StonesBally
Well-Known Member
Some regulation or something. You could always raise and slaughter your own pig...
Oh, and on top of everything else we did yesterday, SWMBO picked a bucket full of stinging nettles and cooked them down. Bright green and pretty much like spinach. Good stuff, except for when it's alive and stings you.
Dad and I would sometimes harvest red worms from the lowland river area near our house. Family property.
Anyway, nettles were all over that place and I'd always get stung. It's like a mosquito bite that also burns. Luckily it goes away after a while.
I was shocked to discover that people can cook and eat it! I don't know where to get it where I live now and frankly I have no desire to seek it out.
Selling pork blood is illegal in the US, but it is the traditional blood used in blood sausages from Poland to Spain to the UK.
Scoped out some muscadine grape vines today
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You're from NC, man. You know we call them scuppernongs here.
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I've always called the black ones muscadines and the green ones scuppernongs. Been here all my life!
Interesting!
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I forget the brand, but that scuppernong grape wine was marketed by a company I forget back when my parents were still alive. I thought it tasted like just starting to get over-ripe grapes. Kinda rich tasting. Might be that they have male & female vines? I've made some good wine out of the wild grapes that grow in these parts. Some kind of wild concorde I think?So, I had looked this up before, but I wanted to double check before I said something totally wrong! They are ALL muscadines, and the green ones are a VARIETY of muscadines...like a distinct species...called scuppernongs. In all my local poking around, I have only found ONE wild scuppernong source. Last year, it hardly produced any fruit...I don't know if it will make a comeback this year or not. I think they are a little sweeter than the black grapes...like a little touch of honey.
I have a pretty good source for the muscadines, but it is a very public place and, if I'm not careful, I might get a scolding for picking them. My next best source is smaller, but fairly prolific. After that, I have some that are more spread out and many are higher in the trees...and I can't climb like I did when I was a kid!![]()
I started a vine in my garden. from seed, a couple years ago...it's slowly advancing up a little trellis, but no grapes yet. Maybe in another year or two. I've noticed that some vines produce grapes and some don't...I may not even have a good vine. If it ever does produce, though, I might build a small grape arbor beside the garden and transplant it. I know some places sell the vines, but I wanted to start out with a vine from wild seed. Fingers crossed.
We often spot wild asparagus in the road ditches around late Apr to early May. Can't miss those straight up green things popping out of the still-brown landscape. I'll jump out of the car and snip off a dozen or so. They are most delicious and tender when the heads are still small.
A friend sometimes brings us morel mushrooms in the spring. Sauteed in butter...yum!
as usual lots of porcini this year. in one spot they grow to the size of frisbees and then rot!
Found this 7+ lb Hen of the Woods mushroom while out mushroom hunting this morning.
that's a beauty! i love the hen. never find them here though. i find chicken mushroom and sponge mushroom regularly (in the same spot every year) but they are second-best compared to maitake.
as my mind wanders, here is something for chicken mushroom collectors. sometimes the texture, even of the younger bits, is too firm or almost leathery. obviously avoid the really woody bits, but put the rest in a food processor with steel blade, and process to a coarse crumble. then season and fry as you would minced meat, let it brown up a bit, add chili paste / mole if you want and simmer in there for a while, and make tacos. reaaaally tasty.