Eat a Cricket, Save the World

Bitty Foods Megan Miller creates cookies and other baked goods with cricket flour
Bitty Foods Megan Miller creates cookies and other baked goods with cricket flour
Bitty Foods Megan Miller creates cookies and other baked goods with cricket flour

From roasted ants to deep fried cicadas, more than one-third of the world’s population regularly relishes insects as a source of dietary protein. But could you?

Before wincing at the idea of McHissing Cockroaches and the Bucket ‘O Dung Beetles coming to U.S. menus anytime soon, think about this: Eating bugs might just save the planet.

According to a recent study by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the global population will reach 9 billion in the next 35 years (up from about 7 billion in 2012) and current food production will have to double to even begin to feed that many people. With land, water and other resources already stretched thin, entomophagy (bug eating) may help stabilize the global food supply.

Here in the Bay Area, a tiny-but-growing company called Bitty Foods is leading the charge toward edible insects with chocolate chip cookies. Or more specifically, chocolate chip cricket flour cookies.

[blockquote]“If we are going to extend the shelf life of our own species, this is super important” – Chef Tyler Florence on alternative forms of protein, like crickets.[/blockquote]

Using their proprietary blend of dried, roasted and ground crickets (blended with cassava and coconut flours for texture and taste), co-founder Megan Miller said Bitty sells about 500 bags of gluten-free chocolate chip, chocolate cardamom and orange ginger cookies in their East Bay kitchens each week. Currently available only online, the company also makes about 600 pounds of cricket flour each week, and they’re having a hard time keeping up with demand.

In fact, the company has even attracted the attention and financial backing of celebrity chef Tyler Florence, who lives in Marin. “If we are going to extend the shelf life of our own species, this is super important,” said Florence of his passion for cricket cuisine. Despite having part ownership in a steakhouse, Florence said beef is ultimately unsustainable, especially in light of recent draughts. When he talks about Bitty, he’s almost giddy, planning new recipes and uses for the flour. “We want this to be big,” he said.

Florence’s enthusiastic endoresment is also good for Bitty’s image and growth. “People love Tyler, and if he says something is delicious, they’re surprisingly willing to taste,” said Miller. “When I first started this, I thought I would have to spend a lot of time convincing people. But we’ve doubled our sales month over month. It’s been incredible that a lot of people are saying that they really get it,” Miller said, “It’s not the taste, it’s the mental barrier.”

Less daunting than, say meal worms or stink bugs, crickets have become the poster-insects for Bitty. “Crickets are something people can grasp. They’re closely related to shrimp, and they’re familiar,” said Bitty Co-founder Megan Miller. “Some people even call them Land Shrimp,” she said, alluding to the flavor of crickets. “It gets across the idea,” she added. In addition to Bitty, several other cricket-based food companies have emerged, including Six Foods, Chapul and Exo cricket bars.

But it’s not all about the novelty factor of eating insects. It’s about simple math. Beef can use up to 1,000 gallons of water and ten pounds of food to make a single pound of meat. By comparison, pigs use about 600 gallons of water and 5 pounds of feed, chickens about 150 gallons and 2.5 pounds of feed. For a pound of cricket protein (roughly 4,000 insects), it takes 1 gallon of water and two pounds of feed. Insects can be raised in small areas, reproduce exponentially, and require little care. Cricket flour is significantly higher in protein, lower in fat and rich in minerals, according to USDA research, making it especially interesting to Paleo and other protein-rich, gluten free diets.

Eating bugs, for most Westerners, is a tough sell. Bugs have gotten the wrap of being creepy, dirty, unwelcome pests rather than a food source. But for most of history, they’ve been a diet staple, from our earliest ancestors through Roman times as gastronomic delicacies. In equatorial climates, bugs tend to be larger and more prevalent, making them an obvious source of protein. And, when it comes right down to it, Americans unwittingly eat up to two pounds of insects a year in our food, based on FDA guidelines allowing small amounts of insect contaminants in most of what we eat.

