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  • The Glad Ostensen family in Gjerdrum, Norway. Anne Glad Fredricksen, 45, as she prepares the evening meal after work in their farmhouse kitchen. Model-Released.
    NOR_130529_074_x.jpg
  • Phnom Penn, Cambodia. Central market. Fried crickets on the left, with small fried chickens on the right.
    CAM_19_xs.jpg
  • The Glad Ostensen family in Gjerdrum, Norway. Anne Glad Fredricksen, 45, as she prepares the evening meal after work in their farmhouse kitchen. Model-Released.
    NOR_130529_075_x.jpg
  • The mother of Shashi Kanth, a call center worker, prepares food in the small kitchen at the home she shares with her son in Bangalore, India. (Shashi Kanth is featured in the book What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets.) Shashi loves his mother's traditional southern Indian food at home, but when he's at work his dinner options are KFC and Beijing Bites, the fast-food restaurants on the ground floor of the high-rise where he works, located on the edge of Bangalore. Like many of his co-workers, Shashi relies on quick fast food meals, candy bars, and coffee, to sustain him through the long nights spent talking to westerners about various technical and billing problems. MODEL RELEASED.
    IND_081208_121_xw.jpg
  • Calistoga, California.Ramon Viera gently knocks or "riddles" the collected sediment which has settled in the necks of the countless wine bottles in the Schramsberg wine cave, one of the oldest in Napa Valley, California. Though it is a tedious process, riddling is a fundamental step in the time consuming production of sparkling wine.
    USA_030129_24_xs.jpg
  • The Breidjing Refugee Camp, Eastern Chad on the Sudanese border shelters 30,000 people who have fled their homes in Darfur, Sudan. To feed her family, a woman stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_8937_xf1brw.jpg
  • The Breidjing Refugee Camp, Eastern Chad on the Sudanese border shelters 30,000 people who have fled their homes in Darfur, Sudan. To feed her family, a woman stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.).
    CHA104_8902_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE) Squatting before the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 64).
    CHA104_0009_xxf1rw.jpg
  • A naga covered in ash stirs a large kettle of food for pilgrims at Kumbh Mela.  Every 12 years, millions of devout Hindus celebrate the month-long festival of Kumbh Mela by bathing in the holy waters of the Ganges at Hardiwar, India. Hundreds of ashrams set up dusty, sprawling camps that stretch for miles. Under the watchful eye of police and lifeguards, the faithful throng to bathe in the river.
    IND_097_xs.jpg
  • The Breidjing Refugee Camp, Eastern Chad on the Sudanese border shelters 30,000 people who have fled their homes in Darfur, Sudan. To feed her family, a woman stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_8945_xf1brw.jpg
  • Brown tree snake in bed with a very young sleeping child:every parent's worst fear. photo illustration. .There are no birds on the Pacific Island of Guam thanks to the Brown Tree Snake. These hungry egg-eating snakes have overrun the tropical island after arriving on a lumber freighter from New Guinea during World War II. Besides wiping out the bird population, Brown Tree Snakes cause frequent power outages: they commit short circuit suicide when climbing between power lines. They invade people's homes through the smallest openings. They have emerged from toilets. And they love the smell of babies. Several sleeping infants have been injured by the snake trying to swallow an arm or a leg...For this photo, an expert researcher and handler of brown tree snakes placed a brown tree snake that had been in a refrigerator to restrict its movement (cold blooded animals do not move much when they are chilled) on the bed with the sleeping child and monitored its movement as it warmed up. As it warmed up, the snake sensed the baby's breath and started to move toward it..
    GUM_11_120_xs.jpg
  • Auseuga Lagavale, the matai (head) of his extended family, is cooking his favorite coconut sauce, in preparation for a feast at the Lagavale home in Western Samoa. The recipe: wring out fresh coconut meat with the fibers from the husk, boil juice in a bowl by droping in rocks heated by fire, dribble in sugar, stir constantly until the milky white sauce thickens. He is cooking in the family's detached cooking shed behind the main house. Published in Material World, page 172.
