Chapulines - Gastro Obscura

Meats & Animal Products

Chapulines

Deep-fried grasshoppers make a tangy, crispy taco filling.

In Oaxaca, Mexico, locals fill their corn tortillas with deep-fried grasshoppers called chapulines. Often seasoned with chile and lime, these crunchy bugs add a yeasty, salty tang that one reviewer compares to “salt and vinegar potato chips, but a bit wetter.” 

Despite chapulines’ familiar flavor profile, the experience can take some getting used to for first-timers—the legs, antennae, and wings can tickle diners’ throats. While many newcomers are reconsidering grasshoppers due to advocacy by environmentalists, who point to insects as a sustainable and healthy source of protein, the bugs have a long history in Oaxaca. Grasshopper-gathering traditionally happens in agricultural fields during the rainy season. This means chapulines remain a seasonal dish—at least until raising grasshoppers like livestock becomes more common. 

Frying chapulines makes a a pot of hearty protein that Oaxaca denizens use like carnitas or carne asada. They pile them in tortillas with salsa and guacamole, add them atop tlayuda (a Mexican flatbread akin to pizza), and snack on them by the handful, entirely plain. 

If you’re curious about adding insects to your dinner plate, tortilla-wrapped chapulines are a great starting point. One Zagat reviewer compares them to “the crunch of fried chicken skin and the taste of mushrooms mixed with shrimp.” Don’t be surprised if you find yourself reconsidering Taco Tuesday after your first few bites.

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rachelrummel rachelrummel