I will skip the pictures here. Otherwise this list is a reminder that many plants in the wild can be made fit to eat. As usual, there is art involved although the steamer pretty well determines if it is even possible. Struggling with young dandelions is a real good introduction to the issues.
I do know all these plants as they are all Eastern woodland. most we never attempted to use. Yet i can heartily recommend lambs quarters although there is craft there also. A few are complete surprises and trying them would be quite an adventure. One i know can be crushed and thrown into water to knock out fish.
Most young plants that remain tender are prospects at least unless they are known to be toxic like nightshade. This list pretty well tells us that. In the event, we eat what we know because it is tailored to our tastes and safe. Good taste from the wild is uncommon.
52 Wild Plants You Can Eat
April 16, 2013 |
We
all know which vegetables and fruits are safe to eat, but what about
other wild edibles? Here are a few common North American goodies that
are safe to eat if you find yourself stuck in the wild:
Blackberries:
Many
wild berries are not safe to eat, it’s best to stay away from them.
But wild blackberries are 100% safe to eat and easy to recognize.
They have red branches that have long thorns similar to a rose, the
green leaves are wide and jagged. They are best to find in the spring
when their white flowers bloom, they are clustered all around the
bush and their flowers have 5 points. The berries ripen around August
to September.
Dandelions:
The
easiest to recognize if the dandelion, in the spring they show their
bright yellow buds. You can eat the entire thing raw or cook them to
take away the bitterness, usually in the spring they are less bitter.
They are packed with Vitamin A and Vitamin C, and beta carotene.
Asparagus:
The
vegetable that makes your pee smell funny grows in the wild in most
of Europe and parts of North Africa, West Asia, and North America.
Wild asparagus has a much thinner stalk than the grocery-store
variety. It’s a great source of source of vitamin C, thiamine,
potassium and vitamin B6. Eat it raw or boil it like you would your
asparagus at home.
Elderberries:
An
elderberry shrub can grow easily grow about 10 feet and yield tons of
food, their leaf structure is usually 7 main leaves on a long
stretched out stem, the leaves are long and round and the leaves
themselves have jagged edges. These are easiest to identify in the
spring as they blossom white clustered flowers that resembles an
umbrella. Mark the spot and harvest the berries when they’re ripe
around September.
Elderberries
are known for their flu and cold healing properties, you can make
jelly from them and are very sweet and delicious.
Gooseberries:
These
are also common in the woods in northern Missouri, the branches are
grey and have long red thorns, and the leaves are bright green and
have 5 points, they have rounded edges and look similar to the shape
of a maple leaf. The flowers in the spring are very odd looking, they
are bright red and hang down, the berries ripen around late May early
June.
Mulberries:
Mulberry
leaves have two types, one spade shape and a 5 fingered leaf. Both
have pointed edges.
Pine:
There
are over a hundred different species of pine. Not only can the food
be used as a supply of nourishment but, also can be used for
medicinal purposes. Simmer a bowl of water and add some pine needles
to make tea. Native americans used to ground up pine to cure skurvy,
its rich in vitamin C.
Kudzu:
Pretty
much the entire plant is edible and is also known for medicinal
values. We were blessed to find this great patch of Kudzu surrounded
by Blackberries. The leaves can be eaten raw, steam or boiled. The
root can be eaten as well.
Daylily:
You
can find this plant in many parts of the country, they have bright
orange flowers and foliage that comes straight up from the ground, no
stem. You can eat the flower buds before they open, just cook it like
a vegetable.
Peacans:
The
trees mature around 20-30 ft, some can grow up to 100 ft tall. The
leaves are bright green and long, smooth edges and the peacans
themselves are grown in green pods and when ripe the pods open and
the seeds fall to the ground.
Hazelnuts:
Hazelnut
trees are short and tend to be around 12-20 ft tall, the leaves are
bright green and have pointed edges, the hazelnuts themselves grown
in long strands of pods and generally ripen by September and October.
