Hotel plan to serve up midge burgers

Blackleaf

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An Argyll hotelier has unveiled plans to serve burgers made with midges to his customers.

David Keat, who owns the Brander Lodge Hotel near Oban, said he would harvest the blood-sucking insects from the hotel's midge exterminator machines.

He said the burgers would be dipped in a coat of midges, like breadcrumbs, and a special secret ingredient added.

Hotel plan to serve up midge burgers


21 June 2018
BBC News


The burger will be dipped in midges and coated with a secret ingredient

An Argyll hotelier has unveiled plans to serve burgers made with midges to his customers.

David Keat, who owns the Brander Lodge Hotel near Oban, said he would harvest the blood-sucking insects from the hotel's midge exterminator machines.

He said the burgers would be dipped in a coat of midges, like breadcrumbs, and a special secret ingredient added.

The plans are due to be considered by Argyll and Bute Council's environmental health department.

Mr Keat, who admitted the idea started off as a joke, said he came up with it after creating a vegan "midge fodder burger" using plants from the hotel's garden, which are a haven for the tiny insects.

He said: "If you are angry and you want to get your own back on the midges, you can eat them for a change, instead of them eating you."


The burger will have to be tested to ensure it is fit for human consumption


David Keat and chef Connor Hay will harvest the midges from extermination machines at the hotel

He insisted that the idea of eating insects was becoming more mainstream.

"We just thought that, with ants and grasshoppers on menus across the world, Scotland has a ready supply of protein-filled midges. Because of our location we have an ample supply of the wee blighters.

"There is a huge plague of midges this year so there are plenty at our disposal."

'Thoroughly tested'

He said he would be sending a specially made midge burger to the local health authority to be tested to ensure it was fit for eating.

Iain MacKinnon, environmental health manager for Argyll and Bute Council, said midge burgers were certainly "an unknown quantity."

He added: "In principle we have no objection, but it would need to be thoroughly tested and checked before it was served up to humans.

"You would need to make sure that the cooking process is able to deal with any bacteria and it would need to go to a food science lab to make sure it's fit for human consumption."


Midges can be a huge menace in the Scottish Highlands between May and September


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-44560839
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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The Masai eat those all the time. Except the entire burger is made of midges.

My mother and her brothers used to hang out with the Maasai when they lived in a magnificent villa (with Kenyan servants) in Nairobi when their father was stationed there as a British Army officer in the days of empire.

More fine British quisine from the land of the deep fried Mars bar ...

I don't see why they can't deep fry midge burgers.