Tag Archives: eat insects

Cricket Caramel Cheesecake

Mini Caramel Cheesecake with Crickets

Mini Cheesecake with Caramel Crickets

 

Just the cheesecake you are always dreaming of- creamy, rich and delicious. Thankfully, these are one-biters so you can have more than one piece! The gluten-free cricket crust and candied crickets on top make this dessert a one of a kind conversation piece and a great dish for anybody curious about the sweeter taste of crickets.

 

Made with Next Millennium Farms Protein2050 Gluten Free Cricket Flour and Organic Roasted Crickets

Makes 48 one-bite cheesecakes

 

Ingredients

Crust

2/3 cup pecans

¾ cup flaked, unsweetened organic coconut

¼ cup cashew butter

2 TBSP organic local honey

2 TBSP coconut flour

4 TBSP ground almonds or almond meal

¼ cup butter, room temperature

Pinch of sea salt

¼ cup NMF Protein2050 organic cricket flour (gluten free if necessary)

 

Cheesecake

2 eggs

½ cup organic sugar

500g cream cheese, room temperature

½ cup whipping cream

2 tsp custard powder

 

Topping

¼ cup NMF roasted organic crickets

2 TBSP granulated honey

Pinch of sea salt

¼ cup Dulche de Leche caramel, room temperature

 

Directions

 

  1. Preheat oven to 350F
  2. Line one or two mini muffin pans with mini muffin cups, foil candy cups work especially well.
  3. For the crust, place pecans into a food processor and mix until the oils begin to give the nuts a pecan butter texture.
  4. Add the coconut, cashew butter, honey, coconut flour, almond meal, butter, salt and NMF cricket flour. Pulse until well combined.
  5. Remove from processor and place in a bowl in the fridge for 10 minutes to stiffen while you make your cheesecake mixture.
  6. In a medium bowl beat together the eggs and sugar until light and fluffy.
  7. Alternate adding the cream cheese and cream in small amounts and continue to beat. *NOTE: add the custard powder to last bit of cream to be added, mix, then add it to the cream cheese mixture. Finish beating and set aside.
  8. Remove crust mix from the refrigerator and place 1 tsp in the bottom of each muffin cup. Press into bottom to flatten.
  9. Place cheesecake mixture into a piping bag with a medium to large hole and pipe cheesecake into each cup in a circular motion starting from the outside and ending in the middle.
  10. Place cheesecakes into oven and bake for 15 minutes. To prevent cracking, leave the cheesecakes in the oven for an additional 15 minutes while the oven cools then remove and cool. The other method to prevent cracking involves placing your muffin tin on a cookie sheet and putting some water in the cookie sheet. The steam from the water prevents cheesecake cracking as well.

 

While your cheesecakes cook you can start on the candied crickets for the top.

 

  1. Take roasted crickets and place into a colander shake. This will help to quickly remove the legs. Pour onto a plate and separate whole crickets and then discard the remaining legs.
  2. Heat sauté pan to medium-low and add granulated honey, sea salt and crickets. Continue to stirring until honey is melting and crickets are well coated. Mix for another 10 seconds being careful not to burn honey or crickets and remove from pan and place on a sheet of parchment paper to cool. Before they cool completely, you can break the candied crickets apart into bits that are the size of 2-3 crickets for the tops of your cheesecakes.
  3. Place caramel into a piping bag with a small hole and pipe a drop of caramel onto the center of each cooled cheesecake. Then top with 2 or 3 candied crickets. Voila! You are ready to serve.

 

Note: These cheesecakes freeze well and can be topped with caramel and crickets after you pull them from the freezer the day of serving.

 

Macaroons Made with Roasted Whole Crickets

 

roasted whole cricket macaroons

 

These sweet treats are REALLY easy to make and no bake. For those looking for that insect “wow” factor these macaroons feature whole roasted crickets.

