I (and nearly 10 million Greeks) eat them quite regularly during the summer. I just pull them straight out of my yard while doing yard work, throw them into a pile, and my wife cleans them. You need a great big pile of cleaned leaves to make one batch.
They are bitter as all hell if you don't cook them properly. First, throw them into a pot without any water and cook them slowly until they release all of their own water. Pour the water out, add fresh water and boil them again. Drain and rinse thoroughly with cold water, drain thoroughly again - repeat this process twice. They will still be bitter. Put them into a big bowl and pour in equal amounts of olive oil and lemon juice, enough to make them all shiny and easy to stir around, don't be stingy. A little bit of sea salt don't hurt, either.. Cover the bowl and let it sit in the fridge for at least 2 days - then it's ready to eat. You eat it cold or at room temperature, not warm.
The Greeks call it "horta", and it goes well as a side dish with anything.
It's delicious! Especially braised in red wine.. MmmmmDeer. Never had it before.
BeerGrylls said:I could've done without eating bear, though. Tastes like old tough steak marinated in used motor oil.
roastquake said:I read somewhere that dandelion leaves make a good bitter salad green. I plan on trying this, and hopefully getting into more foraged food. Anybody have any links for that?
I don't know about links but you should be able to get the old Foxfire books from the library. Books 1-6 have great information about foraging.
When I was little my Mom used to take us out to forage to supplement our groceries. I had no idea at the time that it was financially necessary.
When I was little my Mom used to take us out to forage to supplement our groceries. I had no idea at the time that it was financially necessary.
Durains. Stinky Fruit. My wife got one to try, cut it open and I caught a wiff..... tossed my cookies within seconds and ran for outside as it was that bad. Didn't come back inside for hours. Had to air the house out and I refused to move the garbage can to the curb on trash day, it was that bad. Why so many people love it I have no clue.
I read somewhere that dandelion leaves make a good bitter salad green. I plan on trying this, and hopefully getting into more foraged food. Anybody have any links for that?
Deer. Never had it before.
Never had moose or elk, though a lot of people around here hunt them. I have eaten plenty of reindeer, though - fantastic!
I could've done without eating bear, though. Tastes like old tough steak marinated in used motor oil.
That, and there are also plenty of things which are just not sold in stores.
Stinging nettles are also a very good source of greens. You need gloves to pick them, but after they've been boiled they are highly edible and tasty!
I'm thinking that maybe we should start a foraging thread.
I remember Nettles from when we lived in the States, they were good.
I'm thinking that maybe we should start a foraging thread.
BeerGrylls said:I could've done without eating bear, though. Tastes like old tough steak marinated in used motor oil.
My mom has been talking about making Nettle Beer since before I even started brewing. I don't know the exact recipe, but you fill a bucket with nettles, add sugar and cover with water. Float a piece of bread on top. I think you put some bread yeast on that bread, but I'm not sure.
unionrdr said:So what does it taste like? Sounds interesting with grouse...
So what does it taste like? Sounds interesting with grouse...
Just judging by the name, I bet you could use it in beer....
Deer. Never had it before.
The French Ortolan, in the traditionally prepared way.