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ForageFest 2015 is history but I’m sure the second annual fest is in the works for next year. The event was so large this year some activities had to be moved to a near by facility. Foraging. food and fun with specialities ranging from herbalism to mushrooms to the Calusa natives. As the sun was setting those still there gathered for a groups shot. I’m in the empty chair taking the picture.

ForageFest 2015 is history but I’m sure the second annual fest is in the works for next year. The event was so large this year some activities had to be moved to a nearby facility. There was foraging. food and fun with specialities ranging from herbalism to mushrooms to the Calusa natives. As the sun was setting those still sharing gathered for a group shot. I’m in the empty chair taking the picture.

Julia Morton, a University of Miami botany professor for some 40 years, was the foremost and last word in poisonous and edible plants in Florida. Andy Firk in the blue shirt sitting in the picture above, knew her personally and of her crusty personality. She confounded me with her book, “Plants Poisonous To People in Florida.” On page 79 there is a color photograph of the Lantana camara. On page 80 there are three long paragraph highlighting the plant’s description and toxicity. Then she writes: “Yet, a mild leaf ‘tea’ is a popular remedy, in the West Indies and elsewhere, for indigestion, colds, fever and rheumatism. The ripe fruit are eaten by natives wherever the plant grows.”

A Monarch butterfly on a Lantana blossom. Photo by Green Deane

A Monarch butterfly on a Lantana blossom. Photo by Green Deane

Toxic and edible. The green fruit is toxic, the metallic-blue ripe fruit is not. However there are some qualifiers: The quality of the ripe fruit can vary greatly. Sometimes they can be surprisingly sweet and with few seeds. Other times they can be seedy or have a huge seed and taste not foul but rotten when not over ripe. The plant also presents me with a little mystery.  Native Lantanas have multiple colored flowers, usually yellow, pink and orange. Botanists say once a yellow blossom is pollinated it begins to turn color thus the plant and the insect do not waste time and energy on an already pollinated blossom.  The Mahoe, a tree in the hibiscus group, has yellow flowers in the morning that turn red in the afternoon to — botanists say — attract different pollinators. Might the Mahoe be doing the same thing as the Lantana? Dropping off already pollinated blossoms?  Incidentally the Lantana is not alone in the use of blue. The Travelers’ Palm has metallic-blue seeds that are edible.

Weeds of Southern Turfgrasses

Weeds of Southern Turfgrasses

This is the time of year to find weeds of questionable parentage in the southern lawn They can be difficult to sort out. There is an inexpensive book that can help, Weeds of Southern Turfgrasses. Written by three professors, I think it was compiled for golf course owners so they could identify and expeditiously kill various weeds. However, most of the weeds in the $8 book are edible. The book can be bought in Florida at local county extension offices or it can be ordered through the University of Florida for around $20 including shipping. I don’t get a cut for recommending it. It’s just a good, inexpensive book you will  use. Here’s a link. Also, here is a list of most of the edible plants in the book. You can print it out then cut and paste the information on the relevant page. DO NOT buy this book from on-line book sellers. As the university press is a small press those sellers charge up to $80 for the same book. On Ebay they are trying to sell a used one for $29 with shipping.

A Beginners Guide To Edible Florida.

A Beginners Guide To Edible Florida.

While on the topic of books, a third one to be mentioned is “A Beginner’s Guide to Edible Florida” by writer Don Philpott and photographer Noreen Corle Engstrom. I’ve had both of them in my classes and their book is a nice addition to your backpack. Don’s a volunteer at Wekiva State Park in Apopka and has written about that as well. The park has one of those phenomena of nature that you take for granted if you live near one, a first magnitude spring. It’s comprised of two boils that produce 45 million gallons of water daily and is the headwaters for the Wekiva River. Because of the water pressure the larger boil has never been explored. Don and Noreen’s book is available on Amazon and sells for about $16 new. While the title says “Edible Florida” the book is applicable to the southeastern United States and contains information on over 100 species.

Ground Cherries three to four weeks from ripening. Photo by Green Deane

Ground Cherries three to four weeks from ripening. Photo by Green Deane

Not only was I at the ForageFest 2015 this past Saturday but Sunday I also had a foraging class in Port Charlotte. Our three salty edibles were easy to find, Sea Purslane, Beach Carpet, and the seasonal Seablite. Seablite is just coming into full seasons should it should be around for a month or two.  We did find some Elderberries, the ever-present Amaranth, a Norfolk Pine cone that fell too soon, and some fruiting ground cherries, a few weeks from being ripe. Right now the husks are green. We want them to be golden because that’s went the fruit inside is very sweet. We also went looking for some Winged Yams but they are not quite up yet but we did find some dreaded Air Potato Yams (they do have edible roots as well but have to be boiled twice.)