Walnuts:
Walnut
trees are the most recognisable and the tallest nut tree in
North America, they can range from 30-130 feet tall. The leaf
structure is very similar to the peacan, the leaves are spear like
and grow on a long stem 6-8 leaves on both sides. The leaves edges
are smooth and green. The walnuts tend to grow in clusters and ripen
in the fall.
Acorns:
Acorns
can tend to be bitter, they are highly recognisable as well, they
should be eaten cooked and a limited amount.
Hickory
Nuts:
Hickory
nut trees can grow about 50-60 ft tall, their green leaves are spear
like and can grow very large, they have pointed edges. The hickory
nut is round and ten to ripen in September or October.
Clovers:
Clovers
are everywhere if you’re lucky *pun*, and edible! If you find grass
you will most likely see this sprouting everywhere, their distinctive
trifoil leafs are easy to spot, you can eat them raw but they taste
better boiled.
Red
Clovers:
blossoms
can be eaten fresh or steeped in hot water for tea. And you can toss
both the green leaves and blossoms into a salad.
Chicory:
You
can find these in Europe, North America and Australia. The entire
plant can be eaten along with its white flowers.
Coltsfoot:
Edible
parts: Flowers and young leaves can be eaten. Flowers can be eaten
raw and mixed into a salad adding a wonderful aromatic flavor. Use
the flower head and place them into a glass jar adding raw honey and
storing it for a few weeks for its strength; this makes a great home
remedy to help calm a cough, or just add some of this coltsfoot honey
into your tea. You may dry the flower heads and use them as tea or in
cooking/baking recipes. Young leaves are bitter but better after
boiled them and then in salads, stews, or just add lemon & extra
virgin olive oil & seasoning.
Creeping
Charlie:
Edible
parts: Young leaves can be eaten raw or cooked. The leaves have a
mild bitter flavor with a aromatic tang great for salads or jucing.
You can cook these young leaves like spinach, or add to soups, stews,
and omelet. Tea is made from the fresh or dried leaves. This wild
edible has been known to be added to beer in much the same way as
hops, for flavor and clarity.
Cattail:
Known
as cattails or punks in North America and bullrush and reedmace in
England, the typha genus of plants is usually found near the edges of
freshwater wetlands. Cattails were a staple in the diet of many
Native American tribes. Most of a cattail is edible. You can boil or
eat raw the rootstock, or rhizomes, of the plant. The rootstock is
usually found underground. Make sure to wash off all the mud. The
best part of the stem is near the bottom where the plant is mainly
white. Either boil or eat the stem raw. Boil the leaves like you
would spinach. The corn dog-looking female flower spike can be
broken off and eaten like corn on the cob in the early summer when
the plant is first developing. It actually has a corn-like taste to
it.
Garlic
Mustard:
Edible
parts: Flowers, leaves, roots and seeds. Leaves can be eaten in any
season, when the weather gets hot, the leaves will have a taste
bitter. Flowers can be chopped and tossed into salads. The roots can
be collected in early spring and again in late fall, when no flower
stalks are present. Garlic mustard roots taste very spicy somewhat
like horseradish…. yummy! In the fall the seed can be collected and
eaten.
Chickweed:
These
usually appear May and July, you can eat the leaves raw or boiled,
they’re high in vitamins and minerals!
Hop
Clover:
Edible
parts: The flowers, leaves and seeds are edible. All clover types are
known to be part of the paleo diet of the First Nations people.
Flowers can be put into teas. Seeds (in autumn) can be collected and
eaten as is or roasted and can be ground into flour as well. Leaves
can be tossed into salads, omelets, juicing, sandwiches, etc.
Herb
Robert:
Edible
parts: The entire plant. Fresh leaves can be used in salads or to
make tea. The flower, leaves and root can be dried and stored using
it later as a tea or herbs as a nutrient booster. Rubbing fresh
leaves on the skin is known to repel mosquitoes, and the entire plant
repels rabbits and deer which would compliment and protect your
garden.
