Thursday, July 28, 2016

How Do You Milk A Cockroach?




Could be a question we will soon be asking a lot more than you thought due to a recent study, that has found cockroach milk to be so nutrient dense it could be our best bet of a future protein source!

Now you may have heard about insects being next on our worldwide menu to provide the protein fix we humans require as a sustainable food source while other natural sources are thinning out, dying off or simply being over consumed.  ie – There has been huge ongoing debate and research over the last decade or so due to the fact that our food system seems to be literally broken, or indeed braking! You will have noticed over the last few years plant based alternatives making great breakthroughs and now scientists are thinking much more long-term and planning for the future of food.  There is ongoing debate over  consumption of animals looking at everything from the bad fats in animal/meat products, the processing of such, the treatment of the animals to produce the meat, the prices farmers are getting paid, the impact of transportation, to land, water supplies, the total environmental impact of breeding, to disease, horse meat scandals, climate change and everything in between! 

Therefore, there has been lots of research into all of the above to find the next sustainable, nutritious food source and our next  complete protein source – with the answers pointing to insects.  In Asian countries already some are seen as a delicacy, others eaten regularly already with daily meals and as snacks!   

Check this out – there is a name for it: ENTOMOPHAGY



If you want to find out more about eating insects as a sustainable food source, here are some articles to start you off:






And if you want to try it – there are recipes for you here:




 
Anyway – enough of that! Today I wanted to focus on one insect alone – the nasty (to some) but undeniably mighty, would probably survive the apocalypse, COCKROACH.  New research published just a few days ago has suggested it’s not them, but their MILK that could benefit us. 



Are cockroaches the new cows?   

We seem to have a great fascination these days with dairy free milk alternatives and I LOVE most of them.  You know I bang on about hemp milk, oat milk, almond milk etc and I have been using them (although I am not lactose intolerant, I am not vegan and I still eat lots of other dairy produce regularly) as I really enjoy the flavours, textures and the addition they make to my coffee and smoothies and ice cream making attempts!   

While I’m not yet convinced cockroach milk will be my dairy free alternative of choice, there are some very interesting facts in this recent study:

Here is the research paper

So behind their dark, scaly, shell like exterior cockroaches – specifically the Pacific Beetle Cockroach as this is the only known species able to have live babies that have developed in the mother's body, instead of the mother laying eggs to develop outside her body - contain a nutrient dense milk used to feed their babies.   

This milk contains a hefty amount of protein, in addition to its energy boosting sugars, and lipids (good fats). Researchers are actually saying this could be the most nutrient dense substance – by weight – ever discovered!  It contains 4 times more energy than typical cows milk for example, making it the top contender for a protein with the most calories. 

Now I’ve mentioned calories don’t let that put you off (of course if you haven’t been put off by the fact that this is COCKROACH MILK we are talking about!)  Remember milk should predominantly be a substance to build up, to provide nutrients, fats, calories and energy to growing offspring. Its produced to aid growth and development.   So the more energy it contains – the better it is!

The milk harvested from a cockroach is actually found in crystallised form – protein crystals come from the gut of the baby cockroach as its ingested the milk from its mother. Its these “milk crystals” that scientists have discovered are a “complete” food – and therefore perhaps something for human consumption in the future.  Leonard Chavas,  one of the scientists behind the research, explains that although the crystal formation may seem surprising, other crystals, including insulin, take shape within the body for easier bodily storage, so this crystal could have potential for human consumption.

So in answer the original question – How do you milk a cockroach?  Chavas and his team go on to explain: currently the crystals are extracted from the midgut of the cockroach embryos – not the most efficient way to feed a growing world population with a broken/braking current food system.  Not a sustainable solution yet – BUT – they are hoping to reverse engineer cockroach milk so for now are furthering their investigation to understanding the exact biological and chemical mechanisms underlying the process, how to control it in a much easier way and ultimately how to bring it into mass production!


So our conclusion so far…. there is certainly no irony lost on the fact that that the cockroach (and Cher) is said to be able to survive a nuclear disaster and its turning out that it may someday provide the ultimate liquid superfood!   

However if the idea of cockroach milk disgusts you – like me - you are probably not ready for this yet.  Due to the nuclear stuff though, don’t dismiss this as a food fad, or passing trend.  Remember, the reason scientists are experimenting with bugs as alternative sources for both meat and dairy, is because our food system is broken/braking, our world population is growing at an unsustainable rate and we have to start thinking of ways to fix this.  People, populations, are still suffering mass hunger, while others are over consuming and suffering obesity epidemics, so things need to change and there is no denying that. 

If cockroach milk is the way forward but this doesn’t sit well with you, then maybe you can do something now to ease the braking system – less meat consumption, more plant based alternatives, less food waste.  Play your part now in preserving the environment and sustainable food sources if only so you don’t have to drink cockroach milk in the future!


What you think?  Are you ready for cockroach milk?  Have you eaten insects? How do they taste?  Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Google+


Contact us for more info on protein sources, complete foods, dairy alternatives: info@nitakothari.com or to book a consultation to see if you should up your protein intake, if you are thinking of changing your diet, or want to know more about foods of the future!  

 
www.nitakothari.com


 **Please remember this is advice ONLY (as is all other information contained in this blog, the website and social media related to it) None of the info or advice is intended to override any recommendation from your GP or health professional**







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