 

Chocolate Roasted Cricket Macaroons

Made with NMF Protein2050 Roasted Organic Crickets

Includes 1.5g of cricket protein per macaroon

Makes 20 macaroons

*These treats can be completely Gluten Free if using NMF Gluten-Free Organic Roasted Crickets and gluten-free oats

 

Ingredients

1 cup organic sugar or palm sugar

¼ cup milk

¼ cup butter

1 Tbsp cocoa

Pinch of salt

1 tsp vanilla extract

1/2 cup unsweetened coconut flakes

1 1/2 cup of oats

½ cup NMF Protein2050 Organic Roasted Crickets

 

Directions

  1. Combine sugar, milk, butter cocoa and salt in medium saucepan. Heat, while stirring, just until it boils and melts together.
  2. Remove from heat and add vanilla, coconut, oats and roasted crickets.
  3. Let cool for 2-3 minutes and use a small spoon to drop onto a cookie sheet covered with parchment or wax paper.
  4. Place in refrigerator to cool and set then eat away!

 

These also freeze very well.

 

 

Gluten Free Soft Ginger Cricket Cookies

 

Gluten-Free Ginger Cookies with Cricket Flour

 

These are the ginger cookies that dreams are made of! Absolutely irresistible to anybody fond of ginger and melt in your mouth cookies.

Gluten-Free Soft Ginger Cricket Cookies

Made with NMF Protein 2050 Gluten-Free Cricket Flour

Includes 1g of cricket protein per cookie

Makes 24 cookies

*ingredients are gluten free however crickets contain minimal amount of gluten unless you specifically use gluten-free cricket flour from Next Millennium Farms.

Ingredients

½ cup NMF gluten-free cricket flour

1 ¾ cups all-purpose gluten free flour mix

2 tsp ground ginger

¾ tsp ground cinnamon

½ tsp ground cloves

1 tsp baking soda

¼ tsp salt

1/2 cup coconut oil, melted

¼ cup organic butter softened

¾ cup organic sugar

1 egg

3 tbsp molasses

1 tbsp orange juice

3 tbsp organic sugar

 

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350F
  2. Combine first group of dry ingredients, flours, spices, baking soda and salt.
  3. In a second larger bowl, cream together butter, coconut oil and organic sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg, molasses and orange juice.
  4. Gradually stir the dry ingredients into the butter and sugar mixture. When mixed place in refrigerator for 20 minutes to set the dough.
  5. Place 3 tbsp organic sugar in a small bowl or on a small plate. Roll dough into 1 inch balls and then roll in the sugar. Place the sugared cookie balls on a parchment lined or ungreased cookie sheet about 2 inches apart. Flatten very slightly.
  6. Bake for 8-10 minutes, until bottom and edges are a light golden brown. Allow cookies to cool for 5 minutes before removing from the cookie tray.
  7. Store in an airtight container or freeze them for future friends and family treats!
  8. Warning, place cookies out of sight out of mind as they have a tendency to call to all nearest sweet tooths!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cheddar Cricket Biscuits

 

Delicious biscuits made with Cricket Flour

These biscuits made with #CricketFlour are the perfect side for any soup or a great start to your day with eggs and salsa. Go wild with different cheeses or a mix of what’s in your refrigerator. Some herbs perhaps?

 

Cheddar Cricket Biscuits

Made with NMF Protein2050 cricket flour

Contains 1.5g of insect protein per serving

Makes 10-12 biscuits

 

Ingredients

1 ¾ all purpose flour

¼ cup NMF Protein2050 cricket flour

1 TBSP baking powder

1 TBSP organic granulated sugar

½ tsp sea salt

¼ cup cold butter

1 ½ cups shredded cheddar cheese

¾ cup milk

 

Directions

  1. Preheat your oven to 450F
  2. In a large bowl or food processor mix flours, baking powder, sugar and salt together.
  3. Cut in the butter with a pastry blender or by running your food processor until the consistency is similar to almond or corn meal.
  4. Transfer to a bowl and add the cheddar cheese. Use your hands to toss and combine.
  5. Add all of the milk and stir until a soft dough forms. Remove from the bowl and knead 10 times on a floured surface.
  6. Use a rolling pin and roll the dough out to approx. ½ inch thick. Cut into 2” rounds using a small mug or glass (flour the rim to prevent sticking). Place your biscuits on an ungreased cookie sheet covered in parchment paper.
  7. Bake for 10-12 minutes until your biscuits are golden brown on the bottom and nice and puffy.
  8. Remove from the oven and call the family, warm biscuits are truly irresistible!

