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Thailand is now the largest producer or edible insects


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Thailand is now the largest producer or edible insects

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BANGKOK: -- As the world discovers the culinary secrets that countries like Africa, Asia and Latin America have long known Thailand’s edible insects farming industry is taking off like never before.

As the world wakes up to insects that are very nutritious and can be very tasty growth in this market has become rapid. Thailand now has 20,000 insect farms that produce 7,500 tons of edible insects such as crickets and grasshoppers each year.

Comparatively, against other food stuffs, insects are pretty easy to produce and they are kind to the environment. It takes only two pounds of feed and one gallon of water to produce a pound of crickets which compared to the twenty five pounds of feed and two thousand nine hundred gallons of water you need beef, makes insects a great low impact alternative protein.

As well as the financial benefits there are health benefits too, crickets contain 12.9 grams of protein per 100 grams which is around half the protein contained in foodstuffs such as beef and chicken. Giant water beetles go one step further with 19.8 grams of protein per 100 grams and caterpillars have 28.2 grams of protein per 100 grams which is more than beef and chicken and as much as some fish.

Crickets have found their way to the US where cricket protein bars can be purchase as well as cricket flour that can be used for baking, and if the trend to use insects continues then Thailand could be sitting on an industry that could really take off!

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-- Samui Times 2014-09-27

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"Crickets have found their way to the US where cricket protein bars can be purchase as well as cricket flour that can be used for baking, and if the trend to use insects continues then Thailand could be sitting on an industry that could really take off!"

Or not.

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"It takes only two pounds of feed and one gallon of water to produce a pound of crickets."

I actually enjoyed eating fried silk worms and grasshoppers, until I read an article that pointed out that the insects on the market are the ones who were able to survive all the chemicals sprayed on plants and they contain a very high level of toxins. "Would you prefer a side order of DDT or Round Up with your meal?"

Or instead of blindly believing a myth you could more rationally consider that those on sale in quantity, which are the ones most people consume, are produced commercially. They are not the minute proportion of survivors of sprayed crops collected in the fields.

In 1995, as a ratifier to the Stockhom Convention, Thailand prohibited the production, import, export and possession of DDT.

Although the article was in a scientific agricultural journal, I'd sooner believe a myth than a "ratifier" that constantly claimed they had prohibited slave labor on their nation's fishing vessels. And one must also research the origin and methods of the growing of the feed used to raise the insects. I doubt they feed their insects safer food than they feed the human populace.

Edited by jaltsc
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I suppose it depends on your definition of edible.

"Well, you can live on it, but it taste like shit." Crocodile Dundee

They can be powdered and the taste disguised. You don't have to eat the whole.

I remove the alimentary canal from larger prawns, but digging out a cricket's anus seems a bit fiddly. Perhaps a nice maggot pate?

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How incredibly exciting for Thailand to have this honor.

BTW anybody know, what is the percentage of the world population that eats bugs?

This could be the answer for the failing Thai rice industry.blink.png

Just eat bugs!!!!

Edited by dcutman
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"It takes only two pounds of feed and one gallon of water to produce a pound of crickets."

I actually enjoyed eating fried silk worms and grasshoppers, until I read an article that pointed out that the insects on the market are the ones who were able to survive all the chemicals sprayed on plants and they contain a very high level of toxins. "Would you prefer a side order of DDT or Round Up with your meal?"

unless you take everything out of your own garden. Otherwiese you buy on the market contaminated veggies. I do hope that my carrots from Australia at Tesco are pesticide free....wink.png

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Who are the "unspeakable"?

It was a take on Oscar Wilde's comment on fox hunting, ''The unspeakable chasing the uneatable'' i just knew that some hysteria prone PC person would get his knickers in a twist, but as i have said before, i don't do PC i leave that to the perfectly cut,trimmed stamped and moulded.

Edited by soalbundy
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