The Nanfang / Blog

Throw In Some Garlic, and Locusts Are A Hot Meal Ticket in Guangdong

Posted: 06/25/2014 6:27 pm

locust farm guangdong jiangmen farmer

The term “locust” is one of the unfortunate things to emerge from years of strife between Hong Kong and mainland China. It is used by Hong Kongers to describe the hive mentality of mainlanders who consume Hong Kong’s resources – like infant milk powder, medicines, and other goods – without remorse. But while the term has a negative connotation for some, others believe locusts bring many benefits — especially when eaten.

We told you back in April about a Guangzhou farmer named Xie Bozhen who raises locusts for food, and it looks like it’s catching on with others, too.

READ: Guangzhou Man Farms 7 Million Locusts for Food

Like Xie, several farmers in Heshan near Jiangmen, Guangdong, have decided to turn the tables on pestilence and raise the insects on the farms where they had previously been seen as a nuisance.

Li Bo, 60, is one such farmer. Having raised pigs for 30 years, Li made the switch to locusts after discovering they are more cost effective than pigs. Every year, Li raises about a million locusts for consumption, reports Southern Metropolis Daily.

locust farm guangdong jiangmen farmer

Li is able to raise four to five crops a year in three tents. Each tent can produce 500 kg of locusts annually, in which each kilo is made up of 600 locusts. Annually, he produces about 300,000 of the edible insects.

The harvest, if it can be called that, is sold to Guangzhou businesses for RMB 100-200 per kilogram.

READ: Is the Cantonese Tradition of Eating Bugs Set to
Take Off Around the World?

If you’ve ever wondered what a locust eats when it isn’t decimating the fields of poor farmers, it turns out they enjoy sweet-flavored foods. Their main food is “elephant grass”, but they will eat rye during the winter.

As witnessed by the Southern Metropolis reporter, tens of thousands of locusts took flight and wildly descended upon the oatmeal Li scattered around when he went into feed them. It’s a metaphor that’s been waiting too long to be made.

locust farm guangdong jiangmen farmer

Li Haiwen is the farmer credited with starting the local craze of raising locusts after having gotten the idea by watching TV. Li says locusts are a real treat:

Locusts are insects that are high in protein, and are more nutritious than bee chrysalis. They are eaten by frying, have a fragrant scent, and are delicious.

The Nanfang suggested last year that the Cantonese culinary tradition of eating insects may be catching on, and it looks like Li and his fellow locust farmers have found their market. If you’re still not convinced why you shouldn’t be eating insects, here’s a recent instructional video from AsapScience:

Now that you’ve been properly overwhelmed with science, here’s how to prepare an adult locust for dinner:

  1. Remove their wings; boil them in water to remove their excrement, and then deep fry them.
  2. Add hot peppers, scallions and garlic with a bit of salt.
  3. Enjoy.

locust farm guangdong jiangmen farmerPhotos: Southern Metropolis Daily

Haohao

Guangzhou Man Farms 7 Million Locusts for Food

Posted: 04/24/2014 7:45 am

Admittedly, people in Southeast Asia enjoy a bit of exotic food now and then: cicadas, grasshoppers, ants, crickets and locusts. However, a man living in Conghua, Guangzhou is taking people’s love for one of those exotic delicacies—deep-fried locust—very seriously.

According to a report by Nandu on April 23, a local farmer named Xie Bozhen is raising more than 7 million locusts at a farm in Conghua after he heard the deep-fried insects are considered some of the tastiest culinary dishes among foodies.

Deep-fried locusts (Photo credit: People’s Daily)

According to the report, all of Xie’s insects are raised in a farm nestled deep in the woods (Let’s hope so). Covering an area of 10,000 square meters, Xie’s farm can produce up to nine batches of grown locusts, with each batch weighing between 6 tons and 8 tons. Besides making the insects into packaged snacks, Nie is planning to grind the insects into powder as fish feed, and sell them to fish farmers due to their high protein.

Nie’s entrepreneurial spirit was met with jitters from the officials at the local agriculture bureau who fear an eminent locust plague if the much loathed insects were to be let loose.

But since there is no law banning locust farming, Xie signed an agreement with the bureau which states that in case of locust outbreak, Xie would be responsible for administering pesticides to the bugs and providing compensation for any economic damage caused.

If Xie is looking for a name for his new delicacy, we’d suggest the name “Legion”; for they are many.

Home page photo credit: Nandu

Haohao

Guangzhou: vegetable prices soar, cost of tomatoes up 70% in 1 month

Posted: 05/10/2012 7:00 am

Vegetable markets in Guangzhou have seen large price increases due to a decreasing supply caused by recent heavy rainfall, according to New Express.

The cost of cabbage has risen so dramatically that the cost of 1.5-2.5kg of the vegetable is almost the same as half a kilo of pork.

Reporters found the price of cabbage in Guangzhou has increased from 4.2yuan/kg to now 6.4yuan/kg, rising 50%. Vegetables have been seeing low yields due to low temperatures and a lack of sunshine. Vegetable production has also been hit by pests.


The price of tomatoes also rocketed from 6.8yuan/kg to 11.4yuan/kg a 68% increase. However, the price of eggs sank to the lowest point since July 2010. Statistics from Guangzhou Price Bureau last week showed that the average price of the 32 major kinds of vegetables in Guangzhou has increased by 15% compared to last month. This includes an approximately 30% rise in the price of carrots and celery.

Guangzhou Price Bureau predicted that vegetable prices will return to normal levels when the amount of rainfall decreases.

Haohao
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