 

 

 

 

 

Halloween Party Treats: Serve Insects! BOO!

Halloween Bug Treats

Eat Insects for Halloween

BOO!

Are you having a Halloween party?

Do you want to be the best house on the block, with the scariest, and most amazing handouts for the trick-or-treaters?

This year blow them all away with packets of edible insects.

Right now, at Next Millennium Farms, we’re offering 10% off any order with Promo Code: Halloween so that you can have

the best Halloween party EVER, and so that you can be the house that everyone in the neighborhood is talking about!

Visit or store and order before October 31st, and you’ll get 10% off your order!

 

Eat Insects at the Norwood Fall Fair

Eat Insects at the Norwood Fall Fair

When I say the words, “Fall Fair”, what’s the first thing that comes to your mind?

Delicious homemade food? Beautiful handmade crafts? Rides? Livestock shows?

How about, “Edible Insects”?

Ok, well maybe that’s not typical fare for a fair, but in a few short weeks at the Norwood Fall Fair, on October 11th and 12th, that will be exactly what you can find amidst the cows, goats, horses, hand-cut french fries, and handmade doilies.

If you’re looking for something amazing and fun to do with the family on the Thanksgiving weekend, come on out to the Norwood Fall Fair, and be sure to stop by and say hello to Derek Sedgwick of Next Millennium Farms. I’m sure he’ll be more than happy to discuss the amazing benefits of #entomophagy (eating insects), and will give you a sample of our @Protein2050 #EdibleInsects and will talk to you about our #CricketFlour that adds a delicious nutty flavour to your shakes, pies, cookies and sauces, as well as a protein punch!

Derek was just out at the Purple Onion Festival in Peterborough last week, and was asked to do an interview with Cogeco and for Trent University regarding Next Millennium Farms and on the benefits of #EatingInsects not only relating to personal health, but for the globe as well. Derek spoke with many festival goers, and was pleased to see that many were interested and keen to try the samples in the Next Millennium Farms’ booth. Tons of excited and happy customers walked away with their bags of cricket flour to add to their cooking and baked goods.

Looking forward to seeing you there!

 

 

 

 

 

Crickets Make Your Trail Mix a Hopping Experience

Pack some protein in your trail mix by adding in some insects

What do you put in your trail mix? Nuts? Dried Fruit? Crickets?

Yup. That’s right, I said ‘crickets’.

Nick Hiebert, Founder of Ecotone Foods out of Manitoba, has created a delicious twist on an old trail tradition. He has popped roasted crickets, mealworms and super worms into a trailmix along with dried fruit like cranberries and blueberries, and an assortment of nuts and seeds.

Those who are curious and adventurous tasted the crunchy mix and quickly discovered that the bug laden power food is as delicious as it is nutritious. Cheryl Holmes, the reporter for CTV News in Winnipeg, happily crunched a big spoonful of the super snack.

So, what does Ecotone Foods have to do with Next Millennium Farms? Good question.

Next Millennium Farms supplies Ecotone Foods with their scrumptious insects for their trail mix. Click on the video in the article and check out 1:26-1:50 to hear Ryan Goldin, co-founder of Next Millennium Farms, talk about part of the process that is used to provide us with our crunchy critters.

I love trail mix. It is actually one of my daily standards, especially now that I’m making a concerted effort to eliminate unhealthy snacks from my diet (those that are the culprits know who they are!).

I blend in some raw sliced almonds, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, unsweetened coconut, and cranberries. So, after this article came out, I asked some other Next Millennium Farms team members how long they think it will be until food made with insects is the norm- not ‘specialty’ or ‘niche’ or ‘novelty’.

