Three Insect Recipes to Help the Arthropods Go Down (2024)

  • Food for Thought

Insects pack a protein punch. Get the most of your meal with these recipes.

by Julie Leibach, on May 16, 2013

Forget protein bars. For a nutritious snack, consider popping a few grasshoppers. Or a handful of ants, perhaps?

While the thought of chowing on arthropods might make your skin crawl, consider this: A report from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization says that insects have huge potential for improving the world’s food security.

Related SegmentInsects May Be the Taste of the Next Generation, Report Says

Of course, with any enticing meal, the secret’s in the sauce. To help the six legs, antennaes, or wings go down, trythe following three recipes, courtesy ofThe Eat-a-Bug Cookbook, Revised: 40 Ways to Cook Crickets, Grasshoppers, Ants, Water Bugs, Spiders, Centipedes, and Their Kin,by David George Gordon(Ten Speed Press, 2013).

Three Insect Recipes to Help the Arthropods Go Down (1)

Three Bee Salad
Yield: 4 servings

1/2 cup (about 40) frozen adult bees
1/2 cup (about 60) frozen bee pupae
1/2 cup (about 60) frozen bee larvae
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
6 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
1 ounce bee pollen granules
Lettuce for serving
Nasturtium petals or other edible flowers for serving

1. Bring two quarts of lightly salted water to a boil. Add the adult honeybees and return to boil for 1 minute. Using a slotted spoon, remove the bees from the water. Pat dry with paper towels and allow to cool.
2. To the same water, add the honeybee pupae. Repeat the procedure for cooking the adult bees (but watch how you pat these little guys with the paper towels!), also allowing the pupae to cool.
3. Repeat the same process with the honeybee larvae.
4. In a large bowl, combine the vinegar, oil, mustard, and salt and pepper to taste. Add the cooked adult bees, followed by the pupae, then the larvae.
5. Immediately before serving, add the bee pollen granules, stirring the mixture to ensure that the granules are evenly distributed.
6. Serve on a bed of lettuce, decorated with the nasturtium petals, a bee-utiful touch for this bee-atific dish.

Three Insect Recipes to Help the Arthropods Go Down (2)

Fried Green Tomato Hornworms
Yield: 8 servings

3 tablespoons olive oil
32 tomato hornworms
4 medium green tomatoes, sliced into
sixteen 1/4-inch rounds
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
White cornmeal
16 to 20 small basil leaves

1. In a large skillet or wok, heat 1 tablespoon of oil over medium-high heat. Add the hornworms and fry lightly for about 4 minutes, taking care not to rupture the cuticles of each insect under high heat. Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside.
2. Season the tomato rounds with salt and pepper to taste, then coat with cornmeal on both sides.
3. In another large skillet or wok, heat the remaining oil and fry the tomatoes until lightly browned on both sides.
4. Top each tomato round with 2 fried tomato hornworms.
5. Garnish with basil leaves and serveimmediately.

Three Insect Recipes to Help the Arthropods Go Down (3)

White Chocolate and Wax Worm Cookies
Yield: about 3 dozen cookies

12/3 cups all-purpose flour
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup butter, softened
3/4 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 large egg
2 cups white chocolate chunks or morsels
3/4 cup (about 375) frozen wax worms, thawed

1. Preheat the oven to 375°F.
2. In a small bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. In a large mixing bowl, beat together the butter, brown and granulated sugars, and vanilla extract until creamy.
3. Stir the egg into the butter mixture, then gradually beat in the flour mixture. Stir in the white chocolate chunks and half of the wax worms, reserving the rest for garnishing the cookies.
4. Drop the batter by rounded teaspoonful onto nonstick baking sheets.
5. Gently press 2 or 3 of the remaining wax worms into the top of each cookie.
6. Bake until the edges of each cookie are lightly browned, 8 to 12 minutes.
7. Let cookies cool on the baking sheets for 
2 minutes, then transfer them to a wire rack to cool completely.

Bonus Arachnid Recipe

Three Insect Recipes to Help the Arthropods Go Down (4)

Deep-Fried Tarantula Spider
Yield: 4 servings

2 cups canola or vegetable oil
2 frozen adult Texas brown, Chilean rose, or similar-sized tarantulas, thawed
1 cup tempura batter (page 84)
1 teaspoon smoked paprika

1. In a deep saucepan or deep-fat fryer, heat the oil to 350°F.
2. With a sharp knife, sever and discard the abdomens from the two tarantulas. Singe off any of the spider’s body hairs with a crème brûlée torch or butane cigarette lighter.
3. Dip each spider into the tempura batter to thoroughly coat. Use a slotted spoon or your hands to make sure each spider is spread-eagled (so to speak) and not clumped together before dropping it into the hot oil.
4. Deep-fry the spiders, one at a time, until the batter is lightly browned, about 1 minute. Remove each spider from the oil and place it on paper towels to drain.
5. Use a sharp knife to cut each spider in two lengthwise. Sprinkle with the paprika and serve. Encourage your guests to try the legs first and, if still hungry, to nibble on the meat-filled mesothorax, avoiding the spider’s paired fangs, which are tucked away in the head region.

