Cockchafer soup

Cockchafer soup is a European dish made from the cockchafer insect. It was a delicacy in Germany and France until the mid-1900s.[1] Its taste resembles crab soup. As cockchafers were once an incredibly common pest insect in Europe, with population explosions every 4 years, collecting enough cockchafers to make soup was very easy in former times, but excessive pesticide usage caused their populations to collapse by the 1970s, with complete extirpation in many areas. Because the beetles are now relatively rare, the making of cockchafer soup has almost vanished entirely in communities where it was once commonplace[2].

Faked cockchafer soup, "mockchafer soup", with toasted bread and liver (Cockchafers were substituted by crabs.)

Preparation

According to a French recipe from the 1800s, a batch of cockchafer soup requires 500 grams of the insect with their legs and wings removed.[2] They are fried in butter, then cooked in a chicken or veal broth. The soup can be strained and eaten as a boullion, or crushed cockchafers can be mixed with egg yolk and roux. The soup was served with slices of veal liver or dove breast[3] and with croutons. A single serving contains approximately 30 beetles.[4][5][6][7]

gollark: Hmm, well, you can... use `rayon` as a really convenient way to improve the performance of iteratory things by using multiple threads?
gollark: Neat. I may have to add this to PotatoBIOS.
gollark: > Any beginner mistakes more advanced rust users would like to warn me about up front?If your code has problems, randomly sprinkle in `&` and maybe `&mut`.
gollark: > Seeing as abby isn't on, the beginners mistake is starting using it.That is heresy. Rust good.
gollark: I'm *technically* a contributor too! Although only on relatively meaningless small changes to the ROM!

See also

References

  1. Hyman, Vicki (May 29, 2013), "Insect bites: Cooking with cicadas, New Jersey's newest crop." NJ.com. Retrieved May 31, 2018
  2. Warner, Dick (May 8, 2006), "Bug has a long, colourful history," Irish Examiner. Retrieved May 31, 2018
  3. Manoi. "Maikäfersuppe" (in German).
  4. Helge May. "Die Maikäfer sind wieder da" (in German). Archived from the original on 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2018-05-04.
  5. Schneider, Johann Joseph (1844). "Maikäfersuppen, ein vortreffliches und kräftiges Nahrungsmittel". Magazin für die Staatsarzneikunde Nr 3 (in German). 3. pp. 403–405. ISBN 3-87038-366-6.
  6. "Maikäfer in Luxemburg : Historisches und Kurioses" (PDF) (in German). Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. Heyden, Bertha (1887). Kochbuch oder Gründliche Anweisung, einfache und feine Speisen mit möglichster Sparsamkeit zuzubereiten (in German) (16 ed.). Reutlingen: Enßlin und Laiblin. p. 40.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.