A collection of commercial foots that contain insect-based ingredients. Credit: Courtesy photo

Mmm, bugs.

If you’ve ever hankered for a four-course insect tasting, San Antonio Botanical Garden’s got ya covered.

In conjunction with the fun-loving folks at Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, the garden will host an event called the Incredible Edible Insect at 10:30 a.m. and again at noon Saturday, October 20.

Naturally, all dishes will be small bites.

“This will be a journey into entomophagy, or the eating of insects,” said Molly Keck, an AgriLife Extension pest-management specialist.

Chefs Dave Terrazas of the Botanical Garden, Joshua Schwenke of  Gastronomy Live Events, Michael Grimes of Southern Grit and Stephen Poprocki of Texas Black Gold Garlic will do the cooking. (BTW, Poprocki’s an old hand at this sort of thing, having participated in past insect dinners at the Witte Museum.)

Meanwhile, Keck and Robert Nathan Allen — founder of Little Herds, a nonprofit that promotes insects as food — will supply the science. Namely, they’ll explain how the wriggly little critters provide a sustainable source of nutrition.

And there will be youth activities too because what kid doesn’t go through a bug-eating phase?

The cost for the sampling is $25 per adult and $10 per child. Tickets are available online, but the squeamish may want to bring their own barf bags.

San Antonio Botanical Garden

555 Funston, San Antonio, TX

(210) 536-1400

website

So many restaurants, so little time. Find out the latest San Antonio dining news with our Flavor Friday Newsletter.

Sanford Nowlin is editor-in-chief of the San Antonio Current. He holds degrees from Trinity University and the University of Texas at San Antonio, and his work has been featured in Salon, Alternet, Creative...