This toxic plant is our native Nicker Bean. Photo by Space Coast Nature.

This toxic plant is our native Nicker Bean. Photo by Space Coast Nature.

Among the non-edibles spotted is the Nicker Bean, a well-armed native climbing shrub that likes to grow near brackish water. Incidentally there is a yellow Nicker Bean as well. A chemical called Bonducin is extracted from the seeds or bark and is used to treat fever (hence the nickname “poor man’s quinine.”) Crushed seeds are used to make an infusion to treat hemorrhoids, kidney issues, venereal disease, high blood pressure and diabetes. The seeds suppress urinary sugar but do not affect blood sugar. Roasted seeds have been used as a diuretic to treat edema particularly of the heart or kidneys. Young leaves have been eaten for menstrual issues, to expel worms, and as a poultice to treat toothaches. The crushed roasted seeds have been used to make a coffee substitute. Unroasted seeds can be very toxic. It’s a medicinal plant, not an edible. Consult an herbalist should you have any thoughts about the plant beyond looking at it. Personally I do not consider it an edible in any way.

A tessellated Green Deane teaching a foraging class. Photo by Kelly Fagan.

A tessellated Green Deane teaching a foraging class. Photo by Kelly Fagan.

My upcoming foraging classes stretch from Sarasota to Jacksonville:

Saturday, April 11th, Red Bug Slough Preserve, 5200 Beneva Road, Sarasota, FL, 34233, 9 a.m.

Sunday, April 12th, Mead Garden, 1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789. 9 a.m.

Saturday, April 18th, Spruce Creek Park, 6250 Ridgewood Ave. Port Orange, FL, 32127, 9 a.m.

Sunday, April 19th, Florida State College, south campus, 11901 Beach Blvd., Jacksonville, FL, 32246, 9 a.m.

To learn more about classes, go here. 

Chat about foraging all year on the Green Deane Forum

Chat about foraging all year on the Green Deane Forum

Need to know a wild tea? Looking for a foraging reference? Maybe you have a UFO, an Unidentified Flowering Object, you want identified. On the Green Deane Forum we chat about foraging all year long. And it’s not just about warm-weather plants or just North American flora. Many nations share common weeds so there’s a lot to talk about. There’s also more than weeds. The reference section has information for foraging around the world. There are articles on food preservation, and forgotten skills from making bows to fermenting food. Recent topics include Bee Swarms, To Cook is Human, Can I get Some Suggestions, Making Butter, Heliculture, Tincture? What Kind of Weeds? Sassafras, Cherry Bark Tea, Biting Bugs, Firebow Tinder, Sheep Sorrel, Brown Bear and Greens, Homemade Sauerkraut, Coconut Oil, Solanum sisymbrifolium seeds, Lost resource, Sprouting Palm Seeds, Plant Sources and What Do You See #21. You can join the forum by clicking on the button on the upper right hand side of this page.

What Do You See #22. This week’s WDYS is easy and difficult. There are three edible species, one even northerners should recognize, one southerners should see, and then a nutritional, smelly one. No, grass isn’t one of the answers. 

What Do You See #22, with three edible species.

What Do You See #22, with three edible species.

 

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Salting down sliced Nuphar lutea root. Photo by Green Deane

Salting down sliced Nuphar lutea root. Photo by Green Deane

Time for plan B… Well, actually somewhere around Plan E or F. Above you see a root of the Nuphar luteola/lutea.  If you’ve ever taken one of my foraging classes you have heard me rant about this plant and foraging books. All the books that mention the root say it is edible. I’ve never been about to make it palatable despite years of trying. It’s extremely bitter which had led me to believe writers who say it is edible have never tired it. I know two writers who excluded from their books because they had the same experience as me. It might be time to reassess the root.

