Bugs are in your food, and it’s FDA approved

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jazzy

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eeewwwww


Bugs are in your food, and it’s FDA approved​


“The U.S. food-regulating agency permits a generous threshold of insects in foods before they’re considered contaminated: up to 60 aphids in 100 grams of frozen broccoli of 550 insect fragments per average box of pasta” says National Geographic. These bugs are natural, and they’re safe to consume!

https://dailylaboratories.com/599-2/


This country just approved 16 insects as food — which buggy bite would you eat?​

https://nypost.com/2024/07/10/lifes...sects-as-food-which-buggy-bite-would-you-eat/
 
Oh good a new forum game! I'm going with GRASSHOPPERS, there's a lot of them in my neck of the woods, I'll never be hungry!!

heres an idea--catch them critters with screenbags and sell them to the food processors! you will be a bugzillionaire in no time!
 
eeewwwww

Bugs are in your food, and it’s FDA approved​


“The U.S. food-regulating agency permits a generous threshold of insects in foods before they’re considered contaminated: up to 60 aphids in 100 grams of frozen broccoli of 550 insect fragments per average box of pasta” says National Geographic. These bugs are natural, and they’re safe to consume!
https://dailylaboratories.com/599-2/


This country just approved 16 insects as food — which buggy bite would you eat?​

https://nypost.com/2024/07/10/lifes...sects-as-food-which-buggy-bite-would-you-eat/
They always have been allowed in our food... at certain limits.
Decades ago, I studied the FDA limits on how much 'insect material' was allowed in foods. Shocking!
The only ones that I worry about are the ones that died because they were full of pesticide. :oops:
 
Oh good a new forum game! I'm going with GRASSHOPPERS, there's a lot of them in my neck of the woods, I'll never be hungry!!
Hope you’re not allergic to shellfish. Grasshoppers contain the same protein that makes people allergic to shellfish. If you see acheta in the ingredients—be careful.
 
You have heard the constant drumbeat to ban 'red dye #2' because it is an 'evil synthetic'....
Be careful what you wish for, because it's replacement is standing by :oops::
Anytime you see an ingredients list that includes carmine, cochineal extract or natural red 4, you can be sure that there's a little powdered bug therein... .Cochineal extract is extracted from the cochineal, specifically the female, a species of insect that belongs to the order entomologists refer to as the "true bugs."
 
You have heard the constant drumbeat to ban 'red dye #2' because it is an 'evil synthetic'....
Be careful what you wish for, because it's replacement is standing by :oops::
You want 'all natural'? 😇 Well, they can do that.🤪
You better watch RFKjr pretty close. You may not like the substitutes they will use! :oops:
 
They always have. I worked with the FDA inspectors at the packing house in the 70s. There is a % of filth allowable
Yep, here's just a few:
  • Cornmeal: One or more whole insects, two or more rodent hairs, and 50 or more insect fragments per ¼ cup
  • Macaroni and noodle products: 225 insect fragments or more per 225 grams
  • Ground marjoram: Up to 1,175 insect fragments per 10 grams
  • Ground cinnamon: Up to 400 insect fragments per 50 grams
  • Wheat, for example, can contain up to an average of 9 rodent poop pellets per kilogram (or about 4 pellets/pound).
 
Do rodent fecal droppings qualify?

Ben
Sure, if that's what you would choose
Hope you’re not allergic to shellfish. Grasshoppers contain the same protein that makes people allergic to shellfish. If you see acheta in the ingredients—be careful.
Not allergic, but thanks for the heads up!
 
Yep, here's just a few:
  • Cornmeal: One or more whole insects, two or more rodent hairs, and 50 or more insect fragments per ¼ cup
  • Macaroni and noodle products: 225 insect fragments or more per 225 grams
  • Ground marjoram: Up to 1,175 insect fragments per 10 grams
  • Ground cinnamon: Up to 400 insect fragments per 50 grams
  • Wheat, for example, can contain up to an average of 9 rodent poop pellets per kilogram (or about 4 pellets/pound).
Protein in every bite!
 
Wow. Bugs in our food, plastic in our tea, drugs in our dolphins. What shall we do? I know, quit listening to the news.
I did.
Screw those "THEY" People, live free.
 
You have heard the constant drumbeat to ban 'red dye #2' because it is an 'evil synthetic'....
Be careful what you wish for, because it's replacement is standing by :oops::
That’s the same bug that was used to make the dye for British officers’ redcoats.

I’ve got some in the dye supplies for yarn.
 
Oh good a new forum game! I'm going with GRASSHOPPERS, there's a lot of them in my neck of the woods, I'll never be hungry!!
We had a sealed tuna sized can of dried grasshoppers that was in our pantry as a kid for as long as I could remember. When Grandma was cleaning out the house to sell, we finally opened that can. Just dried grasshoppers. I never knew where dad bought that can of grasshoppers and a part of me wishes I still had it for a conversation piece.

I think they were likely something for feeding some animal, like snakes or turtles or some reptile.

grasshoppers with lemon and salt.jpg
 
We had a sealed tuna sized can of dried grasshoppers that was in our pantry as a kid for as long as I could remember. When Grandma was cleaning out the house to sell, we finally opened that can. Just dried grasshoppers. I never knew where dad bought that can of grasshoppers and a part of me wishes I still had it for a conversation piece.

I think they were likely something for feeding some animal, like snakes or turtles or some reptile.

View attachment 170662
I’ve seen a few bugs for sale for human consumption for over fifty years. Mostly it is stuff like chocolate covered grasshoppers, etc.
 
I've seen the small raisin size boxes of grasshoppers, plain, and chocolate covered. I'm not a big fan of eating bugs but we'll eat anything if we're hungry! I'd rather have some nice big juicy slugs! Have you seen the prices for escargot? Those are like baby snails! Bill Gates wants to put fart baffles in cattle! Who gets that job?
 
Around 1980, there was conversation that things like hot dogs contained earth worms. There was a term, probably a chemical, that was named that people were saying was really ground up earth worms. I suppose you could eat them as well, but, no thank you. I was never big on hot dogs and that may have contributed to my lack of adding them to my foods.
 
Around 1980, there was conversation that things like hot dogs contained earth worms. There was a term, probably a chemical, that was named that people were saying was really ground up earth worms. I suppose you could eat them as well, but, no thank you. I was never big on hot dogs and that may have contributed to my lack of adding them to my foods.
The bugs are probably the best sounding thing in hotdogs. Some things you just don’t want to know.
 
The bugs are probably the best sounding thing in hotdogs. Some things you just don’t want to know.
One of my aunts used to say that if we knew what was in hot dogs, we wouldn't ever eat them. I don't think that is what my deal is. I do think that after I found out that many chemicals in food contribute to migraines, that contributed to no hot dogs. That said, there are hot dogs in my freezer, but I haven't eaten one in years.
 
One of the things that I learned while working overseas was to never look too closely at what I was eating, and never ask what it was. Normally I would cut or bite my food in small enough chunks that I could just swallow without chewing.
What little bits of bugs that are found in American food doesn't bother me at all.
 
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