Beach
Lovage:
Use
the leaves raw in salads or salsas, or cooked in soups, with rice, or
in mixed cooked greens. Beach lovage can have a strong flavor and is
best used as a seasoning, like parsley, rather than eaten on its
own. Beach lovage tastes best before flowers appear, and is
also called Scotch lovage, sea lovage, wild celery, and petrushki.
Plantain:
Is
another one of those plants that seems to thrive right on the edge of
gardens and driveways, but it’s also edible. Pick the green,
rippled leaves and leave the tall flower stems. Blanch the leaves and
sauté with some butter and garlic just as you would with kale or any
other tough green.
Garlic
Grass:
Garlic
grass (Allium vineale or wild garlic) is an herbal treat often found
lurking in fields, pastures, forests and disturbed soil. It resembles
cultivated garlic or spring onions, but the shoots are often very
thin. Use it in sandwiches, salads, pesto or chopped on main courses
like scallions.
Watercress:
Cresses
(Garden cress, water cress, rock cress, pepper cress) are leafy
greens long cultivated in much of Northern Europe. They have a spicy
tang and are great in salads, sandwiches, and soups.
Lamb’s
Quarters:
Use
the leaves raw in salads, or cooked in soups, in mixed cooked greens,
or in any dish that calls for cooking greens. Lamb’s Quarters
are susceptible to leaf miners; be careful to harvest plants that are
not infested. Although Lamb’s Quarters are best before the
flowers appear, if the fresh young tips are continuously
harvested, lamb’s quarters can be eaten all summer. Lamb’s
Quarters is also called Pigweed, Fat Hen, and Goosefoot.
Goosetongue:
Use
the young leaves raw in salads, or cooked in soups, in mixed cooked
greens, or in any dish that calls for cooking greens.
Goosetongue is best in spring and early summer, before the flowers
appear. Goosetongue can be confused with poisonous Arrowgrass,
so careful identification is essential. Goosetongue is also called
Seashore Plantain.
Joe
Pye Weed:
Edible
parts: The entire plant can be used including the root. The leaves
and stems can be harvested in the summer before the flower buds open
and can be dried and stored for later use. The roots are harvested in
the autumn. Fresh flowers can be used to make an herbal tea.
Joe
Pye weed is named after a legendary Indian healer who used a
decoction of the plant to cure typhus fever in colonial America.
Native tribes used gravel root as a healing tonic included relieving
constipation, washing wounds with a strong tea made from the root to
prevent infection.
Pigweed:
Edible
parts: The whole plant – leaves, roots, stem, seeds. The Amarath
seed is small and very nutritious and easy to harvest, the seed grain
is used to make flour for baking uses. Roasting the seeds can enhance
the flavor, also you can sprout the raw seeds using them in salads,
and in sandwiches, etc. Young leaves can be eaten raw or cooked like
spinach, sautéed, etc. Fresh or dried pigweed leaves can be used to
make tea.
Fireweed:
This
pretty little plant is found primarily in the Northern Hemisphere.
You can identify fireweed by its purple flower and the unique
structure of the leaves’ veins; the veins are circular rather than
terminating on the edges of the leaves. Several Native American
tribes included fireweed in their diet. It’s best eaten young when
the leaves are tender. Mature fireweed plants have tough and bitter
tasting leaves. You can eat the stalk of the plant as well. The
flowers and seeds have a peppery taste. Fireweed is a great source of
vitamins A and C.
Monkey
Flower:
Use
the leaves raw in salads, or cooked in soups, mixed cooked greens, or
any dish that calls for cooking greens. Monkey flower is best
before the flowers appear, although the flowers are also edible and
are good in salads or as a garnish.