So where do you get roughly 2.4 million crickets a week? Cricket farms, of course. The insects are raised on large commercial farms throughout the country with growth from egg to adult in less than 6 weeks, and Miller claims that female crickets can lay up to 15,000 eggs, making for a highly sustainable source of protein. They are harvested by being frozen, then dried, roasted and ground.

Obviously, not everyone can afford a $20 pound of cricket flour, so the key to ramping up insect production on a mass scale. Funding from Florence and other backers is expected to ramp up their production from a small, artisan operation to a baking ingredient available at major retailers.

And the taste? The flour is a bit like buckwheat, with a nutty, grassy flavor. Baked into gluten-free muffins, pastries and cookies, moms are some of her biggest buyers. “Sometimes its a challenge for moms to get their kids to eat meat, but if you can give them a serving of cookies, they’ll always eat that,” Miller said.

“We’re going to have to base our diets on plants and other protein sources lower on the food chain, and that includes insects. We just have to be more innovative about feeding people,” said Miller.

You can buy Bitty Foods cricket flour and cookies online at Bittyfoods.com. Miller hopes to have them at other retailers like Berkeley Bowl and Whole Foods within the next year.

[infobox color=”#d8d8d8″ icon=”bug”]Hungry for a bite of crickets for dinner? Chapulines (roasted crickets) are popular in the Oaxacan region of Mexico, and are often available in Mexican markets. Agave Mexican Restaurant and Tequila Bar (1063 Vine St., Healdsburg, 707-433-2411) features Chapulines on their menu, according to owner Octavio Diaz, but it’s best to call ahead to make sure they’re serving them. There’s always the backyard, as well. Bitty Foods’ Miller says that eating wild-foraged crickets is not necessarily a bad thing if you know where they’ve been, but the FDA requires farm-raising for commercial use to regulate sanitary conditions and contaminants.[/infobox]

La Taberna Opens, 1313 Main Changes

taberna
La Taberna has opened in Napa

La Taberna has opened in downtown Napa, a much-anticipated new restaurant from the ZuZu tapas crew. Inspired by the Pintxo bars of Northern Spain, its a modern take on the classic Spanish tavern. The menu will include dishes like tortilla de camaron, ceviches, empanadas, and halibut croquetas. Open daily from 2pm to 11pm and until midnight Friday and Saturday. 815 Main St., Napa, 707-224-5551.

Restaurant and Wine Bar 1313 Main in Napa has debuted a new menu, after last summer’s chef change-up. Executive Chef Adam Ross has created a creative menu that includes poutine (beef-fat (!) fries with oxtail gravy and cheese curds, $12) to crispy pork trotters with quail eggs ($15), lavender-smoked duck breast with pickled huckleberries ($24), along with lamb chops with harissa jus and lime yogurt ($21), King salmon and dayboat scallops. The bar snacks menu (with the poutine, a burger, and oysters) is half off during happy hour. In addition to wines by the glass, flight or bottle, 1313 Main also has an extensive collection of beer and ciders (though, boo for not having any local cidersUpdate, they do have some local ciders, according to insiders) , spirits and port.

1313 Main in Napa
1313 Main in Napa

Flavor! Napa Valley 2014

Chef Todd English is among the chefs appearing at Flavor! Napa Valley
Chef Todd English is among the chefs appearing at Flavor! Napa Valley
Chef Todd English is among the chefs appearing at Flavor! Napa Valley

Flavor!  Napa Valley, a celebration of food and wine featuring dozens of top chefs, winemakers and local personalities happens Wednesday, November 19 to Sunday, November 23 throughout the valley.

Events like Pickling and Preserving at Long Meadow Ranch, Cake Decorating with Duff Goldman, Cheese Making with local chef Sheana Davis and chef Demonstrations with Todd English, Michael Chiarello and Meadowood’s Christopher Kostow happen throughout the Valley during the five-day festival.

