Have you tried having silkworms or crickets for lunch? Imagine adding some crispy locusts to your fried rice instead of fried shrimp. While some might find it odd, we bet the food enthusiasts who like experimenting would want to try these unique dishes at least once. In that case, Singapore is just the place for you.
According to latest reports, the Singapore Food Agency (SFA) has approved 16 different species of insects as safe for human consumption. "With immediate effect, SFA will allow the import of insects and insect products belonging to species that have been assessed to be of low regulatory concern," the Food Authority of Singapore said in a circular on Monday. Also Read: "I Could Have Eaten Them": Man Spots Live Worm In Orange Ordered From Zepto; Company Responds According to a report on Channel News Asia (CNA), the insects approved by the SFA as food include house cricket, banded cricket, common cricket, two-spotted cricket, African migratory locust, American dessert locust, grasshopper, superworm, mealworm, lesser mealworm, lesser wax moth, greater wax moth, silk moth/silk worm, whitegrub, giant rhino beetle grub, and western honey bee .
CNN report weighs in that while approving for "human consumption or as animal feed" the body informed that the production should be safe and hygienic, and not in the "wild". "Documentary proof (is needed to show) that insects are farmed in premises regulated by the Competent Authority," SFA said. Also Read: X User Who Posted About .