happy_stomach wrote:I cringed at first, but after the first few, I could have gone on gathering the suckers for the rest of the night. We had to speed walk home because I could feel them crawling out of my makeshift pouch. My boyfriend commented, "I'm really glad you wore that shirt so that you could carry them. If I had to do it, I'd be much more of a girl about it." When I stared at him bug-eyed (HA!) for using such a stupid stereotype, he responded, "What?! You're not a girl at all!"
Chicken Adobo substituting cicadas for chicken.
You get used to handling the sticky legs fast.
happy_stomach wrote:
justjoan wrote:i dont get it. why the desire to eat them? is it just to prove how adventurous one is? these little critters spend 17 years underground. they come up-they dont hurt the trees, they dont bite humans. they make a lovely noise. i'm not gonna eat them- but rather enjoy their company for the short time they are here.
You could open a fried cicada stand at Foster Avenue and Clark Street, and if you piped in house music and staffed it with a cute boy, you'd be in business.
leek wrote:Note - in the Red Eye this AM it said that if you are allergic to shellfish you MIGHT be allergic to Cicadas (to eating them, not to walking among them). They checked with an allergist who said proceed with caution if you are among the allergic.
See
http://www.aafp.org/afp/20050601/letters.html (2nd letter)
http://oaktreep.ehost.com/oaktreephysic ... /id12.html
"Question: Do you really want to eat something that's been marinating in lawn fertilizers, pesticides and other chemicals for the past 17 years?
Sage advice: You should not even think about eating cicadas if you have a seafood allergy."
germuska wrote:In this week's Time Out Chicago, in the Anteprima review, Heather Shouse writes:You could open a fried cicada stand at Foster Avenue and Clark Street, and if you piped in house music and staffed it with a cute boy, you'd be in business.
justjoan wrote:now that you've discovered that cicadas are edible, do you intend to continue to eat other versions, or will this just be a treat indulged in every 17 years?? i'm not feeling sorry for the cicadas, i just dont understand the impulse to want to eat them.
justjoan wrote:i dont get it. why the desire to eat them? is it just to prove how adventurous one is? these little critters spend 17 years underground. they come up-they dont hurt the trees, they dont bite humans. they make a lovely noise. i'm not gonna eat them- but rather enjoy their company for the short time they are here.
stevez wrote:After the cicadas emerge, there is a rare (every 17 years) "peace", where even the predators are sated and life is relatively safe and easy for the smaller creatures of the forest. As a side note, even the trees benefit.
Cathy2 wrote:The really big surge has not hit yet, though my front yard is a Cicada wonderland:
G Wiv wrote:Cathy2 wrote:The really big surge has not hit yet, though my front yard is a Cicada wonderland:
C2,
What wonderful pictures.
Enjoy,
Gary
Ramon wrote:Those are some great photos, Cathy. Here are some more of mine:
Snark wrote:Why don't those critters fly away when they see you approach or touch them? Are they not scared of movement or contact?
The sound is made with structures known as tymbals which are located on the sides of the first abdominal segment, near the top just behind where the hindwings attach. Large muscles contract, causing the tymbal surface to bend inwards which produces a vibrating click. These vibrating clicking noises are enhanced by a large air chamber that extends well into the abdomen. Repeated contractions by thousands of cicadas can create a spectacular din.