There are also wine tastings and wine dinners, seminars and hands-on classes to round out the week.

Event details and tickets (which range from around $75 to $295) are available at flavornapavalley.com

Native Kitchen & Kombucha Bar

Native Kitchen and Kombucha bar opens in Petaluma

Native Kitchen & Kombucha Bar is plant-based dining for the rest of us. “I like to think of it as nutritious by accident,” says Chef Jasmine Dravis, who recently opened the cafe and bar in downtown Petaluma.
Local honey and cheese from Native Kitchen and Kombucha Bar in Petaluma

Local honey and cheese from Native Kitchen and Kombucha Bar in Petaluma

Focused on food prepared with a “healing intent”—with gluten-free, vegan and vegetarian options as the core of her menu—Dravis doesn’t trade flavor for philosophy, or eschew meat on the menu. Instead, her offerings are a simple mix of seasonal fruits, veggies, grains and meats in a variety of guises.

Start with jalapeño cornbread ($5), a sweet-spicy, gluten-free (gf) wedge with local honey and pepper jam (gf/vegetarian), the Mediterranean pickled vegetable plate ($8) that’s piled with fermented pickles, onions, carrots and red peppers with quinoa tabouleh and hummus (gf/vegan) or seasonal stuffed squash ($9) with arugula and parsley (vegan).

Need something heartier? We loved the Sonoma Cheese Board, with fresh and aged goat cheeses and a jar of local honey ($12) and steak-wrapped veggies (using nearby Thistle Meats’ grass-fed beef). Any of the five salads can be made into wraps or have local chicken or steak added, and larger “skillets” (served in a http://www.thistlemeats.com/, natch) range from chickpea and quinoa chili (vegan, gf) to roasted veggie tacos (vegan, gf) and our favorite dish of the day, sweet corn cakes pan-fried in coconut oil with quinoa and marinated kale salad (vegan, $13).

Local beer, wine and libations are served, along with seasonal cobblers ($7, gf), but Dravis compliments her menu best with kombucha elixirs like the Ginger Mule ($7, non-alcoholic) made from muddled ginger, lime and honer or Spicy Strawberry with house made strawberry basil shrub, OJ and a Cayenne sugar rim. Dravis and her husband are ramping up their own kombucha (a fizzy fermented tea with lots of probiotics) production which will be served on tap in the coming months. Meanwhile, don’t miss Dravis’ tonic teas, steeped herbs specially mixed for whatever ails you, and European digestifs like the cultish Underberg (you get it or you don’t).

Native Kitchen & Kombucha Bar in Petaluma offers a healthy take on dining out, with gluten-free, vegan, vegetarian and omnivorous options to keep everyone happy.

With an interior as sunny and warm as a spring day, and hometown vibe that’s purely Petaluma, it’s a perfect spot for a morning juice jump, noontime bite or omnivorous family feast (there are plenty of plates to make the tots happy). Best of all, with a menu full of nutrition-packed foods, you’ll leave feeling better than when you came in.

Native Kitchen and Kombucha Bar, 110 Petaluma Blvd North, Petaluma, 599-3750, open 10a.m. to 10p.m. daily.

Rumba Cuban Cafe Coming

The Cuban cortadito is a sweetened espresso-like coffee drink. Just ask the Kardashians.
The Cuban cortadito is a sweetened espresso-like coffee drink. Just ask the Kardashians.
The Cuban cortadito is a sweetened espresso-like coffee drink. Just ask the Kardashians.

Biteclub’s already jonesing for a Cuban cortadito (a sweet espresso drink with milk) from the yet-to-open Rumba Cuban Cafe in Windsor. “Yeah, pretty much anyone who’s seen the Kardashians knows what a cortadito is,” said Elizabeth Torno, who with her husband Isaac plans to open an authentic Cuban cafe at 8750 Redwood Highway in the coming weeks.

Along with Cuban coffee drinks, they’ll be serving up a variety of sandwiches including a the Frita Cubana (a chorizo and beef hamburger), and the classic Cubano on freshly baked bread.