Yellow Pond Lilies are extremely common but rarely eaten. Photo By Green Deane

Yellow Pond Lilies are extremely common but rarely eaten. Photo By Green Deane

First the historical perspective: Nowhere else on earth was a plant in this genus reported as edible except in North America. But that is a fuzzy fact for two reasons. The first is there were clearly different species. Botanists were in denial of that reality for centuries. The second is we have one centuries-old report that the natives ate the root after “long boiling” and that it tasted like sheep’s liver. Sheep’s liver would be a fantastic improvement over what it tastes like naturally. So, we aren’t quite sure which Nuphar root the native were cooking up nor beyond boiling what they might have done to it. Complicating the issue is the fact that what was once a bunch of variations within one species is now many species with here-today gone-tomorrow scientific names. It is possible there was a Nuphar luteola/lutea in Maine that was same in name in Florida and Oregon but was a different species and edible. That’s iffy because no matter what you call the plant — in North America or Europe — no one actually seems to eat it though one can find it everywhere… assuming the “it” is the same species. It is one of the most common uncommonly eaten edibles.

The red-ringed seed pod does produce edible seeds after proper preparation. Photo by Green Deane

The red-ringed seed pod does produce edible seeds after proper preparation. Photo by Green Deane

Starting in 2002 and up until I moved last fall I grew N. luteola/lutea in my backyard in a water-controlled pond. I got the starter plant from the Wekiva River. It had a wholesome life and was not sitting in tannic water all the time. As I say in my classes I tried everything I could think of over the years to make the root edible. I diced and soaked it for a week, changing the water as one does with acorns to reduce the acid load. I did the same for a month, changing the water daily. I simmered it for a week. Yes, a full week. I salted it. I dried it. I fried it. I baked it in the sun ending up with tough, bitter styrofoam-like lavender plugs.  Nothing worked which is a bit frustrating because it has the feel of eggplant and is easy to work with. The root looks like it should be edible.  As I jokingly have said in my classes for many years I tried everything but fermenting.

Cauliflower with curry lacto-fermenting. Photo by Green Deane

Cauliflower with curry lacto-fermenting. Photo by Green Deane

Fermenting… As of late I have been delving into lacto-fermenting vegetables. There are reports that such fermenting can reduce the tannic acid load of some foods. Maybe the joke was closer to the truth than I knew. What if they boiled long-fermented roots? Perhaps there was a selection process for the root, or they were fermented someway before cooking that the original reporter was not aware of. And while I don’t want this to sound like a “dumb” moment the edible seeds are bitter, too. But, letting the seed soak for three weeks in water you don’t change — while the pods rot — makes them edible. Perhaps a solution was always there for the root: fermenting them.  It’s on my list of things to do.

Simpson Stoppers have three types of leaves. Photo by Green Deane

Simpson Stoppers have three types of leaves. Photo by Green Deane

The Simpson Stopper is an odd shrub. It’s had over two dozen names because botanists can’t quite figure out just where it fits in the shrub world. It’s also a native and an up-and-coming landscape plant. Another odd thing about the multi-named shrub in that it has three types of leaves. In the picture to the left you can see three leaf tips; dimpled, round and pointed. These can be found on the same shrub.The leaf of the Simpson Stopper  is also covered with dots. Under a #10 loop the upper surface of the leaf looks like it is covered with tiny drops of water (the dots.) The underside of the leaf is often decked out in what appears to be very tiny green dots, sometimes blackish dots. If you hold the leaf to the light and use a loop you will see gold dots. The leaves can also curl under at the edge.

Simpson Stoppers are now being used as hedge plants. Photo by Green Deane

Ripe Stoppers fruit. Photo by Green Deane

Because of the effort to use more native plants the Stopper is seen more now than it used to be. Most landscaping locally includes one and they are also used for hedges. The orange to red fruit is often in pairs and has a little four-sided round pucker at the end (kind of like a little folded-in blueberry crown made of four triangles.) The closely related Syzigums have a wrinkled cross at the end of the fruit. The Stopper fruit has one or two bean-shaped seeds, two being more common, often stuck together. The flavor of the very ripe fruit is close to marmalade or sweet orange rind. Because of taste the seeds are not edible. They taste like unripened Surinam Cherries, which the Stopper is closely related to.  They are blossoming now. 

Goat on the Photo by Green Deane

Goat on the Rodopos Peninsula. Photo by Green Deane

Foraging Instructors: What many people don’t know is EatTheWeeds is also the location of the oldest and most comprehensive list of foraging instructors in the world on the internet. While most of the teachers are in North America Europe is well represented. The beginning of the list started on paper in the early 90s. Since 2008 it has been on EatTheWeeds and greatly expanded to now well over 100 teachers. Continuing efforts are made to keep the list’s information contemporary. If you know of any updates please let me know. To find the list type Foraging Instructors in the search window or find a drop down menu on the home page under the word Foraging at the top of the page. As for the goat… When for various reasons I don’t have a picture of the instructor I substitute one of a foraging goat from a peninsula in Crete. The area there is quite barren and even the tops of occasional trees are free foraging game. (Because the page has some persistent formatting issues that I think are more related to Word Press than me I save up instructor additions to the list for a one-evening battle with the computer every few months. If you have been waiting to be listed, my apologies. I should be up-to-date.)

