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Grasshoppers on pizza?

The Count of Merkur Cristo

B&B's Emperor of Emojis
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Ewwww...grasshoppers on pizza? With the recent insect swarm in Vegas...this "new menu item at Las Vegas pizzeria is taking the world by swarm".

Ed Komenda - Reno Gazette Journal - 3 Aug 19

Las Vegas - In the kitchen of a Las Vegas pizzeria, there’s a new ingredient landing atop New York-style slices.

And you might call it chicken of the desert: grasshoppers.

“The Canyon Hopper” pizza at Evel Pie hit the menu this week after a biblical-level migration of pallid-winged grasshoppers swarmed Sin City’s neon lights and sidewalks – an invasion so thick it looked like a storm on weather radar.

"It's hit the world by swarm," Branden Powers, Evel Pie's managing partner and creator, told the USA TODAY Network.

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If you stop into the parlor at 508 Fremont St. in downtown Las Vegas, a slice will cost $5.50. But supplies are selling out fast.


A California transplant from Bakersfield who grew up in a pizza parlor family, Powers drew inspiration for the Canyon Hopper from Las Vegas regulars who seem unfazed by the bug storm.

“One of the biblical plagues invades Las Vegas, and we laugh in the face of it,” Powers said. “You see all these old ladies – my grandma was one of them – playing the slot machines while Rome burns around them, still on their oxygen, smoking cigarettes. That’s basically Las Vegas.”

Like other pies flying into ovens here, the Canyon Hopper is an ode to Evel Knievel, the daredevil known for his adventurous spirit and death-defying stunts.

And it’s not bad. (Editor’s note: Yes, this reporter tried the Canyon Hopper pizza. He lived to tell the tale – and write this story).

Topping a base of baked goat cheese, caramelized onions and chorizo is arugula and a few healthy sprinkles of roasted grasshoppers seasoned with lime and garlic.

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Biting into a roasted grasshopper, it turns out, is like chewing on a pork rind.

“Everybody’s worried we’re taking a shovel outside,” Powers said.

He actually ordered them on Amazon Prime. They arrived in bags from Oaxaca, a Mexican city known for grasshoppers – or “chapulines.”

The Evel Pie crew thought the novelty insect slices would entice a few curious customers looking for a weird Las Vegas adventure to walk in and try it.

So wrong, they were. :nono:

"We literally thought it was going to be three slices a day," said Corey Horan, Evel Pie's general manager. "We thought it was a good joke, a good time – maybe we'd get a couple people to try it. We didn't anticipate this."

The endeavor started with a few 4-ounce bags of bugs. But soon after the Canyon Hopper hit the menu, the kitchen ran out of grasshoppers.

“We had to scramble and go all around the city. Went to Ethiopian markets, Thai markets,” Powers said. “Eighty percent of the planet eats insects, except us. We eat a couple pounds a year, and we don’t know it.”

Eventually, the Vegas pie-slingers found a Mexican restaurant willing to relinquish some chapulines to help Evel Pie keep the Canyon Hoppers cooking.

Evel Pie has another shipment of grasshoppers arriving Friday to keep up with demand.

“I originally wanted to do a beer and wings special, but the wings are just too tiny, so we decided to go with pizza,” Powers said. “It really bugs me". :ihih:

Works Cited: Vegas's Grasshopper Pizza

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"You better cut the pizza in four pieces because I'm not hungry enough to eat eight". Yogi Berra
 
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simon1

Self Ignored by Vista
Grasshoppers are a common item in some countries.

Hey...that's an idea. Put a piece of that pizza on a hook for bass fishing!
 
Why not? I see more and more insects and arachnids being used as viable protein sources in the future. The only thing holding us back is the stigma of it all; many countries already do it. Scorpions are the tastiest of the bunch, in my opinion, though. They're a bit like shrimp. Could take or leave mealworms, the texture just isn't for me. Crickets and grasshoppers are fine, but I only like them fried.
 
Food changes, i grew up in new england, on the coast during the summer and had a steady diet of , flounder, cod and haddock.
fish like pollack we would use for chowdarrr,, other things use for bait, mussels were used for bait if we didnt have seaworms, but today they are big on the menu. Even mackerel were too boney/oily for us so we gave them away.
Times change...so does the food chain.
 

TexLaw

Fussy Evil Genius
I would be all over that. I've had chapulines a number of times and enjoy them very much.
 
Why not? I see more and more insects and arachnids being used as viable protein sources in the future. The only thing holding us back is the stigma of it all; many countries already do it. Scorpions are the tastiest of the bunch, in my opinion, though. They're a bit like shrimp. Could take or leave mealworms, the texture just isn't for me. Crickets and grasshoppers are fine, but I only like them fried.

If they've been heavily processed to the point where they're just an unrecognizable ingredient in something, I can do it. If you're handing me a bug to eat, and I can see it's a bug, that's a big NOPE.
 
These guys are smart. Look at all the free advertising they are getting!

Grasshoppers are a common item in some countries.

Hey...that's an idea. Put a piece of that pizza on a hook for bass fishing!
Read where someone got a record bass in GA with a McD chicken nugget.

Now I'm thinking about Bill Engvall's 'Dork Fish' story.:biggrin:
 

Ad Astra

The Instigator
No. I'm not eating bugs.

"They" want you to. They can go eat bugs, poo, each other; whatever they want.


AA
 
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