“A Cuban sandwich without Cuban bread just isn’t the same, said Elizabeth. Inspired by years of family recipes, the couple also plan heartier daily specials with classic beans and rice and tostones served with richly marinated beef, pork and chicken.

A close cousin to Puerto Rican and Dominican cuisine, Cuban food is a mixture of Spanish, African and indigenous ingredients based around beans, rice and marinated meats.

“All of our friends are hooked on the food we’ve been making for years,” said Elizabeth.

Just don’t ask for the Tabasco sauce with your Cubano. “Cubans don’t enjoy spicy food at all. We’re all about spices,” said Torno. “My grandmother would absolutely walk away from a jalapeno.”

Michelin Stars 2015 Announced for Bay Area Restaurants

michelin2The nail-biting is over for Bay Area chefs who’ve spent the last several weeks waiting for the call from the reviewers at Michelin. This afternoon, the 2015 Michelin Guide San Francisco, bay Area & Wine Country announced this year’s “starred” restaurants for the Bay Area.

The biggest surprise leaked even before the results were officially released: SF’s Benu and Saison both received a coveted three stars, moving up from their two-star positions last year. The restaurants join The French Laundry and The Restaurant at Meadowood in the three-star category, making for an unprecedented FOUR three-star restos in the Bay Area.

None of the restaurants from 2014 lost a star, making for a pretty static list. Two restaurants earned their first star, Kusakabe and Maruya in SF.

Long considered among the most prestigious accolades in chefdom, the European dining guides began giving their hard-won stars to restaurants around San Francisco nine years ago based on the input of “famously anonymous” reviewers.

Three Stars
The French Laundry, Yountville
The Restaurant at Meadowood, St. Helena
Benu
Saison

Two Stars
Acquerello
Atelier Crenn
Baume
Coi
Manresa
Quince

One Star
All Spice
Ame
Auberge du Soleil, Rutherford
Aziza
Bouchon, Yountville
Boulevard
Campton Place
Chez TJ
Commis
Farmhouse Inn & Restaurant, Forestville
Gary Danko
Keiko à Nob Hill
Kusakabe
La Folie
La Toque, Napa
Luce
Madera
Madrona Manor, Healdsburg
Maruya
Michael Mina
Plumed Horse
Solbar
Sons & Daughters
SPQR
Spruce
State Bird Provisions
Terra, St. Helena
Terrapin Creek, Bodega Bay.
The Village Pub
Wakuriya

The announcement comes on the heels of the Michelin “Bib Gourmand” restaurants in the Bay Area — value-priced restaurants worth checking out.

Trendy Restaurant Menu Generator

Trendy Restaurant Menu Generator? Yup. We’ve finally reached the tipping point on trendy menus that have rehashed the same 20 hipster buzzwords in a comical variety of ways. Shark. Jumped.

Take a gander at a few of our randomized trendy restaurant dishes that probably could exist, but really shouldn’t. Or maybe they should.

#TrendyMenu: Randomized trendy restaurant menu ideas for the farm-to-table, artisan, house-cured chef.

Just try to keep a straight face the next time your waitstaff asks if you’d like try the house-made locally-sourced free range GMO-free vegan charcuterie plate. We dare you.

Keep clicking “Make Another” for new menu items. This never gets old.

Michelin Bib Gourmands SF Bay 2015 Announced

Michelin Stars will be awarded next Tuesday, Oct. 21 for the San Francisco Bay Areaw
Michelin Stars will be awarded next Tuesday, Oct. 21 for the San Francisco Bay Areaw
Michelin Stars will be awarded next Tuesday, Oct. 21 for the San Francisco Bay Areaw

It’s Michelin season! As a preview to the big stars that will be announced next week, the restaurant rating guide has announced their San Francisco Bay Area Bib Gourmand Awards. It’s a huge feather in the caps of moderately-priced restaurants (ie: the ones most of us can actually afford) and a definite pathway to the stars.