The odd-shaped air potatoes of the Dioscorea alata.

The odd-shaped air potatoes of the Dioscorea alata.

This past week I held foraging classes in Cassadaga and Ocala. There is perhaps no better time locally to be looking for wild edibles. The weather has not turned summer hot and there’s a lot to be found. It’s much easier to go looking for some of the 7% edible species than trying to identify the 93% that aren’t edible. Of particular interest was finding a mixture of last winter’s plants with the beginning of summer species. Ending their seasonal run is Pellitory and Chickweed. At blossoming stage we found Heart Leaf Sorrel and Wild Garlic both quite easy to spot. In Cassadaga we saw a banana blossoming and Kudzu was sending out its controversial shoots. We even dug up a Florida Betony root. It is still too early to find wild yam vines. They’ll wait another two to six weeks depending upon the weather before sprouting. But, you can find their general location by looking for their odd “air potatoes” hanging off shrubs and trees. We don’t eat the “air potatoes” but we use them to find and identify the tasty root.

A tessellated Green Deane teaching a foraging class. Photo by Kelly Fagan.

A tessellated Green Deane teaching a foraging class. Photo by Kelly Fagan.

My Foraging Class Schedule:

Sunday, April 5th, Bayshore Live Oak Park, 23000 Bayshore Rd., Port Charlotte, FL 33980, 9 a.m.

Saturday, April 11th, Red Bug Slough Preserve, 5200 Beneva Road, Sarasota, FL, 34233, 9 a.m. 

Sunday, April 12th, Mead Garden, 1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789. 9 a.m.

Saturday, April 18th, Spruce Creek Park, 6250 Ridgewood Ave. Port Orange, 32127, 9 a.m.

Sunday, April 19th, Florida State College, south campus, 11901 Beach Blvd., Jacksonville, FL, 32246, 9 a.m.  To

To learn more about classes, go here. 

Chat about foraging all year on the Green Deane Forum

Chat about foraging all year on the Green Deane Forum

On the Green Deane Forum we chat about foraging all year long. And it’s not just about warm-weather plants or just North American flora. Many nations share common weeds so there’s a lot to talk about. There’s also more than weeds. The reference section has information for foraging around the world. There are articles on food preservation, and forgotten skills from making bows to fermenting food. Recent topics include Heliculture, Tincture? What Kind of Weeds? Sassafras, Cherry Bark Tea, Biting Bugs, Firebow Tinder, Sheep Sorrel, Brown Bear and Greens, Homemade Sauerkraut, Coconut Oil, Solanum sisymbrifolium seeds, Lost resource  Armadillos and Leprosy, Sprouting Palm Seeds, Plant Sources for Camphor, and What Do You See #20. You can join the forum but clicking on the button on the upper right hand side of this page.

What Do You See #21. This week it is easy. There are two edible species in the picture. What are they? Last week the edibles were Poor Man’s Pepper Grass, Sow Thistle, and Henbit. DLJ_0067

 

 

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Andy Firk, of Bamboon Grove, Arcadia, FL., lead an afternoon plant walk at the 2015 Florida Herbal COnference. Photo by Green Deane

Andy Firk, of Bamboon Grove, Arcadia, FL., leads an afternoon plant walk at the 2015 Florida Herbal Conference. Photo by Green Deane

Amongst Turpentine Pines the 2015 annual Florida Herbal Conference made educational history. Well over 500 students — a sold out attendance with a waiting list — studied a wide variety of topics from some two dozen teachers. The weather cooperated reasonably being neither too cold nor too wet. Last year it was chilly, more on that in a moment. Every year the conference had grown in attendance and variety and this year was no exceptions with dozens of topics for the herbalism student to choose from. As in previous years I led three early-morning  plant walks. Some seasonal difference were interesting.

The blossoming tips of the Western Tasny Mustard. Photo by Green Deane

Blossoming tips of the Western Tansy Mustard. Photo by Green Deane

Last year at the same location the Western Tansy Mustard was sparse. The conference was a few days earlier and it was a little colder then.  This year the Western Tansy Mustard was in profusion. Last year there was plenty of Pellitory, this year it was limited. I don’t recall many Smilax tips last year but this year they were easy to find. Also last year the tart Heartleaf Sorrel was few and far, this year many were at the peak of harvesting. Rain had brought out many mushrooms. There was also well-developed stinging nettles nearby — the best I’ve seen locally — and late-season henbit was a hit. It goes to show a few days, a few degrees either way, and a bit of rain can make a big difference in plant appearance and numbers.

