Bug appetit: chocolate-covered bugs served up at insect museum

The menu includes crickets and wax worms on toothpick skewers for dipping in a fountain of melted chocolate, along with “tarsal toffee” made with bug legs and mealworms and fudge infused with crickets and marshmallows. What looked like a Halloween trick was actually an array of treats being served up Saturday at the Audubon Butterfly Garden and Insectarium in New Orleans. The 23,000-square-foot facility is the largest free-standing museum in the United States dedicated to insects. It houses thousands of live bugs, including beetles, cockroaches, wasps, bees, ants and termites. Insect-infused cuisine is also a huge draw. Thousands annually visit the museum’s Bug Appetit kitchen, where six-legged critters and worms are cooked and served.

We get every range of reaction in here. There are people who come here knowing about Bug Appetit, and they come to eat the bugs. We also have people who have trepidation and anxiety. Some just won’t try it.

"Zack Lemann, the museum’s animal and visitor programs manager

Lemann said the FDA allows 60 or more microscopic insect fragments for each 100 grams of chocolate — so it’s not a huge leap to just go ahead and have a whole bug. The chocolate-infused bug fare was being offered as a special “treat” alongside the museum’s year-round offerings of chocolate “chirp” cookies — made with, yes, crickets — sugared wax worms and spicy Cajun crickets.