Nothing satisfies at the end of a long day of climbing like a handful of meal worms. Or at least that鈥檚 the case for bugs-as-food proponent . This September, the 29-year-old El Paso entomologist is putting her money (and her meal worms) where her mouth is. She plans to solo climb El Capitan聽eating nothing but insect-based foods.
Technically the trip up El Cap is just a two-week-long PR stunt鈥攎ore about eating worms than placing gear. It鈥檚 Curry鈥檚 play to get the outdoors set onboard with bugs as the conversation about their viability as a sustainable protein replacement for livestock gets underway in the U.S. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something the edible insect industry hasn鈥檛 done yet,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut these are people that are adventurous by nature and sustainability-minded.鈥

You won鈥檛 see Curry stuffing her face with whole insects during her climb, which she expects to tak ten-to-14 days. Rather, she鈥檚 utilizing pre-made聽bug-flour聽bars and聽cookies, and cricket-based聽fruit leathers. She anticipates needing between 4,000 and 5,000 calories per day during her climb, which shouldn't be a problem.聽Crickets offer 31 grams of protein per 200-calorie serving, which is more than salmon, chicken, beef, and聽eggs. They also offer 7.2 grams of fiber, something that most protein sources don鈥檛 offer at all. Plus, cricket flout is light. Carrying them won鈥檛 be nearly the burden that packing other protein might be.
鈥淲hat she鈥檚 doing is she鈥檚 making a statement that these are powerful foods. These are foods that can get you up a mountain,鈥 says Lee Cadesky, founder of . Cadesky is hoping to bring a tofu-like bug-based product to market later this year, and he鈥檒l be providing Curry with cans of bug chili and spaghetti with bug marinara for her ascent. Several companies, including聽San Francisco's and Ontario's ,聽are donating bug-based foods to Curry for her trip.
Curry is a longtime climber and general bug lover. After receiving a graduate degree in entomology (the study of insects), she decided to pursue a career in entomophagy, or the consumption of insects. 鈥淚 believe that insects are a really awesome tool we can use to feed the 9 billion people we鈥檙e going to have on this planet by 2050,鈥 she says. She runs the website , where the bug-curious can get recipes and buying and cooking advice. Her ultimate goal is to someday open up an edible wax worm production company.聽

鈥淲ax worms are probably my favorite treat,鈥 Curry says. 鈥淭hey have this buttery, honey, subtle flavor.鈥 She adds that there鈥檚 also a gap in the wax worm market. While food-grade crickets have become pretty easy to get, wax worms can be harder to find.
Curry will be from the climb as well as sharing videos of both the pitches she鈥檚 climbing and the foods she鈥檚 eating. While her stunt immediately seems like it鈥檚 just one step removed from those reality shows where a survival celeb sticks a whole, wriggling centipede in his mouth for shock value, Curry promises this won鈥檛 be the way her videos go down. Her videos will be tasteful: No wriggling, no wincing, shirtless adventure dude, no hype. Just climb, eat, repeat, until she gets to the top.聽