The showy tops of the Heart-Leaf Sorrel. Photo by Green Deane

The showy tops of the Heart-Leaf Sorrel. Photo by Green Deane

We also learned that next year one of the world’s leading experts in mushrooms, if not the leading expert in that particular field, will be the guest speaker, Paul Stamets. That will firmly put the Florida Herbal Conference on the attendance map of conferences not to miss, not only in the south and United States but the world. The conference will sell-out quickly. It would be difficult to find anyone more involved than Stamets in exploring the use of fungi from medicine to food to industry, definitely cutting edge. The point is put the conference on your calendar for next year, plan to attend, and sign up as soon as possible. I enjoy the conferences because even though I am teaching there I always learn several somethings interesting and useful.

Pine with the pitch-collecting hardware still attached

Pine with the pitch-collecting hardware still attached

About the Turpentine Pines…. At the camp ground there are many pines that were tapped for pitch to make turpentine. Most of this was done before WWII. It’s not unusual in Florida to find an old-style turpentine pine now and then but there are many at the camp. Usually Slash Pine,  Pinus elliotti, you can identify pines used for turpentine by a long vertical breach in the bark starting near ground level. That’s where buckets were fixed to collect pine pitch. The tree tries to heal the wound with pitch thus on most of the trees you can also see dead wood. This is one reason why that method of collecting pitch was discontinued for less invasive techniques… is this a good time to mention that during the Depression and Prohibition pine pitch was used to flavor gin because customary botanicals were either too expensive or unavailable? Go to the conference next year and see the Turpentine Pines in person.

Fruiting Mulberry in Blossom. Photo by Green Deane

Fruiting Mulberry in Blossom.

Anyone who has owned a mulberry tree knows they have a heavy fruiting season. The soft mast can be hard to keep up with for a week or two but you end up with pounds of delicious fruit. If that mulberry happens to overhang a driveway or sidewalk that passageway will be temporarily purple from that fallen fruit, depending on the species. Seasonal rains usually take care of such stains. Mulberries were welcomed in the southwest United States particularly right after WWII because they are well-adapted to the arid environment and expanding cities needed landscaping. But the fruit stain did not wash off well in dry areas. What to do? Don’t worry: Government came to the rescue. Local governments banned low-pollinating fruiting mulberries in favor of non-fruiting ones such as the varieties used to feed silk worms. Those, however, are heavily pollinators, far more so than the fruiting varieties. The result of that was a dramatic increase in allergens in the southwest. What to do? Don’t worry: Government came to the rescue again:

Ripening Mulberries

Ripening Mulberries

They banned all mulberries outright, fruiting and pollinating. The solution to the non-problem — left over mulberries  — lead to the problem of allergies leading to bans of all trees in many cities such as El Paso, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Tucson, Las Cruces and Alburquerque.  It’s difficult to think a government finds banning food a solution. That’s a complex and expensive non-solution to a pseudo-problem that could have been solved by simpler means …. eating the weeds, or in this case the fruit. This is also an excellent example why government should be as small and powerless as possible.  What next? Ban peanuts? Don’t laugh because there’s more to the story.

An olive tree reported to be over 10,000 years old, between Sparta and Gythio Greece. Photo by Green Deane

An olive tree reported to be over 1,000 years old, between Sparta and Gythio Greece. Photo by Green Deane

In the southwest three species get the brunt of the blame for allergies, Mulberries, Olives and Bermuda Grass. The latter is impossible to get rid of. Mulberries live a few decades so their numbers can decrease. Olive trees can live 500 years or more. But it is rare for someone with allergies to be allergic to only three things. The menu that makes people sniffle is usually much larger.  And there is a genetic component in that allergies can run in the family. For sixty years doctors have been telling patients with allergies to move to the southwest because prior to WWII it was not a high allergen area. But now  some of the cities mentioned above have allergy counts higher than eastern cities and here’s the kicker: People with allergies have been having children with allergies. The southwest is the region of the United States in which the percentage of the population with allergies is growing … and if they all vote government could come to the rescue a third time making things like peanuts illegal. The afflicted could create a political action committee. ACHOO would be a good name… hmmm… the Allergy Coalition Heading Ordinance Objectives.

