For 17 years, the trillions of cicadas known as Brood X have tunneled through dark soil, feeding on sap as they slowly matured. Babies during the George W. Bush years, these long-gestating locusts are starting to hatch across the eastern United States, emerging from the earth in astounding numbers. Their time above ground is short: three to six weeks, just long enough to mate and die. As a biological phenomenon, gigantic cicada broods are hard to ignore. They’re like crickets with musical-theater degrees—dramatic, loud, committed to a splashy outfit change. And while some people will delight in their natural spectacle, others will just want to be rid of them. There is, however, another reaction: Grab a fork and knife.
Brood X offers something beyond noise and wonder. Namely, it offers a source of free-range, no-cost, eco-friendly protein—one so good that Bun Lai is already out foraging. A New Haven, Connecticut–based chef renowned for pioneering sustainable sushi, Lai is currently in Washington, DC, where the cicadas have already begun to hatch, collecting as many as he can find. When he’s done, he’ll host a cicada-based popup dinner in the woods with his bounty. Lai plans to serve the cicadas in a paella, on a pizza, and as a sushi ingredient. He’s going to make some using indigenous preparation methods, too. “Cicadas taste a bit like nuts, as many insects do, but with every bite, my nose is reminded of popcorn, too,” he says.
Edible insects have been a part of rich culinary traditions around the world for years, from Mexico’s crunchy chapulines to beondegi, Korea’s silkworm pupae street food. In the US, though, colonizers did not end up adopting indigenous insect-eating habits. New York-based chef Joseph Yoon hopes the arrival of Brood X will help change that. He’s a cheery evangelist—he runs an advocacy organization called Brooklyn Bugs—and he sees this rare cicada surplus as the right moment to persuade American eaters to give them a chance. As Brood X emerges over a broad swath of the eastern United States, from northern Georgia to New York, some areas will see millions of the insects per acre. Most inhabitants will have more than they know what to do with. Now could be the ideal time to refine the US palate. “Over 80 percent of the world’s nations eat insects,” Yoon says. “Why are we missing out?”
Adventurous chefs aren’t the only cheerleaders. Brian Fisher, an entomologist with the California Academy of Sciences, heads a project that encourages insect-eating in Madagascar, but he’s also bullish on edible critters coming to American kitchens. Like Yoon, he views the cicada as an appealing entry point for eaters wary of munching bugs. “It’s one of the beautiful, tasty ones!” he says. “It tastes like shrimp. It’s high-end.”