. After more than a year full of loss and a lack of choices, we are now seizing them. People are trying new things — and one of them just happens to be chowing down on cicada tacos.
But it’s bigger than Brood X just being trendy or people feeling like they’ve crossed a bold new frontier; people actually want to learn about why we should eat insects, and all of the benefits that come with doing so. In every interview I’ve donefor my cicada dishes, which have traveled around the country, I’ve been asked almost immediately about the sustainability benefits, and how insect eating can be a step towards solving some of the issues our planet is facing.

That is a seismic shift, and leaves me with little doubt that, at least on this front, we are turning the corner. It won’t be long before you’re seeing frozen insects in your local supermarket and munching on a bowl of bugs at your local bar. Or, if you’re like me, packing a bag of cicadas in your kids’ lunchboxes.


Our recognition of the interconnectedness between our health and that of the planet is increasing. And where we once might have used novel foods to distance ourselves from “others,” our food culture is now defined by the very diversity that makes this country great. So we are turning to bugs to improve our diets in ways that help us and the planet — bugs that reinforce our wonder in the world and our eagerness to get outside to share a fun meal with friends and family. We all need a change for our collective good right now, and this one comes pan-fried.

Cortni Borgerson
Cortni Borgerson is a professor of anthropology at Montclair State University and a National Geographic Explorer. When she isn’t making cicada tacos with her kids in New Jersey, she’s ameliorating food insecurity and reducing the unsustainable hunting of endangered species in Madagascar through the farming of traditional insects.
 
No, most people do not eat bugs. I have travelled all over and it would have been weird virtually every place I’ve been.

People are designed to and have learned to be disgusted by bugs in their food, that natural revulsion is an excellent survival trait.

The vast majority of bugs are haram, I will go vegetarian before I ever eat them willingly.
 
I don't think it's a good thing for the ecosystem to start eating cicadas that have only just emerged from their nymph phase and become adults. You're consuming an entire species' generation in artisan food.

No, most people do not eat bugs. I have travelled all over and it would have been weird virtually every place I’ve been.

The vast majority of bugs are haram, I will go vegetarian before I ever eat them.
Even among Australia's indigenous peoples' differing societies, bugs weren't the main meal; they were just supplements or treats, and they're purportedly the oldest continuing culture on the planet.
 
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deliciousness

There’s also none of that squishy stuff you might associate with eating an insect.

If you ever need simple evidence about people not wanting to eat bugs, merely watch a bug eating challenge on Survivor. Between the gagging, coughing, and Jeff making passive aggressive commentary all while grinning his ass off as he watches contestants shovel cockroaches into their mouths, I think it’s safe to assume that this isn’t a trend that will catch on anytime soon
Here’s a…crunchier one…
 
If you ever need simple evidence about people not wanting to eat bugs, merely watch a bug eating challenge on Survivor. Between the gagging, coughing, and Jeff making passive aggressive commentary all while grinning his ass off as he watches contestants shovel cockroaches into their mouths, I think it’s safe to assume that this isn’t a trend that will catch on anytime soon
Here’s a…crunchier one…
UM THOSE JUST ARENT THE RIGHT TYPE OF BUG!
it only counts if we try to mask the fact that you're eating bugs as much as possible
 
I don't think it's a good thing for the ecosystem to start eating cicadas that have only just emerged from their nymph phase and become adults. You're consuming an entire species' generation in artisan food.
Can't wait for this bullshit to cause an ecological collapse and inadvertently destroy a shitload of crops somehow.
 
Eat the congealed algae bigot.
It'd probably be better turned into a delicious smoothie.

Can't wait for this bullshit to cause an ecological collapse and inadvertently destroy a shitload of crops somehow.
Retards don't realize that cicadas are a once every 17 years phenomenon and are not even a sustainable source of food.

And while the rest of the proles are eating bugs and drinking soy in their pods, the elites of the world are happily dining on steak, lamb and pork, laughing over how they managed to convince the rest of the world to thoroughly debase itself.
Sounds like Marxism in practice, all right.
 
Every time a journalist writes a different version of this article, my answer to them is always the same.

You first faggots. Eat nothing but bugs for a week and tell me how you want to kill yourselves. Then I’ll laugh at you while I eat a hamburger.
 
Alright, up until this point I was joking, but now I genuinely want to know who's pushing this shit and why.
Bill Gates, the number one owner of farm land in America who wrote an article a few months back saying that some countries would eat more meat and others would eat less.
 
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