Port d'Essaouira : Baisse de 45% des débarquements de pêche à fin février    U23: Double confrontation amicale du Maroc face à la Côte d'Ivoire les 26 et 30 mars    Sahara : l'administration Trump annonce un «examen stratégique» de la MINURSO    Report de la visite de la rapporteuse de l'ONU sur la torture à Rabat et Laayoune    CAN 1976 : comment L'Equipe, BeIN Sports, Goal et Koora ont relayé une fake news sur le Maroc    Aïd Al-Fitr : Casablanca déploie un dispositif renforcé pour l'accueil du public dans ses parcs et jardins    L'ambassadeur du Maroc empêché accéder à la cour de la Mosquée Hassan II au Sénégal : une source évoque une procédure protocolaire habituelle    Marrakech-Safi : 12.341 entreprises créées en 2025    Ligue des champions CAF : L'AS FAR élimine Pyramids et se qualifie en demi-finale    Après une absence due au service militaire... le groupe coréen BTS signe un retour en force avec des chiffres records    Après-pétrole maritime : ce que le Maroc peut faire, dès maintenant    Détroit d'Ormuz : l'armée américaine affirme avoir "réduit" la menace iranienne    Désintox : De l'agence de presse nigériane aux sites à buzz : autopsie d'une fake news devenue «fait historique»    Tanger-Med : Saisie de 4 tonnes de cannabis dissimulées dans du faux poisson    Sénégal: Obligada por la CAF, la FSF intenta apagar la polémica en torno a la camiseta Puma con una estrella    Accord agricole Maroc-UE : la Commission européenne soutient le système d'étiquetage    Officiel : Rayane Bounida dit NON à la Belgique et choisit le Maroc !    Voici les hauteurs de pluies enregistrées ces dernières 24H    2ème tour des municipales en France: La participation focalise l'attention    Paradoxe des Lions : Regragui part sans titre, Ouahbi arrive déjà champion    Commerce extérieur : le Maroc accélère sa transformation numérique    Kyntus Morocco Branch : dans l'Oriental, 220 emplois créés, 400 visés d'ici 2028    Sultana Khaya sort du silence et dément toute «scission» avec le Polisario    Sultana Khaya rompe el silencio y desmiente cualquier «ruptura» con el Polisario    Sénégal : Contrainte par la CAF, la FSF tente d'éteindre la polémique autour du maillot Puma à une étoile    Gaz de Tendrara: Le commercialisation annoncée pour le troisième trimestre 2026    De la 2G à la 6G : une innovation chinoise réduit la consommation d'énergie et multiplie la vitesse des communications    Ligue 1: Bilal Nadir de retour à l'entrainement avant le choc OM-Lille    Aïd Al Fitr : Grâce Royale au profit de 1201 personnes    Le temps qu'il fera ce samedi 21 mars 2026    Washington allège ses sanctions contre le pétrole iranien pour faire baisser les cours    Pétrole: Les stocks stratégiques commencent à être mis sur le marché    L'ambassadeur de France Christophe Lecourtier annonce son départ du Maroc    Tanger Med: Mise en échec d'une tentative de trafic de plus de 3,9 tonnes de chira    Alerte météo: Averses orageuses et fortes rafales de vent ce vendredi    Etablissements pionniers : L'ONDH engage 15,8 MDH pour mesurer la conformité à la labellisation    Rabat. SM le Roi, Amir Al-Mouminine, accomplit la prière de l'Aïd Al-Fitr à la mosquée "Ahl Fès" et reçoit les voeux en cette heureuse occasion    Mort de Chuck Norris, légende du cinéma d'action    Théâtre : Ouverture des candidatures pour le soutien aux projets culturels et artistiques    SM le Roi, Amir Al-Mouminine, accomplit la prière de l'Aïd Al Fitr à la mosquée "Ahl Fès" à Rabat    Aïd Al Fitr célébré vendredi au Maroc    Aïd Al Fitr : Grâce Royale au profit de 1201 personnes    Le Roi, Amir Al-Mouminine, accomplira vendredi la prière de l'Aïd Al Fitr à la mosquée "Ahl Fès" à Rabat    «Porte Bagage» triomphe à Bergamo et consacre une nouvelle voix du cinéma marocain    Carte de l'artiste : les demandes déposées jusqu'au 31 décembre 2025 examinées    UNESCO : Medellín, en Colombie, désignée Capitale mondiale du livre 2027    FESMA 2026 : Lomé au cœur des saveurs africaines    Film : Rire, couple et quiproquos au cœur d'une comédie marocaine    







Merci d'avoir signalé!
Cette image sera automatiquement bloquée après qu'elle soit signalée par plusieurs personnes.



