Coming to a Frying Pan Near You: Worm, Fly and Grasshopper Cooking OilsJiminy Cricket, that's nasty. Or is it?
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If the thought of crunching into agrasshopper kabobbugs you out, imagine eating an egg fried in grasshopper oil. Some extreme eatersalready haveand, if the iron-stomached entrepreneurs behind the growing entomophagy movement have their way, you might one day, too. Maybe sooner than you think.
我们不骗你。油制成的昆虫——苍蝇,crickets and mealworms included -- are shaping up to be the next frontier in alternative cooking oils. Researchers atWageningen Universityin the Netherlands recently analyzed oils from the aforementioned creepy-crawlies and, per theirfindings, they have more than a hunch that oil from crickets is likely the most consumer-friendly option in the bunch.
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After all, millions of peoplethe world overalready snack on roasted crickets like peanuts or popcorn. On American soil, gusty gastronomers are starting to suck the chirpy critters down in smoothies and inprotein bars, too. Just ask our very own cricket-eater,Kate Taylor. (In case you're wondering, she sayscrickets, like tofu, mostly take on the flavor of what they're cooked with and, when eaten whole, they're just as crunchy as you'd expect.)
All gagging aside, the researchers say cooking oils from bugs are packed with energy and essential fatty acids and are a rich source of healthy proteins, minerals and vitamins. Nutritionally speaking, they're somewhat of a middle road between animal and vegetable oils. They're also inexpensive and relatively eco-friendly to produce, making them an ideal vehicle for combatting malnutrition and "mitigating the livestock crisis," researchers noted. Bravo. Who cares if they're not cholestrol-free?
To turn the bugs into edible oils, researchers freeze-dried them in liquid nitrogen and ground them into a fine powder in a blender. Then, using someIron Chef-worthy techniques, they extricated lipids (fats) from the bug dust. Appetizing, right? Then they chewed the fat, literally, sussing out each oil's physical properties and scent and taste profiles.
Related:How Food Makers Are Convincing America to Eat Bugs
Not surprisingly, cockroach oil was the most putrid in the lot, with lead researcher Dr. Daylan Tzompa-Sosa noting that it smelled "especially disgusting," reeking "something like vomit,"Food Navigator USAreports. The oil's funk was so rank, she says, that it could never be fit for human consumption. It might work, however, as an ingredient in paints and industrial lubricants. Dang cockroaches, man. Winning since prehistoric times.
The insect oils that scored the best in lab tests came from grasshoppers and soldier flies. They give off a "fruity, pleasant" bouquet, also perFood Navigator USA. Fine, we'll give grasshoppers a pass, but only because they're cute and kids dig them. Flies, though? No. Just no.
What about you? Would you sauté veggies in grasshopper grease?