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03-11-2018, 02:10 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: On the border in Lloydminster
Posts: 8,369
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Crickets the new beef?
MMM crickets VS beef? Call me sceptical I just don't think roasted crickets will catch on.
Bugs as livestock? A Canadian insect farm is taking cricket powder mainstream
Getting the cricket farm started
In 2013, the United Nations released a report detailing the benefits of eating insects. At the time, Goldin says he also saw investors on shows like Shark Tank buying stakes in companies that made consumer packaged goods with cricket powder.
It was then that he and his family saw an opportunity to farm crickets for consumption.
"In terms of the mechanization on the farming side, there isn't much precedent out there. We've really had to roll up our sleeves and get our hands dirty and figure things out on our own," he says.
Entomo Farms currently has three barns, each about 20,000 square feet in size. The company raises what they call free-range crickets, which means there is lots of space for the insects to run around.
http://www.cbc.ca/radio/day6/episode...ream-1.4565666
http://entomofarms.com/future-of-food/#12reasons
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03-11-2018, 02:48 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: 00
Posts: 507
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Can we add mosquitoes to the menu? I know where to find some! And they're also free range! Raised without the use of hormones or antibiotics. Ought to be a good selling point.
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03-11-2018, 02:54 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: With my dogs
Posts: 4,545
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As the global population continues to increase, insects may become the most viable source of protein for a large number of people. They're not beef, but they are pretty good. I collect a feed or two of grasshoppers every summer. Fried gently with a bit of salt and chili powder and sprinkled with lime juice, they're quite tasty.
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alacringa
"This Brittany is my most cherished possession — the darndest bird-finder I have ever seen, a tough and wiry little dog with a choke-bored nose and the ability to read birds’ minds." -Jack O'Connor
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03-11-2018, 03:03 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: central Alberta
Posts: 12,629
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I know one fellow that collects grasshoppers all summer and they are his only source of protein, by choice. He might be onto something. Free meat.
It's not just crickets ..... giant waterbugs have two 'fillets'or backstraps of protein. And they are already on the market in other countries.
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This country was started by voyagers whose young lives were swept away by the currents of the rivers for ten cents a day... just for the vanity of the European's beaver hats. ~ Red Bullets
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It is when you walk alone in nature that you discover your strengths and weaknesses. ~ Red Bullets
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03-11-2018, 03:07 PM
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Central Alberta
Posts: 21,399
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Hey, when we're down to eating insects and making meat in a lab, you know the world is totally screwed.
Grizz
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"Indeed, no human being has yet lived under conditions which, considering the prevailing climates of the past, can be regarded as normal."
John E. Pfeiffer The Emergence of Man
written in 1969
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03-11-2018, 03:33 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Mar 2018
Posts: 123
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Grizzly Adams
Hey, when we're down to eating insects and making meat in a lab, you know the world is totally screwed.
Grizz
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I think our ancestors main source of protein probably was bugs and slugs. Well, some bugs anyways.
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03-11-2018, 03:35 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2017
Posts: 986
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Eat them up. More beef for me
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03-11-2018, 03:44 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: On the border in Lloydminster
Posts: 8,369
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Nope not gonna happen pass the beef
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03-11-2018, 04:04 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Calgary
Posts: 19,420
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Personally, I'd sooner run the bugs through some chickens and then eat the birds.
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"The trouble with people idiot-proofing things, is the resulting evolution of the idiot." Me
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03-11-2018, 04:55 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: 00
Posts: 507
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Haha yup! Turkey's are great at huntin bugs!
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03-11-2018, 05:56 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Ft. McMurray and Kingston
Posts: 1,764
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I've got cousins in Ontario that have cricket ranches ; been 'farming' them for several years.
They run several million head of all ages .
Little buggers are hard to milk though
And ya oughtta see the roundups!!! Lotsa fun.
They started off providing crickets for the pet shop and pet food industry, and a few years ago they began experimenting with making 'flour' with them. I've tried it and it's quite tasty, and indistinguishable in look from plant based flours. They make pies and breads and pancakes and muffins, etc, whatever flour can be used for. It's rather healthy too, due to the protein value.
I'd buy and use it if it were more available.
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03-11-2018, 08:11 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: YEG
Posts: 9,981
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I find they fall thru the grills on the BBQ
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03-11-2018, 08:25 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Copperhead Road, Morinville
Posts: 19,290
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I’ve spent some time in Eastern Asia and bugs are a staple there with street vendors selling them. I’ve tried several different types from deep fried locusts to what I think might have been centipedes. The deep fried stuff just tasted like the fat that they were fried in. Other than for the novelty, I wouldn’t eat any of them unless I was starving. I have to say that the salted beetles that I ate one time weren’t bad though.......similar to eating sunflower seeds but more filling. Rip the tiny head off, bite into them to crack the shell covering the wings, spit them out, and chow down. Not too bad at all.
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03-11-2018, 08:50 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 397
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Just like Snowpiercer.
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03-11-2018, 09:11 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: onoway, Ab
Posts: 6,993
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I’ll stick to home raised, AAA grain fed finished steers. I will start eating insects about the same time I start eating coyote.
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03-11-2018, 09:30 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Camrose county
Posts: 3,492
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alacringa
As the global population continues to increase, insects may become the most viable source of protein for a large number of people. They're not beef, but they are pretty good. I collect a feed or two of grasshoppers every summer. Fried gently with a bit of salt and chili powder and sprinkled with lime juice, they're quite tasty.
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Very interesting. I know a guy that would just pick up insects and just eat them like candy,,and another guy who would eat night crawling earthworms, I guess it's all mind over matter it would be stretch though before I'd give up the beef.
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If people concentrated on the really important things in life,there would be a shortage of fishing poles.Doug larson. Theres a fine line between fishing and just standing on the shore like an idiot. Steven Wright.
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03-11-2018, 09:35 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 5,326
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Smokinyotes
I’ll stick to home raised, AAA grain fed finished steers. I will start eating insects about the same time I start eating coyote.
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I would probably eat many coyotes before an insect looked edible.
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03-11-2018, 09:47 PM
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Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: SW Calgary
Posts: 1,271
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Careful what insects you eat. This kid was paralyzed after eating a slug. Now I have eaten chocolate coated grasshoppers and ants as well as both deep fried and that was at school back in the mid 60's. Nothing special , but wasn't terrible either.
https://www.sfgate.com/world/article...a-12739679.php
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03-11-2018, 10:21 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: May 2013
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,900
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At least the crickets aren't genetically modified.
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03-11-2018, 11:09 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: 00
Posts: 507
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I've got a good use for nightcrawlers, I feed them to my fish which in turn fertilize my grow beds where my tomatoes and veggies grow. So in a round about way, I guess you could say they're on my menu.
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03-11-2018, 11:14 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2014
Posts: 954
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Beats eating Soylent Green, but not by much.
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03-11-2018, 11:15 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: 00
Posts: 507
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Davey Boy
Careful what insects you eat. This kid was paralyzed after eating a slug. Now I have eaten chocolate coated grasshoppers and ants as well as both deep fried and that was at school back in the mid 60's. Nothing special , but wasn't terrible either.
https://www.sfgate.com/world/article...a-12739679.php
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Wow! Gotta wonder what the honeymooners were eating to get the worms!
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