lpetrich
Contributor
To feed two billion more people, the world needs a bug diet | WIRED UK -- "When four crickets provide as much calcium as a large glass of milk, why isn't everyone eating bugs already?"
Insects seem gross to many people, but some people do eat them, and one might even market them as "land shrimp".
EXO -- protein bars with ground-up crickets. From its FAQ file,
Entocycle -- raises black soldier-fly larvae on food-processing waste like spent grain from local breweries ("Our Protein"), and currently markets the larvae as fish and chicken food ("Our Process").
Flying SpArk | Sustainable Protein | Israel -- from the larvae of Mediterranean fruit flies (Ceratitis capitata). Those larvae are fed on fruits and vegetables, though the site does not indicate their source. Food-processing waste?
Essento Produkte -- text in German, and I used Google Translate on it. From its FAQ page,
Finally,
Insects seem gross to many people, but some people do eat them, and one might even market them as "land shrimp".
EXO -- protein bars with ground-up crickets. From its FAQ file,
Where do your crickets come from?
We work with a couple of domestic cricket farms that specifically raise crickets for human consumption. Our crickets are currently fed a Certified-Organic grain-based diet and filtered water. We are constantly focused on optimizing the feed and are experimenting with various options including organic matter like orange peels and cornhusks.
How do you make cricket flour?
After cleaning the crickets, we dry them to remove the moisture and mill them into fine flour. The result is slightly nutty-tasting flour that is high in protein and micronutrients.
Entocycle -- raises black soldier-fly larvae on food-processing waste like spent grain from local breweries ("Our Protein"), and currently markets the larvae as fish and chicken food ("Our Process").
Flying SpArk | Sustainable Protein | Israel -- from the larvae of Mediterranean fruit flies (Ceratitis capitata). Those larvae are fed on fruits and vegetables, though the site does not indicate their source. Food-processing waste?
Essento Produkte -- text in German, and I used Google Translate on it. From its FAQ page,
So one can get whole insects, insect flour, insect hamburger, insect meatballs, and insect protein bars.Welche Produkte hat Essento?
Unser Sortiment umfasst ganze Insekten sowie veredelte, weiterverarbeitete Produkte. Damit möchten wir die Konsumenten entscheiden lassen, wie der Einstieg in die neue Welt der essbaren Insekten einfacher fällt. Du bekommst ganze Insekten gefroren oder gefriergetrocknet, nature oder weiterverarbeitet als Snacks oder Mehl. Zudem fertigen wir für dich in unserer Manufaktur unsere würzigen Insect Burger und Insect Balls mit Mehlwürmern und unseren fruchtigen Insect Bar mit Grillenmehl. Wo du Insekten kaufen kannst?
Which products does Essento have?
Our assortment covers whole insects as well as refined, further processed products. We want to let consumers decide how to get into the new world of edible insects easier. You get whole insects frozen or freeze-dried, nature or processed as snacks or flour. In addition, we manufacture our spicy Insect Burger and Insect Balls with mealworms and our fruity Insect Bar with grilling flour in our manufactory. Where to buy insects?
Yet more food-processing waste.Mit was werden die Insekten gefüttert?
Zuchtbetriebe füttern die Insekten mit Nebenströmen aus der Lebensmittelproduktion. Damit steht das Futtermittel für Insekten nicht in Konkurrenz mit unseren Lebensmitteln. Beispiele für Nebenströme sind die Unmengen an Weizenkleie, die bei der Getreideverarbeitung anfällt und Ausschussgemüse und -obst, welches wir Menschen nicht mehr essen können/möchten.
What are the insects fed with?
Breeding farms feed the insects with side streams from food production. Thus, the feed for insects is not in competition with our food. Examples of side streams are the vast amounts of wheat bran produced during grain processing and rejected vegetables and fruits that we humans are unable / unwilling to eat.
Finally,
Eat Grub
Eat Grub, founded in 2013 by Neil Whippey and Shami Radia after a charity trip to Malawi introduced Radia to flying ants cooked in chilli and lime. The pair kicked off with a series of pop-up restaurants in London, where neo-Thai chef Seb Holmes served up a seven course tasting menu. The recipes appeared in a co-authored book Eat Grub: The Ultimate Insect Cookbook, followed by the launch of a range of freeze dried, ready- to-cook insects, cricket powder energy bars and roasted grub snacks. In 2016, Eat Grub partnered with farmer and entomologist Howard Bell to launch Entovista, the UK’s first cricket farm.

