To Eat Or Not To Be Eaten?

fireflies.jpgAhhh….end of summer.  Shooting stars spark August skies, like fireflies surprised my nights back East. When I was little, lightening bugs against a celestial backdrop made me micro, shuddering first at the size of the universe and how my life’s light merely flickers for a second in it, like theirs. Then I’d go macro and wonder if the teensy fireflies looked at humans and felt submicroscopic by comparison. Or were they far better off than girls like me losing sleep over such things. Fireflies never scared me; thoughts of my mortality did.

Ahh…quiet mornings with brilliant L.A. light….confluence of houseflies who found their way in through portals left open by window washers now stud clean glass seeking the sun. Fury overcoming fear, I attack, slap happy with my swatter. Now it’s hard to see out the cleaned windows around their drying corpses smearing the glass. Maybe one should only wash windows in winter.

Ahh…summer greenery caresses my cottage…and cobwebs decorated with gnat carcasses and teensy leaves line every corner in which they can be hitched.  Talented Daddy Long Legs lurk unseen between the eaves waiting to ensnare me in their astounding webs, or scare a scream out of me as they lurk in my bathtub. Why do they scare me so?

mosquito.jpgAhh, summer dusk, whose serenity is compromised by the fine whine, like a dentist’s drill, of mosquitoes dive bombing my ear, or approaching by stealth, stinging me deeply til they die of their gluttony or my belated slap. Calomine lotion cracks pink across my calves, and I reek of repellent, as mosquitoes will travel through fire and flood far across state lines to find me.  That’s how alluringly attractive I have the misfortune to be, and how moist nights are marred by small murders. Mosquitoes are brazenly brave kamikaze suicide terrorists with some extremist insect sect, hoping to take me out itch by itch before they die.

Ahh…sweet sounds of the summer night.  A cacophony of crickets give a concert and counting the number of their chirps per fifteen seconds and adding forty tells the temperature. That counting calms me. Then they can suddenly jump twenty times the length of their own bodies right into my lap and send me shrieking inside.

Insects own the world. We’re on borrowed lands and time. They will ignore any control measures, any ecologically correct deterrents and overpopulate, bite and infect our people. They will eat us alive…unless we eat them first.

angel-and-juan.jpgMy mentee Angelica de Los Angeles, who graduated from Los Angeles High School with honors in June, laughs at my fears. On her way to college on scholarship, a math and science genius, much smarter than me about many things.  She is untriggered by traumas and Teflon for terrors. For her, insects are not scary. They are a delicacy.

Back in Oaxaca she and her family would catch colonies of crickets, small as the tip of a finger, in the meadows with bags, and blanche them in boiling water, except for the ones that leapt out of the pot who deserved to live.  In another pan, they’d prepare a sauce of garlic, lemon and salt.  Then they’d pour the drained crickets into the pan and fry them til they were soft and flavorful.  Chapulines were a special appetizer for upbeat occasions. Her family can’t seem to catch enough crickets in California and miss that dish greatly.

Now the push for ingesting insects is on, as protein sources lessen and hungry mouths increase in number, (just like imbibing treated blackwater will become the norm as water sources diminish).  Here are some recipes to make them palatable. Where is Julia when we need her?

Dry Roasted Grasshoppers

Spread fresh, frozen and cleaned insects on paper towels on a cookie sheet. Bake at 200° for 1-2 hours until desired state of dryness is reached. Check state of dryness by attempting to crush insect with spoon.  From Orkin

Garlic Butter Fried Grasshoppers

1/4 cup butter 
 6 cloves garlic, crushed 
 1 cup cleaned insects*
Melt butter in fry pan. Reduce heat. Sauté garlic in butter for 5 minutes. Add insects. Continue sautéing for 10 - 15 
minutes, stirring occasionally.  From Orkin

Grasshopper Fritters 
from 'Ronald Taylor's "Butterflies in My Stomach"
3/4 cup sifted flour 
1 tsp. baking powder 
1 tsp. salt 
3/4 c milk 
1 egg, slightly beaten 
1 c grasshoppers 
1 pt. heavy cream beaten stiff

Sift flour, baking powder and salt together into a bowl. Slowly add milk and beat until smooth. Add egg and beat well. 
Pluck off grasshopper wings and legs, heads optional. Dip insects in egg batter and deep fry. Salt and serve. 
from  Amazing Grasshopper Recipes.

Parcht Locusts

This dish was discovered by William Dampier in 1687, while visiting the Bashee Islands (located between the Philippines 
and Taiwan). He described it in A New Voyage Round the World:
They had another Dish made of a sort of Locusts, whose Bodies were about an Inch and an half long, and as thick as the 
top of one's little Finger; with large thin Wings, and long and small Legs. ... The Natives would go out with small Nets, and 
take a Quart at one sweep. When they had enough, they would carry them home, and parch them over the Fire in an earthen Pan; and then their Wings and Legs would fall off, and their Heads and Backs would turn red like boil'd Shrimps, 
being before brownish. Their Bodies being full, would eat very moist, their Heads would crackle in one's Teeth. I did once 
eat of this Dish, and liked it well enough....from Dr. Frog's Recipe Page

Popcorn Crunch 


Here's an easy treat to prepare and take to the drive-in movie. The kids will love it.
1/2 cup butter, melted 
        1/2 cup honey 
        3 quarts popcorn, popped 
        1 cup dry roasted insects, chopped
Blend the butter and honey together in a saucepan and heat gently. Mix the popcorn with the insects and pour the 
butter-honey mixture over it. Mix well. Spread on a cookie sheet in a thin layer. Bake at 350° 10 to 15 minutes, or until 
crisp. Break into bite-sized pieces.  From Orkin