Insect-eating might be the latest food trend. Would you try it?
According to a recent news report, insects are heading to Canadian grocery shelves. It’s not an attack of killer ants or an infestation of locusts; rather these insects are of the edible variety destined to be sold for consumption.
You may have just said “ick”, but for some years now environmentalists and foodies have hailed bugs as the future of eco-friendly protein. Sustaining the environment while trying to feed the over seven billion mouths on our planet has become increasingly challenging. As author Paul Roberts vividly explains in his book The End of Food, the existing system of making, marketing and moving food is failing because very year it is becoming less and less compatible with the growing population. While there is more high-volume and cheaply manufactured food than ever before, the quality of our milk, meat and crops has steadily declined. And the quality of soil and water used to produce this food has also been compromised. Also, consider the great paradox of the existing system: there are nearly one billion people in the world who are considered obese and another one billion who don’t get enough to eat.
People eating insects is by no means a new concept. The ancient Romans and Greeks ate beetle larvae and locusts, and Aristotle wrote about harvesting cicadas to eat as well. Some communities in Sub-Saharan Africa and East Asia have a strong culinary tradition of bug consumption, while in Western countries a few high-end restaurants have put insects on the menu.