*This post was updated on May 17, 2013 to reflect the fact that spiders such as tarantulas are indeed not insects. They are arachnids, belonging to the same phylum as insects, Arthropoda. We added a third insect recipe.

Reprinted with permission from The Eat-A-Bug Cookbook, revised by David George Gordon (Ten Speed Press, 2013). Photo Credit: Chugrad McAndrews.

Meet the Writer

About Julie Leibach

@julieleibach

Julie Leibach is a freelance science journalistand the formermanaging editor of online content for Science Friday.

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Three Insect Recipes to Help the Arthropods Go Down (2024)

FAQs

What is the diet of the arthropods? ›

The diet of arthropods varies with the species but may consist of plants, animals (including other arthropods) or decomposing organic matter. Depending on what an organism eats, it is described as being either phytophagous, zoophagous or saprophagous.

What are the 4 types of arthropods? ›

Arthropods are divided into four major groups:
  • insects;
  • myriapods (including centipedes and millipedes);
  • arachnids (including spiders, mites and scorpions);
  • crustaceans (including slaters, prawn and crabs).

What are the modes of feeding in arthropods? ›

Arthropods exhibit every type of feeding mode. They include carnivores, herbivores, detritus feeders, filter feeders, and parasites, and there are specializations within these major categories.

How do arthropods get their food? ›

Most arthropods are scavengers, eating just about anything and everything that settles to the ocean floor. Skeleton shrimp feed detritus, algae or animals. Crabs feed on mollusks they crack with their powerful claws.

How do arthropods survive? ›

The success of arthropods derives in large part from the evolution of their unique, nonliving, organic, jointed exoskeleton (see figure), which not only functions in support but also provides protection and, with the muscle system, contributes to efficient locomotion.

Why do people eat arthropods? ›

Many cultures embrace the eating of insects. Edible insects have long been used by ethnic groups in Asia, Africa, Mexico and South America as cheap and sustainable sources of protein.

What are the 3 arthropod parasites? ›

The arthropod ectoparasites can also threaten human health indirectly by infectious disease transmission (fleas, mites, and ticks).

What are 3 things that all arthropods have in common? ›

All arthropods posses an exoskeleton, bi-lateral symmetry, jointed appendages, segmented bodies, and specialized appendages.

Do arthropods have live birth? ›

Almost all arthropods lay eggs, with many species giving birth to live young after the eggs have hatched inside the mother; but a few are genuinely viviparous, such as aphids.

What are the 7 class of Arthropoda? ›

Arthropod Classes
  • Arachnid. the Class of Arthropods that includes spiders, mites, ticks, scorpions, pseudoscorpions and harvestmen.
  • Chilopoda. ...
  • Collembola. ...
  • Crustaceans. ...
  • Diplopoda. ...
  • Diplura. ...
  • the largest Class of arthropods and the most diverse group of animals in the world.
  • Myriapoda.

How do arthropods get rid of waste? ›

Myriapods, insects, and some arachnids, such as spiders and mites, possess another type of excretory organ, Malpighian tubules, which open into the intestine. Thus in these animals both excretory and digestive wastes exit from the anus.

Do arthropods have jointed legs? ›

The word arthropod (from the Greek root words arthro- meaning joint and -pod meaning foot) refers to a unique feature of the group—jointed legs, called appendages, which vary widely in number and function.

Do arthropods have a brain? ›

The arthropod nervous system consists of a dorsal brain and a ventral, ganglionated longitudinal nerve cord (primitively paired) from which lateral nerves extend in each segment. The system is similar to that of annelid worms, from which arthropods may have evolved.

Do arthropods eat bacteria? ›

Arthropods ingest decaying plant material to eat the bacteria and fungi on the surface of the organic material. Stimulate microbial activity. As arthropods graze on bacteria and fungi, they stimulate the growth of mycorrhizae and other fungi, and the decomposition of organic matter.

Do arthropods lay eggs or give birth? ›

Most arthropods lay eggs, meaning that they are hatched outside of the female's body. This is called an oviparous birth. However, some arthropods have a viviparous birth, this is when females like scorpions give birth to living young after they have developed inside of the female's body.

What animals do arthropods eat? ›

Arthropods have a diverse diet, as they include a wide range of species with different feeding habits. Some common diets among arthropods are: Herbivores: Feed on plants, e.g., some insects like caterpillars and grasshoppers. Carnivores: Feed on other animals, e.g., spiders, scorpions, and mantises.

Are arthropods omnivores? ›

Many predatory arthropods are omnivores, (e.g. lady beetles, spiders, lacewings, ants, true bugs and phytoseiid mites), and they can feed on plant foods including foliage, pollen and nectar [45].

What do arthropods live in? ›

Arthropods are found in all parts of the world in a wide variety of environments, from the deep sea to the frozen arctic regions. Over 800,000 species of arthropods have been identified, but scientists estimate that there may be tens of millions of species in this phylum, many of them yet to be discovered!

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