This Snack at NOLA Venue May Make You Squeamish

New Orleans' Audubon Insectarium is serving up cicadas at its 'Bug Appetit' cafe
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Apr 22, 2024 9:40 AM CDT
This Snack at NOLA Venue May Make You Squeamish
Zack Lemann, curator of animal collections for the Audubon Insectarium, prepares cicadas for eating in New Orleans on Wednesday. The insectarium plans to demonstrate ways to cook cicadas at the little in-house snack bar where it already serves other insect dishes.   (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

As the nation prepares for trillions of red-eyed bugs known as periodical cicadas to emerge, it's worth noting that they're not just annoying, noisy pests—if prepared properly, they can also be tasty to eat. Blocks away from such French Quarter fine-dining stalwarts as Antoine's and Brennan's, the Audubon Insectarium in New Orleans has long served up an array of alternative, insect-based treats at its "Bug Appetit" cafe overlooking the Mississippi River, per the AP. "Cinnamon Bug Crunch," chile-fried wax worms, and crispy, Cajun-spiced crickets are among the menu items.

Periodical cicadas stay buried for years, until they surface and take over a landscape. Depending on the variety, the emergence happens every 13 or 17 years. This year two groups are expected to emerge soon, averaging around 1 million per acre over hundreds of millions of acres across parts of 16 states in the Midwest and South. Recently, Zack Lemann, the insect venue's curator of animal collections, has been working up cicada dishes that may become part of the menu. He donned a chef's smock this week to show a couple of them off, including a green salad with apple, almonds, blueberry vinaigrette—and roasted cicadas. Fried cicada nymphs were dressed on top with a warm mixture of Creole mustard and soy sauce.

"I do dragonflies in a similar manner," Lemann said as he used tweezers to plop nymphs into a container of flour before cooking them in hot oil. Depending on the type and the way they're prepared, cooked cicadas taste similar to toasted seeds or nuts. The Insectarium isn't the first to promote the idea of eating them: Over the years, they've appeared on a smattering of menus and in cookbooks, including ones with titles like Cicada-Licious from the University of Maryland in 2004. "Every culture has things that they love to eat and, maybe, things that are taboo or things that people just sort of wrinkle their nose and frown their brow at," Lemann says. "There's no reason to do that with insects when you look at the nutritional value, their quality on the plate, how they taste, [and] the environmental benefits of harvesting insects instead of dealing with livestock." More here.

(More cicadas stories.)

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