Meat production - more specifically, industrial meat production - has a detrimental, long-reaching effect on the environment, and most experts agree that the worst effects are seen in climate change. Livestock farming contributes greatly to land and water degradation, acid rain, biodiversity loss, degeneration, and deforestation. To put a finer point on it, our food choices may very well be destroying the planet.
In order to mitigate the damage, environmentalists and culinary entrepreneurs alike continue to look for sustainable protein alternatives, and a surprising heir apparent to traditional meat consumption has emerged: insects. There are over 1,900 edible insect species and many are already consumed in countries in Central America, Asia, and Africa, but convincing people in other parts of the world to add bugs to their dinner plates presents an entirely different challenge - one that might be overcome if people realised how delicious insects can be.
It should be noted that cooking with and eating insects often has nothing to do with food scarcity, or a dearth of edible options. Neither does it mean that a society is ‘primitive’. Globally, insects are being served up as street snacks or landing on the lauded tables of the finest dining establishments. A culinary crawl around the world reveals some of the most interesting insect delicacies ever to grace a plate (or skewer).