How Moroccans fried locusts in Argan oil, boiled and grilled them into delicacies
Publié dans Yabiladi le 04 - 04 - 2025

Throughout history, Moroccans, including Jewish communities, developed unique methods to cook locusts, turning a pest into a delicacy and even a source of economic relief. Let's explore the fascinating ways Moroccans prepared locusts during the 18th and 19th centuries.
Moroccan cuisine is a spectacle of delicious, colorful, and joyful food and dishes. From couscous to vegetable-loaded tajines and pigeon-filled pastillas, it embodies centuries of culinary know-how but also reflects times of hardship.
One chapter of Moroccan food tells a story of suffering, resilience, and survival, with many dishes invented during periods of natural calamities, epidemics, storms, floods, devastating locust swarms, and famine.
Morocco has experienced waves of locust invasions over the centuries, with swarms devouring crops and leaving many famished. But our ancestors found a solution—killing the invading insects and feeding hungry stomachs. It is no secret that Moroccans not only developed ways to consume the flying insects for survival but also turned them into a delicacy.
In this article, Yabiladi explores how Moroccans cooked locusts and integrated them into their diet during times of crisis.
Boiled, fried, salted and peppered
Moroccans preferred their locusts boiled first, according to historical accounts of foreign diplomats and writers in Morocco during the 18th and 19th centuries. «The poor used to devour boiled locusts with some salt and pepper», wrote Moroccan historian Mohamed al-Bazzaz in his detailed account of hunger and epidemic crises in 18th- and 19th-century Morocco, quoting British Consul General Drummond Hay.
Others reported that after boiling the little beasts, Moroccans liked to fry them for a crunchier bite. According to James Grey Jackson, a British merchant who lived in Mogador in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, dishes of locusts were «served up at principal repasts» during the summer of 1799 and the spring of 1800, which were marked by a plague that had «almost depopulated Barbary (an old name for Morocco)».
Moroccans cooked them as follows: «They were usually boiled in water for half an hour, then sprinkled with salt and pepper and fried, with a little vinegar added». They tasted like prawns, Jackson reported. The British merchant recounted that people would eat hundreds of them in one serving «without any ill effects». But for the poor who had to survive entirely on boiled and fried locusts, they became «emaciated and indolent».
Vengeful cooking
Some skipped the boiling phase and fried the flying insects in a rather vengeful manner. American captain James Riley, whose ship wrecked off Morocco in 1815 and who was later enslaved, recalled in his memoirs how locusts were considered «very good food by Moors, Arabs, and Jews».
Riley described how Moroccans cooked the locusts: «They catch large numbers of them in their season and throw them, while alive and jumping, into a pan of boiling argan oil». The insects «hiss and fry until their wings are burned off and their bodies are sufficiently cooked». Then they are finally poured out and served, wrote Riley, who compared their consistency and flavor to the «yolk of hard-boiled eggs».
According to historical records, some Moroccans mixed locusts with milk. In his book Insects as Human Food: A Chapter of the Ecology of Man, entomologist Friedrich Simon Bodenheimer reported that in North Africa, locusts, «fresh or preserved, with legs, wings, and heads removed», were grilled, boiled, or even prepared with couscous.
Some even dried them under the sun on rooftops, ground them into powder, and «mixed [them] with milk» or «kneaded [them] with flour and boiled with fat or butter and salt».
Quoting 18th-century French Dominican priest Jean-Baptiste Labat, Bodenheimer wrote that the «Moors take revenge on locusts by eating them». «They collect them carefully, put them into leather bags, pound them, and boil them in milk», he explained.
In some parts of Morocco, locusts were eaten smoked, as 18th-century French Consul Louis de Chenier described. He recalled that «smoked locusts are brought in prodigious quantities into the markets in Morocco», though they had «an oily and rancid taste which habit only can render agreeable».
Other ways of consuming the little insects included roasting, grilling, or cooking them in earth ovens, which still exist in Souss villages today.
The Moroccan-Jewish way
Moroccan Jews were no exception when it came to eating locusts. Bodenheimer mentioned that Moroccan Jews only ate female locusts, believing that «the males are unclean» and that «underneath the body of the females, there are some Hebrew characters which make them lawful».
They also had their own slow-paced cooking method. They would «salt them and keep them for use with the dish called Dafina, which forms the Saturday's dinner for the Jewish population».
The dish is prepared by layering meat, fish, eggs, tomatoes, and various other ingredients in a jar, which is then placed in the oven on Friday night. It remains there until the Sabbath, ensuring a hot meal without violating the religious prohibition against lighting a fire on that day.
Sahara's longest cooking process
In the Sahara, Moroccans had the most elaborate method of cooking locusts. Archibald Robbins, an American sailor shipwrecked off the coast of Morocco in the early 19th century and later captured by Saharan nomads, described the process in detail.
«They prepare them for food by digging a deep hole in the ground, building a fire at the bottom, and filling it with wood. When the soil is heated as much as possible and the coals and embers have been removed, they prepare to fill the cavity with live locusts, which have been kept in a bag holding about five bushels (equivalent to 36.4 litres)», Robbins recounted. The locusts were dumped into the heated pit, quickly covered with sand to prevent escape, and roasted under a second fire.
After cooling, they were dried in the sun for several days, then ground into powder or eaten whole after removing the head, wings, and legs. Robbins, who tasted them, considered them «nourishing food».
Moroccans succeeded in turning their enemy into food, overcoming food crises. In fact, the abundance of locusts as a food source led to temporary economic relief in food markets. Foreign travelers and diplomats reported that eating locusts and cooking them in innovative ways reduced demand for ordinary food supplies, leading to a decrease in the price of provisions.


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.