Hormigas: Culonas __exclusive__
It is the queen, and only the queen, that ends up in the frying pan. After mating, the male dies. The newly fertilized queen, however, descends to the earth, sheds her wings (the scars are a mark of her new status), and begins the lonely, heroic task of digging a new nest. She will never eat again, living off the fat and protein reserves stored in that enormous abdomen—her “culona”—to produce the first generation of worker ants. It is precisely this nutrient-dense, flavor-packed abdomen that humans have learned to intercept. The capture of hormigas culonas is a form of sustainable hunting that requires deep ecological knowledge, patience, and a specific kind of courage. The harvest takes place during the first heavy rains of the season. In the towns of San Gil, Barichara, and Guanentá, entire families rise before dawn. They are not looking for the ants on the ground; they are looking for the sky.
It is crucial to harvest quickly. The ants are only edible at this precise stage of their life cycle—post-mating, pre-nesting. Within hours of landing, a queen will burrow into the soil. Once underground, her abdomen begins to shrink as she metabolizes her reserves to lay eggs. The flavor and texture are lost. Furthermore, if she completes her nest and begins her colony, she becomes aggressive and her body chemistry changes. The window of opportunity is measured in a single morning, maybe two days at most. The live ants are brought home in sacks that squirm and rustle. The first step is death—but a clean, deliberate one. The ants are submerged in salted water. This both humanely kills them and begins the purging process, cleaning any residual dirt or formic acid from their exoskeletons. The salt also initiates a subtle brining. hormigas culonas
The harvesters do not swat or chase. Instead, they gently gather . Using soft brooms or even their hands, they sweep the teeming queens into buckets, sacks, or calabash bowls. The sound is distinctive: a soft, persistent pattering like rain on leaves, as hundreds of queens drop from the low vegetation or stumble across the tarps. A good morning’s harvest might yield five, ten, even twenty kilograms of live, squirming queens. It is the queen, and only the queen,
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