This year’s Bib winners for Wine Country include

Backyard (Forestville)

Bistro Jeanty (Yountville)

Bistro 29 (Santa Rosa),

C Casa (Napa),

Chalkboard (Healdsburg)

Cook (St. Helena),

The Farmer & The Fox (St. Helena) *NEW

Glen Ellen Star (Glen Ellen)

Grace’s Table (Napa)

Hot Box Grill (Sonoma) – under new ownership

La Salette (Sonoma)

Monti’s Rotisserie (Santa Rosa)

Oenotri (Napa)

Redd Wood (Yountville)

Risibisi (Petaluma)

Sazon (Santa Rosa)

Scopa (Healdsburg)

The Girl and The Fig (Sonoma)

Willi’s Wine Bar (Santa Rosa)

Falling off this year’s list: Boon Eat & Drink (Guerneville), Cucina Paradiso (Petaluma)

Guy Fieri’s American Kitchen and Bar Top Grossing Restaurant

Guy’s American Kitchen and Bar in NYC is a license to print money for the Mayor of Flavortown
Guy's American Kitchen and Bar in NYC is a license to print money for the Mayor of Flavortown
Guy’s American Kitchen and Bar in NYC is a license to print money for the Mayor of Flavortown

Despite scathing reviews and general nay-saying, Guy Fieri’s American Kitchen and Bar in New York City appears to be one of America’s top grossing independent restaurants, according to Restaurant Business Magazine.

Who’s laughing all the way to the bank, now?

With an estimated $16 million in sales, Guy’s “off-the-hook” addition to his Flavortown empire is #26 on the list, ahead of such big boys as The Four Seasons in NYC ($13.8m), Boulevard in SF ($12.8 million), Daniel NYC ($11.8m) and even Emeril’s Orlando ($11.3m).

What’s hardly a surprise is that the lion’s share of the restaurants on the list are in tourist destinations like NYC (29/100) Las Vegas (20/100), and California (8/100) with seating for hundreds.

Atop the list: Vegas’ Tao Asian Bistro with a whopping $64million in sales and an average check size of $75. The next closest? Joe’s Stone Grab in Miami with only about half the sales ($35 million).

Guy’s American Kitchen and Bar opened in 2012, and received a legendarily mean review from The NY Times’ Pete Wells. Fans of the Diner’s Drive-Ins and Dives show on Food Network, however, have flocked with an estimated 450,000 meals sold, and an average check size of $37, according to Restaurant Business Magazine.

Our “grain of salt” alarms went off, however, at the tiny asterisks on the list, stating that sales of many restaurants were “estimates” rather than actual statistics.

Regardless, Guy’s American Kitchen and Bar certainly lives up to being “so money” as Fieri claims. Or at least a license to print money.

Simply Vietnam Express opening

Simply Vietnam Express is opening in Santa Rosa. Photo from BiteClub Facebook friends
Simply Vietnam Express is opening in Santa Rosa. Photo from BiteClub Facebook friends
Simply Vietnam Express is opening in Santa Rosa. Photo from BiteClub Facebook friends

When failed restaurants bemoan their fate to a bad location, I always think about places like Simply Vietnam in Santa Rosa. Tucked away in an industrial area off Dutton Ave. in West Santa Rosa, its an unlikely success. There’s never anywhere to park, it’s hard to find, there’s absolutely no ambiance and there’s always a wait. But make great pho, Vietnamese noodles and other Asian comfort food consistently, quickly and at a reasonable price, and you’ve got a recipe for a solid business.

Which is why it isn’t surprising that the owners of Simply Vietnam are expanding. The new restaurant, Simply Vietnam Express, will soon open at the former Ticket Sports Bar (3381 Cleveland Ave., Santa Rosa) with Bahn Mi, soups salads, fresh rolls and boba tea. I have no doubt it will have the same rabid following when it opens later this month.