A tessellated Green Deane teaching a foraging class. Photo by Kelly Fagan.

A tessellated Green Deane teaching a foraging class. Photo by Kelly Fagan.

Foraging classes: Please note the class at Wickham Park needs to be changed. Saturday March 7th, Wekiva State Park, 1800 Wekiwa Circle, Apopka, Florida 32712. 9 a.m. Sunday, March 8th, John Chestnut State Park: 2200 East Lake Road, Palm Harbor, FL 34685, 9 a.m. Saturday, March 21st TBA  Because of an event at Wickham Park this class will either have to be move or rescheduled.TBA.  Sunday, March 22nd, Dreher Park, 1200 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 33405. 9 a.m. Sunday, April 5th, Bayshore Live Oak Park, 23000 Bayshore Rd., Port Charlotte, FL 33980, 9 a.m. Also note on April 4th I will be teaching at an annual event at Bamboo Grove in Arcadia Florida.

Green Deane Forum

Green Deane Forum

Depending on where you live foraging can be slow this time of year. But the off-season can also be a time to study up on various plants and share experiences. On the Green Deane Forum we chat about foraging all year long. And it’s not just about warm-weather plants or just North American flora. Many nations share common weeds so there’s a lot to talk about. Recent topics include Armadillos and Leprosy, My Relatives, Tofu Intake and Cognition,  Sprouting Palm Seeds, Snowfall In Florida, Plant Sources for Camphor, How California Got to Where It Is, Fire Roll, Earth A New Wild Water, Lightroom 5,  Yellowhorn (Xanthoceras sorbifolium) and What Do You See #17.

Wild peppers grow in many areas of Central and North America. The vary greatly and the exact species above is debatable. To read more about wild peppers go here. Photo by Green Deane

Wild peppers grow in many areas of Central and North America.  Photo by Green Deane

Florida natives used the ending -sasse or -sassa a lot. It means a place or a location. Thonotosassa, a city northeast of Tampa, means a place to find good flint.  Homosassa, a town and spring north of Tampa, can mean two things: River of Fishes, or, Pepper Ridge. Springs are not known for their fishes — at least near them — because of the low oxygen content of the water so we’ll go with Pepper Ridge. Wild Peppers, or Bird Peppers, are naive to much of North America and then southward into Central American and beyond. Usually trending towards spicy they are a delightful find as you rummage about the forest and field.  Where I first noticed them was years ago at Turtle Mound, which is an ancient garbage heap a few miles south of Daytona Beach. When the path splits near the top look ahead and down you should see a lot of Bird Peppers (in season which is a few months from now though dried ones are available now.) Turtle Mound, about 80 feet high, also manages to keep a year-round crop of papaya growing on it. They also don’t seem to be bothered much by insects there either.

What Do You See? Last week the major species in WDYS #17 was Poor Man’s Peppergrass, Spanish Needles and the cactus against the fence, Nopales. You can revisit the picture on the Green Deane Forum on the board What Do You See. All three can be eaten cooked and raw. In this week’s picture, What Do You See #18 there are seven edible species, four are easy to find. The answer is on the Green Deane Forum and will be published here next week.

What Do You See #18. Photo by Green Deane

What Do You See #18. Photo by Green Deane

 

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Among the many identifying characteristic of the Eastern Redbud is that the branch bends slightly at every node. Photo by Green Deane

Among the many identifying characteristic of the Eastern Redbud is that its branches bend slightly at every node. Photo by Green Deane

There’s a common sight locally this time of year: Trees with no leaves covered with either small pink blossoms or white blossoms. First the pink.

Eastern Redbud blossoms are small. Photo by Green Deane

Eastern Redbud blossoms are small. Photo by Green Deane

The Eastern Redbud, Cercis canadensisputs on a colorful show of pink blossoms every spring. If the blossoms are pink why is it called a Redbud? Because the buds are red but they produce pink flowers.  The flowers, young heart-shaped leaves, and young pea pods are edible. The Redbud is both a native understory tree and planted in landscaping. Its blossoms have the classic petal arrangement of wings and keels, so typical of the Pea Family. It’s important to note the blossoms are small, half-inch to an inch or so. That has to be mentioned because there is an ornamental tree — Tabebuia heterophylla — also planted locally that has pink blossoms and no usually leaves in the spring. But those blossoms are big, 2.5 to 3.5 inches long. Also called the Pink Trumpet Tree it is very showy whereas the Redbud is modest. To read more about the Redbud go here. 