Prunella
vulgaris:
Edible
parts: the young leaves and stems can be eaten raw in salads; the
whole plant can be boiled and eaten as a potherb; and the aerial
parts of the plant can be powdered and brewed in a cold infusion to
make a tasty beverage. The plant contains vitamins A, C, and K, as
well as flavonoids and rutin. Medicinally, the whole plant is
poulticed onto wounds to promote healing. A mouthwash made from an
infusion of the whole plant can be used to treat sore throats, thrush
and gum infections. Internally, a tea can be used to treat diarrhea
and internal bleeding.
Shepherd’s
Purse:
Use
the young leaves raw in salads, or cooked in soups, in mixed cooked
greens or in any dish that calls for cooking greens. Although
the leaves may be eaten throughout the summer, the mature leaves have
a peppery taste that does not appeal to all palates.
Mallow
Malva neglecta:
Edible
parts:All parts of the mallow plant are edible — the leaves, the
stems, the flowers, the seeds, and the roots (it’s from the roots
that cousin Althaea gives the sap that was used for marshmallows).
Because it’s a weed that grows plentifully in neglected areas,
mallows have been used throughout history as a survival food during
times of crop failure or war. Mallows are high in mucilage, a sticky
substance that gives them a slightly slimy texture, similar to okra,
great in soups. Mallow has a nice pleasant nutty flavor. One of the
most popular uses of mallows is as a salad green.
Miner’s
Lettuce:
Parts:
Flowers, Leaves, Root. Leaves can be eaten raw or cooked. A fairly
bland flavor with a mucilaginous texture, it is quite nice in a
salad. The young leaves are best, older leaves can turn bitter
especially in the summer and if the plant is growing in a hot dry
position. Although individual leaves are fairly small, they are
produced in abundance and are easily picked. Stalks and flowers can
be eaten raw. A nice addition to the salad bowl. Bulb also can be
eaten raw. Although very small and labor-intensive to harvest, the
boiled and peeled root has the flavor of chestnuts. Another report
says that the plant has a fibrous root system so this report seems to
be erroneous.
Field
Pennycress:
Field
Pennycress is a weed found in most parts of the world. Its growing
season is early spring to late winter. You can eat the seeds and
leaves of field pennycress raw or boiled. The only caveat with field
pennycress is not to eat it if it’s growing in contaminated soil.
Pennycress is a hyperaccumulator of minerals, meaning it sucks up any
and all minerals around it. General rule is don’t eat pennycress if
it’s growing by the side of the road or is near a Superfund site.
Sweet
Rocket:
This
plant is often mistaken for Phlox. Phlox has five petals, Dame’s
Rocket has just four. The flowers, which resemble phlox, are deep
lavender, and sometimes pink to white. The plant is part of the
mustard family, which also includes radishes, broccoli, cabbage,
cauliflower, and, mustard. The plant and flowers are edible, but
fairly bitter. The flowers are attractive added to green salads. The
young leaves can also be added to your salad greens (for culinary
purposes, the leaves should be picked before the plant flowers). The
seed can also be sprouted and added to salads. NOTE: It is not the
same variety as the herb commonly called Rocket, which is used as a
green in salads.
Wild
Bee Balm:
Edible
parts: Leaves boiled for tea, used for seasoning, chewed raw or
dried; flowers edible. Wild bee balm tastes like oregano and mint.
The taste of bee balm is reminiscent of citrus with soft mingling of
lemon and orange. The red flowers have a minty flavor. Any place you
use oregano, you can use bee balm blossoms. The leaves and flower
petals can also be used in both fruit and regular salads. The leaves
taste like the main ingredient in Earl Gray Tea and can be used as a
substitute.
Mallow:
Mallow
is a soft tasty leaf good in fresh salads. Use it like lettuce and
other leafy greens. You may find the smaller younger leaves a tad
more tender. Toss in salads, or cook as you would other tender greens
like spinach. The larger leave can be used for stuffing, like grape
leaves. The seed pods are also edible while green and soft before
they harden, later turning woody and brown. I hear they can be cooked
like a vegetable. I’ve harvested and eaten them raw, and want to
try steaming, pickling, fermenting, and preparing like ocra.
