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Healthier than 'most expensive' steak: Entrepreneur seeks to turn mopane worms into tasty snacks

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Wendy Vesela
Wendy Vesela
PHOTO: Instagram/wendyvesela
  • Chemical engineer Wendy Vesela has devised a way to turn mopane worms into a flour that can be used in a variety of snacks.
  • Vesela grew up in Limpopo, where mopane worms are a staple food.
  • She wants to change people's perceptions of the "worms", which contain more protein and iron than steak.

Johannesburg – A startup entrepreneur wants to change the way mopane worms are viewed and eaten.

For many people, the idea of eating insects is still riddled with fear and inhibition.

But they can be a valuable source of nutrition, and farming them is not detrimental to the environment.

Chemical engineer Wendy Vesela has found ways of turning the spiky green and black caterpillars – which are packed with protein and iron – into a flour that can be used in savoury biscuits, sweet chocolate protein bars, cereals, or smoothies.

When steamed and sliced, mopane pieces can also be used as pizza toppings.

Vesela says she has found domestic and international customers for her organic products.

Edible insects and worms may indeed be gaining popularity in Western cultures.

But food anthropologist Anna Trapido insists that the trend should not be seen as just another dietary fad, a "kind of adventure tourism, where you get a badge" for eating them.

"Mopane need to be treated with respect because they are part of people's emotional, spiritual, culinary genres," she said.

In Vesela's home province of Limpopo, where she grew up in a town not far from the Kruger National Park, mopane is a staple food, cooked in a sauce of onions and tomatoes.

'More protein than steak'

The caterpillars are "a healthier option of protein", she said. And it's "not a worm. So people have just to get over that fear".

Vesela tried to woo reluctant customers with biscuits and protein bars at a recent food fair in Sandton.

"I won't eat a worm. I'm sorry, it's disgusting. But if you give it to me in the form of a chocolate... it's really delicious," said Gail Odendaal, 38, walking away with a bag of protein bars.

Mopane worm being plucked from tree during harvest
A woman harvests mopane worms from a mopane tree in Tutume, Botswana on 14 January 2020.
AFP PHOTO: Monirul Bhuiyan/AFP

Mopane worms are environmentally friendly too, requiring no extra water or land, as they breed and feed on mopane trees, which grow in hot and dry regions.

They are a better source of protein than many other foods on the market, said dietitian, Mpho Tshukudu.

"It's high in protein, in essential fats and minerals, especially iron. It has more iron than the most expensive piece of steak," she said.

Bucketful of freshly harvested mopane worms
A woman throws mopane worms into a bucket after harvesting them from a mopane tree in Tutume, Botswana on 14 January 2020.
AFP PHOTO: Monirul Bhuiyan/AFP

With demand rising since she started her venture seven months ago, Vesela plans to expand the business and have multiple harvests a year.

She now hires rural women to gather mopanes when they are in season in December and April. The mopanes are gutted, boiled and dried, to then be used whole or milled.



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