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Uncategorized Thursday, December 20th 2012 at 8:25 am

Scientists Propose Mealworms As Protein Source of the Future, Soylent Green Suddenly Not Sounding So Bad

Be it a slice or ten of bacon in the morning or a good steak for dinner, most meat shares a common bond — it is pretty awesome to eat. While this is clearly the best thing about meat, it is also one of the biggest knocks against it. Since meat is awesome, everyone wants to eat it. Taken alongside the fact that meat takes a significant amount of time, energy, and resources to get as awesome as it is, that means that while meat is  awesome, it is actually a pretty inefficient and unsustainable way to feed a lot of people. A pair of researchers at Wageningen University in the Netherlands has proposed a new way to get cheap, nutritious, lean protein into the diets of people worldwide — by turning mealworms into the mainstream meat of tomorrow.

While meat is already consumed at high levels around the industrialized world, consumption rates are rising sharply in developing countries where populations are expected to expand the most. Thus, as populations continue to rise in the coming decades, meat is going to become a more and more precious commodity. As more people look to add more meat to their diets — because of how awesome it is — Dennis G. A. B. Oonincx and Imke J. M. de Boer propose that resource intensive grub like beef and pork could be replaced by actual grubs, which actually have a great many virtues as a food stuff. They’re nutritionally packed, cheap and easy to produce, and don’t require a great outpouring of energy to offer the main pragmatic benefit of meat — a mostly straight up dose of lean protein. In fact, as a foodstuff, mealworms have just one thing going against them. This is, of course, the fact that they are, in point of fact, mealworms, and thus not food.

In the study, published online in the journal PLOS ONE, Oocinx and Boer modelled the energy consumption and and carbon emissions associated with raising one kilogram of mealworms, which make a nutritious, protein packed lunch, if you can stomach eating worms. The levels of input required to get a kilo of mealworms for food compared very favorably to higher rates for chicken, beef, pork, and milk, making it a much more efficient, sustainable protein source of the future —  a future in which we will all eat worm burgers that are seasoned with our own tears, and where the living will envy the dead.

Now, I suspect some of you have eaten mealworms before, and will not hesitate to point out that they are, in point of fact, a food or food like substance. To which I respond thusly:

While I have mostly nothing but an abiding respect for the many dietary choices of others, I just can’t get behind this one. I have eaten paint chips before. That doesn’t make them food, any more than having eaten worms before makes them food. In a best-case scenario, worms are bait — also known as food for food. Perhaps more pertinently, though, remember that finding a worm inside of food is a nearly universal indicator that the thing you are attempting to consume is no longer food. At that point, it is either rotten or mezcal, and putting either substance in your body is a risky proposition nearly certain to end in stomach upset and regret. Tread lightly and eat well, friends.

(via PLOS ONE)

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  • Anonymous

    Why can’t we test this on developing countries where people are starving? (So long as it’s certified safe for human consumption of course) I used to raise these things to feed my pets, they are VERY easy to produce.

    As long as it doesn’t look like a worm, I really don’t care. It’s better than eating Sewage shaped like meat like some scientists in Japan seem to think is a good idea.

  • bunsin flame

    I’m sorry, but I can’t respect the journalistic integrity of any article that has an animated gif of a scuttling octopus. I’m sorry, but once you get beyond the “eww yuck” factor, what’s wrong with meal worms. As CoderSeven pointed out they’re easy to produce, they’re also high in protein, something that is hard to come by in many developing nations. In short I think this sounds like a fantastic solution once we as a society become less picky about what we eat

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001224409264 Smail Buzzby

    I have eaten Skittles and am pretty sure that they are not food. Squid is bait, yet dumb people with dysfunctional taste buds eat it.
    People consume lots of gross things. My guess is that mealworms don’t taste good – if they did then people would already be cramming them into their faces.

  • Mary Sparrowdancer

    They taste like shit, and as I am one person who has taken care of over 20,000 wild birds and wild animals, the wildlife will not eat them on a regular basis, either, unless the mealworms are live. Switch to local gardening of fresh, natural vegetables and fruits.

  • http://twitter.com/jleighow John Leighow

    Honestly.. This revelation will spark the quick production of ‘food replicators’ ala Star Trek.. And thus Mealworms will probably only be food for a year or two, before people destroy them.

  • Ella

    Mealworms not so much…but grasshoppers!!! Oh my god, fry those babies up with some lime, garlic, and salt, and you’ve got chapulines. Of course, my grandma didn’t tell me what they really were the first time I ate them…

  • Liggerstuxin

    I’m sure I’m in the minority. But I do eat meat and I feel kind of bad about it. The conditions that we put our birds and mammals in (factories) are pretty inhumane. As long as it doesn’t look like bugs, and I they get the taste down, I’ll try it. What are we eating in meet anyway, it’s just the flash of an animal anyway. Any meat is gross if you think about it too much. I guarantee you if you met your food for you if you’ll might think differently.

  • http://twitter.com/javakoala javakoala

    I’ve had mealworms. They weren’t bad.

  • ethelhitchcock

    So mealworms are not food because you find them gross, which sounds like the five year-olds retort to broccoli. Many non- western cultures eat what is considered a creepy crawly and don’t bat an eye, because it is food. You are what you eat, and you are what your food eats. Bring on the seasoned mealworms, I am talking to you Frito-Lay.

  • Idlethoughts

    Try Quorn, virtually indistinguishable texture to chicken despite being a fungus. Fairly mild flavor, but it goes well with sauces.

  • Idlethoughts

    Actually having food isn’t really most of those people’s problem its the ability for countries to distribute it where it’s needed