They are meat the same way a cow is meat, but you don’t eat the cows hide. If you sell cricket meat then it should be just the “meat” of the cricket, otherwise you are just selling cricket not cricket meat, like selling the corpse of a cow is not selling meat it’s selling a dead cow.
Just as you sell lobster, you sell the lobster and then extract the meat later. Just calling the entire lobster meat is also disengenous.
If I buy a whole chicken at the grocery store, I buy it in the meat section. No one would say “you’re buying a whole chicken, therefore you’re not buying meat.”
With lobster you can extract the meat and eat it. You can also boil the empty shell to make a lobster stock as a base for a seafood soup or a pan sauce. Just as with chicken you don’t eat the bones but you can boil them to make stocks for soup or pan sauces. They’re still classified as meat and the products you make from them are considered meat products.
You are being very selective with your choices of examples. Yes you buy a “chicken” at the grocery store but you aren’t buying it with feathers and feet still attached. If you buy crickets at the grocery store I guarantee you it will be the whole carcass.
I don’t understand why you are being so pedantic about this.
EATING AN CRICKET IS NOT THE SAME AS EATING AN ENTIRE CHICKEN OR LOBSTER, IT DOESNT MATTER WHAT THE FUCK YOU CALL MEAT OR NOT. that’s the only thing I’m trying to point out even boiling the carcasses and shells to make soup bases and stock is not the same as eating the feathers and guts.
If you would like to eat an entire chicken with feathers and intestines and all that to prove me wrong then please go ahead
Why not? Shrimps and prawns are meat. Lobsters are meat.
Wet bugs meat, dry bugs not meat?
You only eat the inside of the shrimp and lobsters. You throw away the exoskeletons.
Good luck doing that with crickets.
So if you stick the entire lobster into a paste grinder, is it a meat product or not?
Also now I wonder if that would have any nutritional value, lots of calcium?
Sure but why does that make crickets “not meat”?
They are meat the same way a cow is meat, but you don’t eat the cows hide. If you sell cricket meat then it should be just the “meat” of the cricket, otherwise you are just selling cricket not cricket meat, like selling the corpse of a cow is not selling meat it’s selling a dead cow.
Just as you sell lobster, you sell the lobster and then extract the meat later. Just calling the entire lobster meat is also disengenous.
If I buy a whole chicken at the grocery store, I buy it in the meat section. No one would say “you’re buying a whole chicken, therefore you’re not buying meat.”
With lobster you can extract the meat and eat it. You can also boil the empty shell to make a lobster stock as a base for a seafood soup or a pan sauce. Just as with chicken you don’t eat the bones but you can boil them to make stocks for soup or pan sauces. They’re still classified as meat and the products you make from them are considered meat products.
You are being very selective with your choices of examples. Yes you buy a “chicken” at the grocery store but you aren’t buying it with feathers and feet still attached. If you buy crickets at the grocery store I guarantee you it will be the whole carcass.
I don’t understand why you are being so pedantic about this.
EATING AN CRICKET IS NOT THE SAME AS EATING AN ENTIRE CHICKEN OR LOBSTER, IT DOESNT MATTER WHAT THE FUCK YOU CALL MEAT OR NOT. that’s the only thing I’m trying to point out even boiling the carcasses and shells to make soup bases and stock is not the same as eating the feathers and guts.
If you would like to eat an entire chicken with feathers and intestines and all that to prove me wrong then please go ahead