It might not be everyone's cup tea, but scientists say cockroach milk could become a new superfood. Insect dairy could be the next big thing supermarket shelves and our diets. Scientists say insect milk could be a perfect non-dairy alternative to cow's milk, no matter how hard it might be people to accept milk bugs. Scientists studied the nutritional value the milk from the Pacific Beetle cockroach. They discovered that the milk was much richer nutrients than dairy milk. Scientists said: "A single crystal [ cockroach milk] is estimated to contain more than three times the energy an equivalent mass of dairy milk." The crystals were also full amino acids and proteins.
Most cockroaches do not actually produce milk. The Pacific Beetle cockroach is the only one known to feed milk to its young. However, milking enough cockroaches to satisfy a growing human population clearly isn't as easy as milking cows. An alternative is to try and replicate the milk a lab using stem cell technology, and then turn this technique a large-scale industrial process. A South African company called Gourmet Grubb has already started selling insect-milk ice cream. It says the milk is, "a sustainable, nature-friendly, nutritious, lactose-free, delicious, guilt-free dairy alternative the future". It won't be too long before other companies jump the bug-milk bandwagon.