    Wsa_mw_3_xxs.jpg
  • Auseuga Lagavale, the matai (head) of his extended family, is cooking his favorite coconut sauce, in preparation for a feast at the Lagavale home in Western Samoa. The recipe: wring out fresh coconut meat with the fibers from the husk, boil juice in a bowl by droping in rocks heated by fire, dribble in sugar, stir constantly until the milky white sauce thickens. Work, Food. {{He is cooking in the family's detached cooking shed behind the main house. The Lagavale family lives in a 720-square-foot tin-roofed open-air house with a detached cookhouse in Poutasi Village, Western Samoa. Material World Project.
    Wsa_mw_708_xs.jpg
  • Tao Xiuzeng, a worker at the Silk Factory #1 in the city of Suzhou, describes her favorite recipe for silkworms as she pulls the silkworm cocoons from boiling water, threads the fine  silk filament onto a reel, and then tosses away the rest of the pupae when the 1000 yards or more of silk is wound off each one. Occasionally she brings silk worm pupae home to eat, first drying them in the oven, then stir-frying them with ginger, onion, rice wine, and garlic, Suzhou, China. Her daughter is afraid of them, she says. (Man Eating Bugs page 90 Bottom)
    CHI_meb_72_cxxs.jpg
  • Live silkworm pupae are sold in the Qing Ping market; the pupae are often stir-fried along with ginger, onion, rice wine, and garlic, Guangzhou, China. (Man Eating Bugs page 90 Top)
    CHI_meb_71_cxxs.jpg
  • Stir-fried silkworm pupae about to be eaten, Guangzhou, China. Silk worm pupae can also be deep-fried. (Man Eating Bugs page 91).
    CHI_meb_69_xxs.jpg
  • A spoonful of fried weaver ants of the Oecophylla genus, near Angkor Wat, Cambodia. They are shaken from their nests in the trees, caught in baskets on long poles, then stir-fried quickly over high heat. (Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects page 54. See also page 6)
    CAM_meb_117_xxs.jpg
  • A market-place vendor displays banana leaves covered with maeng man for sale, the bugs are female giant winged red ants and are eaten stir-fried, Chiang Mai, Thailand. (Man Eating Bugs page 41)
    THA_meb_9_cxxs.jpg
  • A member of the Khuenkaew family busily plucking up female giant red ants, known as maeng man, which are flying away from their homes on brand new wings. The 'harvest' of the maeng man is a once-a-year event occurring just after the first rains of the rainy season which push the ants out of their old homes to form new ones. They were collected in bottles, then stir-fried and served with sticky rice for dinner. Outside Chiang Mai, Thailand. (Man Eating Bugs page 40)
    THA_meb_12_cxxs.jpg
  • In a rice paddy near Ubud, Bali (Indonesia), dragonflies are skewered on a stick. Young children catch dragonflies with a wand made from jackfruit palm frond stem tipped with sticky jackfruit sap. Past generation of Balinese kids routinely caught dragonflies this way, then dewinged, and stir-fried them with coconut oil: a crispy protein snack. This practice has mostly disappeared due to a more prosperous population that has ready access to chicken. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Ido_meb_4_xs.jpg
  • In a rice paddy near Ubud, Bali (Indonesia), a young boy catches dragonflies with a wand made from jackfruit palm frond stem tipped with sticky jackfruit sap. Past generation of Balinese kids routinely caught dragonflies this way, then dewinged, and stir-fried them: a crispy protein snack. This practice has mostly disappeared due to a more prosperous population that has ready access to chicken. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Ido_meb_2_xs.jpg
  • Stir-fried black water beetles prepared for a restaurant meal in Guangzhou, China (cold beer in background). Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Chi_meb_702_xs.jpg
  • One of the chefs of the "Elegant Good Smell Restaurant" prepares scorpion soup and stir-fried scorpions in woks, Louyang, China.(Man Eating Bugs page 98)
    CHI_meb_92_cxxs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Two hours later, lunch is ready. Six-year-old Cui Yuqi reaches for a piece of smoked chicken in the family's kitchen house. Other foods on the table include (clockwise from bottom) cauliflower and beef; pig's feet; dried tofu curd and cucumber; cucumber and beef; steamed egg-white custard; stir-fried green peppers and beef. The tomatoes in the center were picked from their kitchen garden that morning. Hungry Planet: What the World Eats (p. 88). The Cui family of Weitaiwu village, Beijing Province, China, is one of the thirty families featured, with a weeks' worth of food, in the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.