I say 1-2 years.

Hopeful? Maybe… Anyone care to make a wager?

#InsectProtein #CricketFlour #Entomophagy

Eat Insects at the Incredible Edible Festival

Eating insects at the Incredible Edibles Festival

Do you live in Ontario, and are looking for something fun to do tomorrow? Maybe you want to take a little drive, eat some great food, listen to amazing music, and listen to some fantastic speakers?

Check out Campbellford, on Saskatoon Avenue, there will be a large food festival, called the Incredible Edibles Festival. Derek Sedgwick of Next Millennium Farms will be there with great tasting crickets, mealworms and cricket flour for sampling and purchasing, and at 1:30 pm, he will be speaking about how eating insects is a great way to get protein, iron, essential amino acids and calcium into your diet in a delicious and easy way.

Hope to see you out there!

Eating Insects with ASAP Science

 

 

 

Eating Insects from Bug Bistro

Last week I was taking a little break at work, chatting to one of my friends at her desk, when suddenly, another one of my friends came running out of his cubicle when he heard my voice, phone in hand, saying something like, “They’re eating crickets, they’re eating crickets!” (My co-workers at my 9-5 job are all VERY intrigued by my new-found interest in eating insects) I looked at him and asked, “Who’s eating crickets?” He responded with, “The ASAP Science guys! They’re eating crickets, and posted a pic on Instagram!”

We had just heard of ASAP Science through one of our instructors during a course we were all taking together at OCAD (Ontario College of Art and Design), and many of us started following them through different social media channels.

So, of course I take the phone from his outstretched hand and look at the picture, and sure enough, not only are they eating insects, they are eating insects from THE BUG BISTRO! I totally freaked out, shrieked, and said, “OH MY GOD, they’re eating our bugs! They’re eating crickets from Next Millennium Farms!”

Well, that was just the beginning.

A few days later, there were two videos posted by ASAP Science, AKA Mitchell Moffit and Gregory Brown.

There are two videos: “Should We All Be Eating Insects” discusses the nutritious value and environmental component related to eating insects, and “How to Eat Bugs” offers the new insect eater some great ideas for including insects in their daily diet.

ASAP Science cred Youtube

 

ASAP Science cred to Youtube showing you how to eat insects

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“The Next Bug Thing”, on The Lang and O’Leary Exchange

Darren Goldin talks to Dianne Buckner of The CBC’s Lang and O’Leary Exchange

Have you ever been in a studio’s Green Room? If you haven’t, the Green Room is where you wait before you go on the air, and if you are a guest on a show, there will typically be some kind of refreshments for you.

Well, today on The Lang and O’Leary Exchange on the CBC, Next Millennium Farms’ own Co-Founder, Darren Goldin, brought the refreshments to them instead of the other way around. What snacks were those, you might ask? Well, chocolate covered mealworms, of course!

The 5-minute interview with Dianne Buckner was wonderfully executed. The responses flowed from one into the other seamlessly, allowing Darren to showcase the exciting growth that has been taking place at Next Millennium Farms at a rapid pace; they have already outgrown their newly acquired 9000 square foot facility!

The mission and vision statements of Next Millennium Farms were organically brought to the forefront through the interview; producing great tasting and highly nutritional insects for human consumption, which are beneficial for people, but also for the globe, as the carbon footprint produced by raising and producing insect protein is much lower compared with other protein sources like beef or chicken.

Before you know it, eating insects WILL BE mainstream in our society. It will be common to see someone snacking on crispy crickets on the subway, or pulling out a pack of sea salt and pepper mealworms from their lunch bags. Just yesterday, City News aired a spot shot in Norwood, Ontario at Next Millennium Farms’ headquarters, where news reporter, Audra Brown was given some wax worms from one of Goldin’s daughters, and she remarked, quite surprised I’d like to add, “These are GOOD!”

Check out our new Bug Bistro to get your own!