Pineapple
Weed:
Edible
parts: Pineapple weed flowers and leaves are a tasty finger food
while hiking or toss in salads. Flowers can also be dried out and
crushed so that it can be used as flour. As with chamomile, pineapple
weed is very good as a tea. Native Americans used a leaf infusion
(medicine prepared by steeping flower or leaves in a liquid without
boiling) for stomach gas pains and as a laxative.
Milk
Thistle:
Milk
thistle is most commonly sought for its medicial properties of
preventing and repairing liver damage. But most parts of the plants
are also edible and tasty. Until recently, it was commonly cultivated
in Eurpoean vegetable gardens. Leaves can be de-spined for use as
salad greens or sautéed like collard greens; water-soaked stems
prepared like asparugus; roots boiled or baked; flower pods used like
artichoke heads.
Prickly
Pear Cactus:
Found
in the deserts of North America, the prickly pear cactus is a very
tasty and nutritional plant that can help you survive the next time
you’re stranded in the desert. The fruit of the prickly pear cactus
looks like a red or purplish pear. Hence the name. Before eating the
plant, carefully remove the small spines on the outer skin or else it
will feel like you’re swallowing a porcupine. You can also eat the
young stem of the prickly pear cactus. It’s best to boil the stems
before eating.
Mullein
Verbascum thapsus:
Edible
parts: Leaves and flowers. The flowers are fragrant and taste sweet,
the leaves are not fragrant and taste slightly bitter. This plant is
best known for a good cup of tea and can be consumed as a regular
beverage. Containing vitamins B2, B5, B12, and D, choline,
hesperidin, para amino benzoic acid, magnesium, and sulfur, but
mullein tea is primarily valued as an effective treatment for coughs
and lung disorders.
Wild
Grape Vine:
Edible
parts: Grapes and leaves. The ripe grape can be eaten but tastes
better after the first frost. Juicing the grapes or making wine is
most common. The leaves are also edible. A nutritional mediterranean
dish called “dolmades”, made from grape leaves are stuffed with
rice, meat and spices. The leaves can be blanched and frozen for use
throughout the winter months.
Yellow
Rocket:
It
tends to grow in damp places such as hedges, stream banks and
waysides and comes into flower from May to August. Yellow Rocket was
cultivated in England as an early salad vegetable. It makes a
wonderful salad green when young and the greens are also an excellent
vegetable if treated kindly. Lightly steam or gently sweat in butter
until just wilted. The unopened inflorescences can also be picked and
steamed like broccoli.
Purslane:
While
considered an obnoxious weed in the United States, purslane can
provide much needed vitamins and minerals in a wilderness survival
situation. Ghandi actually numbered purslane among his favorite
foods. It’s a small plant with smooth fat leaves that have a
refreshingly sour taste. Purslane grows from the beginning of summer
to the start of fall. You can eat purslane raw or boiled. If you’d
like to remove the sour taste, boil the leaves before eating.
Sheep
Sorrel:
Sheep
sorrel is native to Europe and Asia but has been naturalized in North
America. It’s a common weed in fields, grasslands, and woodlands.
It flourishes in highly acidic soil. Sheep sorrel has a tall, reddish
stem and can reach heights of 18 inches. Sheep sorrel contains
oxalates and shouldn’t be eaten in large quantities. You can eat
the leaves raw. They have a nice tart, almost lemony flavor.
Wild
Mustard:
Wild
mustard is found in the wild in many parts of the world. It blooms
between February and March. You can eat all parts of the
plant- seeds, flowers, and leaves.
Wood
Sorrel:
You’ll
find wood sorrel in all parts of the world; species diversity is
particularly rich in South America. Humans have used wood sorrel for
food and medicine for millennia. The Kiowa Indians chewed on
wood sorrel to alleviate thirst, and the Cherokee ate the
plant to cure mouth sores. The leaves are a great source of vitamin
C. The roots of the wood sorrel can be boiled. They’re starchy
and taste a bit like a potato.
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