    CHI204_0008_xxf1.jpg
  • In a rice paddy near Ubud, Bali (Indonesia), a young boy catches dragonflies with a wand made from jackfruit palm frond stem tipped with sticky jackfruit sap. He pulls the dragonfly off the end of the wand before skewering it on a stick to take home. Past generation of Balinese kids routinely caught dragonflies this way, then dewinged, and stir-fried them with coconut oil: a crispy protein snack. This practice has mostly disappeared due to a more prosperous population that has ready access to chicken. Image from the book project Man Eating Bugs: The Art and Science of Eating Insects.
    Ido_meb_3_xs.jpg
  • A Vendan woman stirs a pot of grasshoppers that the kids have just collected. She cooks the de-winged grasshoppers in oil and they are eaten with cornmeal porridge. Masetoni, Mpumalanga, South Africa. (Man Eating Bugs page 137B)
    SAF_meb_24_cxxs.jpg
  • Stirred with a palm leaf stem, palm grubs, or Capricorn beetle larvae, are sautéed in their own oil over a fire. Uganda. (Man Eating Bugs page 143 Inset, grubs being cooked by Joseph Kawunde). Joseph Kawunde, 56, a former Ssese Islander, is one of few in his mainland village of Bweyogerere who enjoys the cuisine of masinya, or palm grub (the larvae of the Capricorn beetle); the other villagers curiously watch as he prepares the foreign dish of masinya worms cooked with salt, curry, and yellow onions. Bweyogerere, Uganda.
    UGA_meb_19_xxs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting before the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_9174_xf1brw.jpg
  • Manual laborer stirring cow manure at a unit producing methane gas from manure. The methane production unit is located on a farm belonging to the National Dairy Development Board at Anand, Gujarat, India. (1986).
    IND_SCI_ENGY_68_xs.jpg
  • Fatoumata Toure stirs a pot of porridge on the roof of her home in the village of Kouakourou, Mali. The Natomo family lives in two mud brick houses in the village of Kouakourou, Mali, on the banks of the Niger River. They are grain traders and own a mango orchard. According to tradition Soumana is allowed to take up to four wives; he has two. Wives Pama and Fatoumata are partners in the family and care for their many children together. Material World Project.
    Mal_mw_712_xs.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting before the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_9141_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting before the fire with her children, Sudanese Refugee D'jimia Ishakh Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that this refugee family eats three times a day. Despite losing almost everything in their flight from militia attacks, D'jimia keeps her improvised household as orderly as possible. To cover the ground inside, the family hauled in clean sand from the dry riverbed. D'jimia and the children sleep on two blankets, which she constantly airs out and washes. (Supporting image from the project Hungry Planet: What the World Eats.)
    CHA104_9070_xf1brw.jpg
  • (MODEL RELEASED IMAGE). Squatting before the fire, D'jimia Souleymane stirs a pot of aiysh, the thick porridge that her refugee family eats three times a day. Even when they lived in their village in the Darfur region of Sudan though, aiysh was the mainstay of every meal, along with a thin soup. This is also the traditional meal in central and northern Chad. (From a photographic gallery of kitchen images, in Hungry Planet: What the World Eats, p. 54)
    CHA104_0013_xxf1rw.jpg

Peter Menzel Photography

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