Category Archives: Security

Yellow Jacket Soup

Nearly ten years ago on Reddit, a user posted this recipe for Yellow Jacket Soup.

Yellow Jacket Soup – (OO-GA-MA)

Hunt for ground dwelling yellow jackets early in the morning or in the late afternoon. Gather the whole comb. Place the comb over the fire or on the stove with the right side up to loosen the grubs that are not covered. Remove all of the uncovered grubs. Place the comb over the fire or on the stove upside down until the paper-like covering parches. Remove the comb from the heat, pick out the yellow jackets and place in the oven to brown. Make the soup by boiling the browned yellow jackets in a pot of water with salt. Add grease if desired.

Simple enough. Bake the insects, then boil them with fat and… eat soup.

Apparently the recipe was actually found and posted to the web first by a Tiny Pine Press blog, from a 1951 cookbook they found in a shop.

Recipe written by Mary and Goingback Chiltoskey (published January 1, 1951) as posted to a blog on November 6th, 2009

Five years later in 2017, the idea showed up again on Twitter, and caught the eye of a chef “Barlowe”.

“You’re up to something, aren’t you?” I ask him. “Yellowjacket soup,” he says, smiling from ear to ear. … The idea sprouted by way of chef Sean Brock posting a centuries-old Cherokee recipe on Twitter. “I’m dying to try this,” Brock wrote.

The Twitter version of this story as published by Vice (which really was an Instagram post) goes on to erase not only Reddit and Tiny Pine as prior and better written sources than Brock, but also obliterates the cookbook too. Somehow it cites the book as Brock’s written source while saying it doesn’t count.

The recipe was last written down around 1860, and Barlowe took a quick interest in the idea of recreating it.

Such misinformation, the Web looked better in 2009 on that original Tiny Pine blog post.

Wasps for soup maybe sounds far fetched and ancient, given the Twitter misinformation treatment, yet the Japanese certainly still do it.

After we got a good pile going, Sayoko simmered the larvae in a pot with sugar, sake, chopped ginger, and soy sauce. That method of cooking is called tsukudani—people make all kinds of things that way… so much of wasp culture in Kushihara is centered on being in the present moment: in a certain place at a certain time. Wasps are, more than anything, a fleeting mark of the fall season. You spend months cultivating the nests just for that moment when you pop a raw larvae into your mouth and it bursts into a flash of honey butter.

…and also residents or tourists in Yunnan, China.

…we dipped them in water to wash them off, them placed them in a bowl together. Then, heating some oil, we deep fried them…. My Italian friend went a step further and sautéed them in butter with some sage.

And of course there’s science to support the nutritional value.

The high amounts of unsaturated fatty acids in the lipids of the hornets could be expected to exhibit nutritional benefits, including reducing cardiovascular disorders and inflammations. High minerals contents, especially micro minerals such as iron, zinc, and a high K/Na ratio in hornets could help mitigate mineral deficiencies among those of the population with inadequate nutrition.

The science certainly gets a shout out as well in Africa.

In Sub-Saharan Africa, edible insects with high consumption rates have been identified as beetles (31%), caterpillars (18%), bees, wasps and ants (14%) and grasshoppers, crickets and locusts (13%). Across the central Africa region, insects still provide more than 50% of dietary protein, and their commercial value is higher compared to animal-derived protein. This can be attributed to the superior nutritional profile of numerous insects coupled with the ease of insect production and the low carbon footprint associated with insect rearing.

Super interesting, really, why Americans aren’t more familiar with their own delicious variations like Yellow Jacket Soup.

Be a Mark Cuban

The Daily Show interview with Mark Cuban is fantastic. I agree, I agree, AI agree.

He really nails the problem with the post-2008 Silicon Valley rise of fascist bro culture. In particular he correctly points out Musk and Thiel types want to end democracy and flip the U.S. into a corporation, buying themselves a seat on its board of directors (e.g. oversee and give orders to a puppet President).

He also explains the opposite, how corporations playing fair can do good, delivering ethical values (e.g. transparency and accountability), making so many lives better. The proof… being his own new tech company rapidly fixing American healthcare.

And then his response to the hate spread by Musk is a master class in being a joyful leader.

Nordstream Pipeline Case Cracked? Ukrainian Diver Named in German Arrest Warrant

It’s been a bit of a mystery, but Germany seems ready to make a case.

German authorities have issued an arrest warrant over the sabotage of the Nord Stream pipelines nearly two years ago, according to German news outlets ARD, Süddeutsche Zeitung and Die Zeit.

In an investigation published Wednesday, the outlets reported that the suspect is a Ukrainian diving instructor, named only as Volodymyr Z. for privacy reasons.

Buried lede? You have to love German privacy laws. That’s a subtle dig on dictatorships like Russia where there is no real justice or law, just obedience.

Dawn Project Calls Out Big Tech for AI Snake Oil

Dan O’Dowd built his reputation on software safety, and then created an advocacy group The Dawn Project.

He has repeatedly and correctly flagged Tesla AI claims as a total fraud, a clear and present danger to society.

Now he’s expanding the criticism (PDF) to some other known dishonest big tech brands, such as OpenAI.

Each time a $10 billion Al face plants, its promoters say: “nothing is perfect, it’s young, it needs time to learn, these are early innings, it needs more data.” Sam Altman (whose Al couldn’t correctly list US states that ended with the letter Y) wants investors to give him $7 trillion to build a super Al.

The problem isn’t the tech, if you read between the lines, it’s the people running these companies. Why can unrepentant liars be CEOs in America?