A Chickasaw Plum in it's leafless spring glory. Photo by Green Deane

A Chickasaw Plum in its leafless spring glory. Photo by Green Deane

Trees with white blossoms this time of year, and no leaves, tend to be plums among them the Chickasaw Plum and the Flatwood Plum. Of the two we want to find the Chickasaw Plum once it leaves out and starts to fruit. There is also an American Plum but ones does not come across that species too often here. I planted a Chickasaw Plums in my yard and within a few years had a large thicket of them, all producing. Like Mulberries, they love to grow and they taste good, too. It’s easy to tell the Chickasaw Plum once it leaves out so some patience is required.  To learn how to identify the Chickasaw Plum click here.

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The stripped “limequat” created itself.

I have a dear friend who is what we would call an English Garden gardener. He doesn’t grow plants for food. Plants are colors and textures with which he paints and sculpts his yard.  It helps to know what the gardener, or the creator of a park, has or had in mind. In some parks toxic plants are preferred, Oleanders for example, but food-bearing plants are not. That’s because lawyers advising governmental agencies are afraid someone will eat some fruit or nut and get sick. Yeah, it’s irrational that toxic plants are okay and edible ones are not but that’s reality. It is one of the problems of letting the legal mindset dictate social values when there are other valid ways of thinking, such as historical or moral. It would seem reasonable to me that we practice the opposite in public parks, select food-bearing plants and phase out the toxic. Thus when I see a strange tree (or herbaceous plant)  in a park my first thought is “toxic or edible?” I have a hard time thinking of a true gardener planting a toxic tree in a public park. An English Garden gardener might but not a food gardener.

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Note the striped citrus fruit.

So I had no idea what this tree was when I saw it in a public park in Winter Park. I was wondering who won, the lawyer or the gardener. It has a bit of an exotic look to it, and the striping on the fruit was strange as well. It looked like something that came from far away, maybe the other side of the world. Fortunately someone on a facebook page knew what it was. It’s a Fortunella margarita, which is a self-creating limequat. It came from a small twig seen on a 21-year-old Nagami Kumquat in Leesburg FL in 1986. For the record  that is 59 miles away, not the other side of  the earth (though Kumquats are from Southeast Asia.) The variegated mutation was spontaneous. You can read more about it here.

Foraging Classes: Saturday March 7th, Wekiva State Park, 1800 Wekiwa Circle, Apopka, Florida 32712. 9 a.m. Meet at the Sand Lake Parking Lot. Sunday, March 8th, John Chestnut State Park: 2200 East Lake Road, Palm Harbor, FL 34685, 9 a.m. Saturday, March 21st Wickham Park: 2500 Parkway Drive, Melbourne, FL 32935-2335., 9.a.m. Sunday March 22nd, Dreher Park, 1200 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 33405. 9 a.m. Sunday, April 5th, Bayshore Live Oak Park, 23000 Bayshore Rd., Port Charlotte, FL 33980, 9 a.m. For more information or to sign up for a class go here.

Green Mulberries which should be ripe around April Fools' Day. Photo by Green Deane

Green Mulberries which should be ripe around April Fools’ Day. Photo by Green Deane

Foraging seasons don’t end abruptly unless there is a sudden hard freeze or the like. I can still find chickweed but most of it has blossomed and is in the process of seeding. Pellitory is getting old and tough, kind of like this writer. Sow thistles are blossoming as well along with sorrel. Spring isn’t here yet but it is close. Our last average frost date is Valentine’s Day. We should have another bout of cold weather during the first full week in March, the next full moon, and from then on the weather should, for the most part, get warmer. Yesterday was a bit too warm at 81 F. This however, encourages that which must happen, such as the blossoming of the Mulberries. Interestingly while the amount of spring time rain can affect fruit and nut production there is a more significant indicator of yield. It is can the bees fly on the critical days the plants need pollinating. To read about Mulberries, go here. 

Florida Herbal Conference 2015

Florida Herbal Conference 2015

The sold-out Florida Herbal Conference starts in three days however you can check for any cancellations. I’ve taught edible plants there for the last three years and will be there again this year. It’s a must for all southern herbalists and well as those northern ones who want to escape freezing cold and study their craft in the dead of winter. It always has interesting speakers and great classes. While there is some cross over between Earthskills and Herbalism the conferences are sufficiently different to justify attending both. I get the early morning specials Saturday and Sunday, 7 and 9 a.m. See you bright and early. And unlike previous years, the forecast is to be moderately warm but perhaps a little windy.

