• @[email protected]
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    4711 days ago

    As someone with a shrimp allergy, I have to be careful with my coffee too. Certain regions, such as Colombia, are notorious for high cockroach content in their coffee.

    • @Apeman42
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      3811 days ago

      And now I’m even more glad that I buy whole bean rather than ground coffee.

      • @[email protected]
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        8411 days ago

        I buy whole bean then toss in a roach or two so I get the full experience, fresh right in my kitchen.

        • @[email protected]
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          3311 days ago

          This is really cool, so you use only local roaches? That’s my issue with packaged coffee - the roaches are usually from Argentina or something and i try to buy American as much as possible.

    • @ickplantOP
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      1111 days ago

      Oh god, I like Colombian coffee. Excuse me while I retch.

      • @[email protected]
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        1411 days ago

        I’ll have you know roachfee is a sustainable alternative to pure coffee. /s

        More seriously it looks like this is primarily based on anecdotes and was directed at ground coffee vs whole beans.

        • @[email protected]
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          911 days ago

          At the time of his 2009 interview, Emlen also said that U.S. standards allowed for coffee beans to contain up to 10% “insect filth and insects” — a fact that has been somewhat misrepresented. According to guidance issued by the FDA, an average of 10% or more of green coffee beans were found to be insect-infested, which included beans damaged by insects or mold.

          That isn’t super encouraging that the standard is less than 10% any matter that isn’t coffee, including insect parts.

          • @[email protected]
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            911 days ago

            You’re not going to be encouraged by everything else they allow.

            Though I think (anyone feel free to jump in if I’ve got it wrong) that the coffee limits are not 10% non-coffee matter by weight but rather 10% of beans demonstrating insect damage/infestation/mold. This is not exactly reassuring, but it’s almost certainly far less insects than 10% of your coffee bag’s weight being ground up buggies. You can read about the FDA’s coffee analysis process which is interesting, if somewhat opaque.

            • @[email protected]
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              110 days ago

              I’m going to tell myself that this is an American thing that the EU protects me from. Then I will not look into it any further, so that I can continue to exist. Thank you

              • @[email protected]
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                210 days ago

                I’m pretty sure all insect fragments, rodent droppings, and the like all vanish as soon as they cross the EU border in accordance with food safety regulations. /s

                I did start reading into said EU regulations a bit, but I won’t ruin your day.

  • @[email protected]
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    2811 days ago

    Can I just put them in my mouth but not eat them if I want to scare children by opening my mouth so that they make that noise so children will think that the noise is coming out of my mouth and then fly out at them for the coup de grace?

  • @TommySalami
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    2311 days ago

    You know what, I’m here for it. Anytime I hear about the cicadas coming back it’s always over the top dread. People freak out, and there’s so much acting like seeing a cicada is going to grind life to a halt. Everyone seems to lean into the bit.

    The fact that the growing answer to the cicadas this year is a wildly different “fuck it, we’ll eat them and then they can’t get us” could not be more beautiful to me.

    • flicker
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      1311 days ago

      Really, it’s the most believably apex predator behavior I’ve seen in humans.

    • @[email protected]
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      811 days ago

      Where are you seeing dread? Most of the cicada news I’ve seen falls between “this is a cool curiosity” and “this happens regularly and is perfectly fine”. Also plenty of articles about eating them.

      • @[email protected]
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        611 days ago

        The sound of an awoken brood looking to fuck is maddening and inescapable. I absolutely dread experiencing that again.

        • @[email protected]
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          210 days ago

          I also don’t enjoy being dive bombed walking through the parking lot of the grocery store, and finding a couple stuck to my shirt when I get home

  • @Modern_medicine_isnt
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    1611 days ago

    That this occurred to someone is just more proof that groceries cost too much.

    • @Mirshe
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      10 days ago

      Nah, this has been a thing for a WHILE. My great grandma had cookbooks from the 1930s with recipes for cicadas.

      • qyron
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        610 days ago

        Can we see, if only a page, of those books? Please?

        That is the kind of unusual things from other times every person should get in touch with.

  • @[email protected]
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    1511 days ago

    I mean honestly source? Free lean protein which I can acquire while circumventing price gouging and greedflation doesn’t seem like that bad of an idea. Maybe toast them bitches in the air fryer and put em on a sammich. Make a CLT.

    • @[email protected]
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      1011 days ago

      Certainly, if I were to eat a cicada, I would choose to eat them when they’re in what we call the teneral state or when they’ve just molted, and they’re still soft," Benson said. "They don’t have the wings fully developed, and I wouldn’t eat a cicada raw; I would cook it.”

  • @essell
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    1011 days ago

    Yeah, but the experts were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should

    • @[email protected]
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      611 days ago

      It’s interesting that even on lemmy people aren’t so open-minded to give eating insects a chance.

      • @[email protected]
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        311 days ago

        I’m all for it being an available food source, but I’d rather it not be my available food source. If my choices are to eat bugs or die, fuck it, cook me up some bugs. But in any other situation I would find it difficult to handle my instinctual revulsion if I knew what I was eating.

      • @essell
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        111 days ago

        Not true, I eat prawns!

  • mechoman444
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    810 days ago

    Til: insects and shellfish are basically the same thing.

    • @Shelbyeileen
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      210 days ago

      For a long time; crab, lobster, crayfish were seen by the upper class as bugs of the sea and were very inexpensive. It’s only relatively recently did they become hella expensive. My 8th birthday party, I remember getting a pound of snow crab legs (including sides) for $6.99 at a nice seafood restaurant. I was born in the 90s, so it wasn’t that long ago!

    • @ThatWeirdGuy1001
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      110 days ago

      Not just shellfish! They’re all part of the arthropod family! So that would also include lobsters and crabs!

    • @ickplantOP
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      210 days ago

      You’re making me think of all the drug commercials that says “Don’t take this drug if you are allergic to this drug.” Bitch, how do I know if I don’t take it first?

  • @atx_aquarian
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    311 days ago

    I feel so lucky to have been here for this discussion today.