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Cicadas don’t sting. Cicadas don’t bite.

Once every seven year cicada
Craig Schmidt
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Actually, they don’t have the necessary mouth parts to bite. Cicadas don’t spread disease. They aren’t toxic. Cicadas are good for your plants. Cicadas are full of nitrogen which feeds into your soil when they pass away. Cicadas aerate your lawn to improve water filtration.

The cicadas will urinate, mate, and return underground. What a life.

And now we are told you can eat them!

Brood X Cicadas Emerge After 17 Years Underground
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Yummy. Yummy.

The Cicada is a delicacy in some countries. You can pan-fry or toast them. Some people put them in gumbo, tacos, or pizzas. Or stir-fried over rice.
The Food Network reports Cicadas are extra crunchy.

Brood X Cicadas Emerge After 17 Years Underground
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We are warned to clean the Cicadas.  Handle them like you prepare chicken. Do not try and catch them yourself. And do not eat them raw. Buy them from a vendor. What? Will they have them at Piggly Wiggly?

Cicada Recipe

Brood X Cicadas Emerge After 17 Years Underground
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-1 minced onion
-chopped cilantro
-minced ginger
-sliced carrots
-chopped broccoli & cauliflower
-water chestnuts
-Bean sprouts
-snow peas
-blanched cicadas

Brood X Cicadas Emerge After 17 Years Underground
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Friends tell me their taste has been compared to fried okra. I will take their word for it.
So, cicadas are just our noisy friends.

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Gallery Credit: Charlotte Barnett

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