Photo of Francisca Castellanos

Energy & sustainability

Francisca Castellanos

Using crickets to produce protein-rich food with a lower environmental impact than meat.

Year Honored
2023

Organization
Crick Superfoods

Region
Latin America

Hails From
Ecuador

Ecuadorian Francisca Alejandra Castellanos, a graduate in International Relations and Social Sciences from the Tecnológico de Monterrey, is passionate about mountaineering and needed a source of protein without whey, as she is lactose intolerant and hikes at high altitudes. While working with Mexican indigenous communities, she discovered the properties of crickets. With the combination of these factors, she found an alternative to traditional protein bars with low environmental impact but is rich in nutrients.

Her answer was the start-up Crick Superfoods, which produces food with cricket protein. This insect has high protein content and provides nine amino acids, more calcium than milk, and more vitamin B12 than salmon, according to its creator. "We are the first Ecuadorian company to produce and market products with cricket protein. It was born from the difficulty of finding food products with protein that are environmentally and health friendly," she explains. For this nutritional and environmental breakthrough, Castellanos has been chosen by MIT Technology Review in Spanish as one of the winners of Innovators under 35 Latin America 2023.

The company sells two types of nachos made with cricket flour as a snack, one product with sea salt and the other with chili. Her start-up also markets a protein topping for salads and other types of recipes. Castellanos points out that crickets emit 80 times less carbon dioxide than cows for an equivalent amount of feed, and controlled environment cricket farms use 10 times less soil. This alternative also uses much less water per kilo than cattle farming. They are suitable for coeliacs, as they are gluten-free. The insects are fed on vegetables and cereals for eight weeks and their food quality is assured, says the innovator. To maximize its social impact, Castellanos has partnered with the Food Bank of Quito to improve the nutrition of the most vulnerable people through its cricket flour nachos.

Finally, Castellanos' initiative is researching new products such as energy bars for athletes and women during menstruation. After expanding in the Ecuadorian market, where there is no culture of insect consumption, the young innovator seeks to market her products in Mexico, the United States and the Netherlands. Crick Superfoods complies with two of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals set by the United Nations: zero hunger and responsible production and consumption.