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Aussies urged to eat moths
#1
Ananova: 

Australians are being urged to get rid of a plague of moths - by eating them.

The "munch a moth" campaign is being led by Jean-Paul Bruneteau, 51, a French-born chef, reports the Daily Telegraph.

He first began eating the brown bogong moths 11 years ago while researching a book on bush tucker eaten by Aborigines.

"They have a lovely popcorn flavour, like hazelnut," he said.

Mr Bruneteau, who has run "bush tucker" restaurants in Sydney and Paris, suggests pulling off the furry wings, then popping the moths in the oven for three minutes in a splash of canola oil.

Alternatively the chef, recommends putting them through a coffee blender and sprinkling them into an omelette, pancake or crepe.

Martyn Robinson, a naturalist who works at the Australian Museum in Sydney, is another dedicated moth muncher, preferring to catch them on his windowsill, hold them by the wings then pop them in his mouth.

But Mr Robinson's initial enthusiasm for eating the native moths waned after he discovered that they contain high levels of arsenic, the result of eating farm crops sprayed with pesticides.

He also warns about their fat content: one study found that 3oz of bogong moth abdomen contains three times as much fat as a Big Mac.

http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_2544280.html?menu=
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#2
Richard Wrote:Mr Bruneteau... suggests pulling off the furry wings, then popping the moths in the oven for three minutes in a splash of canola oil....

Alternatively the chef, recommends putting them through a coffee blender and sprinkling them into an omelette, pancake or crepe....

YIKES.

No. 

No desire here to become a moth muncher.

:snooty:
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#3
Sily, you might never know they were in the next omelette you order unless someone told you.  :-)

 
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#4
*note to self* :: stop eating out at restaurants for fear of moth crunchies being slipped into my omelettes.

:big grin:



a tiny bit off topic but sort of current news -- > Jessica Seinfeld, wife of Jerry, has a new cookbook out called Deceptively Delicious about pureeing certain vegetables and fruits and slipping them into foods, unnoticed, to get kids to eat dreaded nasties such as zucchini, spinach, cauliflower and moth innards.


...just kidding about the moth innards.


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#5
You know what, Sily?  I've been contemplating this and I think I could eat a few moths under certain conditions and not feel too grossed out.  lol!
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#6
Oh my.




Polly, you may enjoy some of these  tasty moth recipes.  Or Vic Cherikoff's Bogone Moth recipe here.

[Image: moth.jpg]

Try Vic Cherikoff's Bogong Moth Damper!
They are the brown moths that flutter in through open windows and doors, or swarm around outdoor lights and every year around this time Sydneysiders chase the countless insects from their homes.
There are some though that think they are quite fabulous…like Surry Hills chef Jean-Paul Bruneteau who likes to roast them!
Vic Cherikoff says Bogong Moths contain over 20% protein; fat averages 50% of dry body weight; have an energy content of nearly 2000 kilojoules; and are particularly high in zinc. This is his modern adaptation of an ancient recipe for Bogong Moth Damper!
Ingredients
A generous handful of moths
1 cup plain flour
1 cup self-raising flour
1 cup powdered milk
1/4 teaspoon raising agent
Water 

Method
Using a mortar and pestle (or near equivalent) pound up the moths with the powdered milk. Mix in the remaining dry ingredients. Add sufficient water to make a stiff dough and shape into a ball.
 Flatten the ball to a height of 2.5 centimetres, lightly flour the surface and cook in ash, camp oven, or domestic oven until cooked through. Serve hot.


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#7
Sily,

The recipe sounds like a biscuit recipe of some sort.  If ground up moths were in it and it was cooked, I could eat it.  :-)
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#8
It sounds like Australians have some tasty dishes out there. Moth omelets, wild cat stew, and cat poo coffee. icon_lol

Wild cat stew
http://www.hyperspacecafe.com/forum11/2912.html

Cat poo coffee
http://www.hyperspacecafe.com/forum11/2292.html

 
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#9
Modern scientists can determine the toxicity level and stuff like that, so we can trust the government health agency, and drink certain animal poo for coffee.
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#10
What do you expect from people who consider ants and frogs to be a delicacy?

The Viets will soon be given us tips on how to eat our stray dogs of which there are none in Springvale Vic strangly enough.

SHEESH!!!!:discust: 

The benefits of a multi-lingual society. lolol
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