Christian Homesteaders
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Search
 
 

Display results as :
 


Rechercher Advanced Search

Like/Tweet/+1
Latest topics
» The Beast Revelation
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptyMon Jun 11, 2018 2:24 am by michae1

» Facebook page
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptySun Feb 11, 2018 9:19 am by dizzy

» Hilarious video A little garden fun by the cowboy poet Baxter Black
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptyFri Jun 17, 2016 12:54 am by mountainmama

» An Insurrection Coming
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptySat Apr 16, 2016 6:52 am by 12acrehome

» Patrice's Patch Garden Journal
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptySat Apr 02, 2016 8:47 am by PATRICE IN IL

» lambs and ewes
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptyWed Mar 23, 2016 11:46 pm by Farmfresh

» Irish Cuisine Class/Demonstration Recipes
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptyMon Mar 07, 2016 6:13 am by PATRICE IN IL

» Prayer request for my dh's aunt
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptyFri Mar 04, 2016 8:55 pm by PATRICE IN IL

» How has your day been and what's for dinner...................
Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist EmptyMon Feb 29, 2016 5:43 am by PATRICE IN IL

Keywords

Seasoning  recipes  Sloppy  Taco  

Affiliates
free forum

Top posting users this week
No user


Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist

Go down

Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist Empty Finding Wild Edible Foods: A Checklist

Post by Sonshine Sat Aug 15, 2009 12:21 am

http://www.motherearthnews.com/Real-Food/Foraging-Wild-Edible-Plants.aspx?utm_content=08.14.09+FG&utm_campaign=FG&utm_source=iPost&utm_medium=email&page=2

1. Do your plant homework. Know your Queen Anne’s Lace from your poison hemlock. Positive identification and proper preparation are the forager's primary concerns — especially when hunting mushrooms. Many poisonous mushrooms look very much like the edible kinds. While mushroom poisoning generally results in mild to serious gastric discomfort, it can also cause organ failure and death. Don’t take any chances! (Learn more about mushrooms in Hunt for Wild Mushrooms, Why We Need Mushrooms and Grow Your Own Mushrooms.)

2. Know where to collect wild foods. Obviously, you don't want to eat plants collected from a nuclear landfill, or watercress from a polluted stream. Plants along roadsides, or those that may have been exposed to pesticides — on the margins of conventional farms, for example — must be thoroughly washed, preferably several times, before consumption. And get off the beaten path — areas closest to town usually have the most foraging activity. Venture further afield to less-trafficked areas and reap greater rewards.

3. Know when to gather wild foods. Practiced foragers keep a close eye on the calendar and the weather. Spring is the time for greens, when new leaves and shoots are tender and sweet. Mushrooms, ramps, nettles and other spring ephemerals generally have a short harvest window, usually three weeks or so. Wild fruits harvested in autumn, such as persimmons and pawpaws, must be fully ripened (soft to touch), before they are palatable.

4. Leave healthy plants. When harvesting, “Take half, leave half,” is Kindscher’s rule. Learn about and avoid plants that are threatened or endangered.

RELATED CONTENT
Foraging for Edible Wild Plants: A Field Guide to Wild Berries
Learn about foraging for wild edible plants. Wild berries include blackberries, raspberries, dewber...

Food Security, Oil Supply, Population: Stabilizing Tipping Points in Nature
How many failing countries will it take before civilization itself fails? We have the technologies ...

Let’s Talk About Hunger
Here’s a new way to bring together coalitions that are working toward the promotion of locally grow...

Food Co-ops: Good Food and Good Prices
Food Co-ops: Good Food and Good Prices September/October 1979 A "New Wave" of grocery outlets can g...

CITY FOOD/COUNTRY FOOD
CITY FOOD/COUNTRY FOOD February/March 1998 By Joe Novara Maybe food really should be shrink-wrapped...
5. Learn how to prepare wild foods properly. Pokeweed (Phytolacca) can cause intestinal disaster if not cooked in several changes of water, and acorns must be leached several times to remove bitter tannins. Heed your senses — learn to taste the difference between awful and unusual.

“Our population is far too big for foraging to make a significant impact on overall diet,” Kindscher says. For the modern forager, wild plants figure primarily as seasonal highlights in the annual diet — in April, morels with cream, and elderberry pie in August. Apart from the hyper-dose of nutrition that wild plants provide, and the physical benefits of outdoor exercise, foraging also feeds the soul, establishing a connection to place and keeping time with the seasons. “The golden rule,” Kindscher says, “is to tread lightly.”
Sonshine
Sonshine
Admin

Posts : 5253
Join date : 2009-05-07
Age : 66

https://christianhomesteader.forumotion.net

Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum