W Power 2024

If your new year's menu includes insects, what should you drink?

Tempted by grasshopper tacos or a nice mealworm risotto for the new year? You wouldn't be off-trend for this New Year's Eve

Published: Jan 1, 2022 12:17:18 PM IST
Updated: Jan 1, 2022 12:18:41 PM IST

What should you quaff with an insect dish?

Image: Omar Torres/ AFP

What drink goes best with the grasshoppers, crickets or giant water bugs you plan to consume on New Year's Eve? Don't panic, we have some suggestions for what to imbibe with these edible insects.

Tempted by grasshopper tacos or a nice mealworm risotto for the new year? You wouldn't be off-trend for this New Year's Eve. Especially since, according to a 2017 UN report (The future of food and agriculture: Alternative pathways to 2050) insects are a viable solution for helping us reduce our meat consumption while maintaining protein intake. This year, the FAO followed up with a report "Looking at edible insects from a food safety perspective." A boon for every one of us, as well as the other people who will populate the planet to the tune of 9 billion by 2050. According to fans, they are delicious. It would therefore be wrong to deprive ourselves of them.

What should we drink with them?

To accompany your choice, the Food & Wine website took it upon themselves at the time to look into the matter and asked Aly Moore, a graduate in Public Health from Yale, for her opinion. According to the specialist, "wine pairing allows for a brazen display of insects in their full form, and it allows for us to treat them as a delicacy." We agree.

So take care in choosing your accompaniment. For a weaver ant, with a tangy taste, opt for a white chenin, with floral and fruity notes. For grasshopper, with a taste closer to meat, look to a cabernet sauvignon. For mealworms, with an earthy, nutty taste, a lighter, fruitier red, such as grenache, will bring out the flavors. According to Aly Moore, cricket has a nuanced flavor that can be tricky to detect. A semi-dry white wine is preferable to a dry white wine, which would tend to make the cricket taste drier than it is. Finally, for the crustacean taste of scorpions or giant water bugs, she goes for a sauvignon blanc. Our mouth is watering!

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