Green Deane Forum

Green Deane Forum

In nearly every class and daily on-line I am asked if I can identify a plant if a picture is sent to me. I say I will try and also suggest the sender join the Green Deane Forum. There’s a UFO page there, Unidentified Flowering Objects. On the forum we chat about foraging — and other topics — every day along with techniques to harvest and use the bounty you have found. And it’s not just about Florida or the southeast. There are members from all around North America and the world. The link to join is on this page just to the right of this article. Recent topics include What Do You See #17, Natural Eater Website, Looking Forward To Maple Bloom Tea, Dragon Pearls, Free Movie of Medicinal Plants, Mexican Poppy, Hailing From Alabama, Golden Rod’s Edible? Fire Roll, Wahoo Bark, Eating Bitter Foods, Witches Butter, Braiding Natural Cordage, Smilax-Asparagus alternative, Loquats Pie and Grappa.

What do you see? There are at least three different edible species in this photo. The answer will be here next week, or you can read it on the Green Deane Forum.

What do you see #17

What do you see #17

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Poor Man's Pepper Grass is quite common now. If the leaves were larger and the seeds heart-shaped it could be Shepherd's purse, also edible. Photo by Green Deane

Poor Man’s Pepper Grass is quite common now. If the leaves were larger and the seeds heart-shaped it could be Shepherd’s purse, also edible. Photo by Green Deane

Wild Geraniums are barely edible and are usually medicinal. Photo by Green Deane

Wild Geraniums are barely edible and are usually employed medicinal. Photo by Green Deane

Near my dentist’s office there is a dry drainage ditch. As it is on a hill it’s there to collect and hold rainwater to slow down erosion. Shaped like a right angle, it is perhaps 400 feet long in total. As I was early yesterday for my scheduled torture I went wandering down the ditch.  Food is where the water is and where the rain carries seeds. There was Wild Geraniums — barely edible — lots Sheep’s Sorrel, numerous Common Sow Thistle, a mother load of Western Tansy Mustard — there isn’t an Eastern Tansy Mustard — Spanish Needles, Plantains, a young Paper Mulberry — no adult in sight — pods from the wrong kind of ear tree, Poor Man’s Pepper Grass — pictured above — and Pellitory. While it is the right time of year and it was the right place it does demonstrate you don’t have to travel to a distant state park to find forgable food.

pix-adam-and-eve-funny-picturesIt’s that strange time of year in Florida. Will it be 38 tomorrow or 83? And if we’re going from one temperature to the other — the direction is not too relevant — it will probably rain. Now days we can look at the forecast and stay inside. We have food in the pantry. In the past, though, if you didn’t forage you didn’t eat. Only weather that was worse than your hunger kept you from foraging. We have the luxuries of extra food and not having to go out in bad weather… which reminds me of Eastport, Maine, not far from where I grew up.  In the last 20 days it’s had 99 inches of snow. Might as well get one more dusting and call it 100. Once when I was in school we had a storm that snowed us in for three days. That was the year you could jump off the roof into the snow and not bottom out. Another time an ice storm covered the snow so thick that you could skate for miles across the fields on the snow and not break through. Once it was so cold the schools had to shut down for the week. They couldn’t keep them warm.  That is weather you don’t forage in. But here in Florida my foraging classes are only called off because of accident, injury or hurricanes. My upcoming schedule:

Foraging Classes: Sunday, February 22nd, Mead Garden, 1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789. 9 a.m.  March 7th, Wekiva State Park, 1800 Wekiwa Circle, Apopka, Florida 32712.   9 a.m., March 8th, John Chestnut State Park: 2200 East Lake Road, Palm Harbor, FL 34685, 9 a.m. March 21st Wickham Park: 2500 Parkway Drive, Melbourne, FL 32935-2335., 9.a.m.  March 22nd, Dreher Park 1200 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 33405.  9 a.m. April 5th, Bayshore Live Oak Park, 23000 Bayshore Rd., Port Charlotte, FL 33980, 9 a.m. For more information or to sign up for a class go here.

The following guest article is by Mike Conroy.

Of Bees, Butterflies, and Moths

Honey bee about to land on a Date Palm blossom. Photo by Green Deane

Honey bee about to land on a Date Palm blossom. Photo by Green Deane

What, you might ask, do bees, butterflies, and moths have to do with foraging? Well, nothing, and everything. You see, many plants require pollinators in order to reproduce, and reproduction is everything to foraging. Without reproduction, we would have anything to forage.  Bees, butterflies, and moths (and wind, rain, and bats) are all pollinators. This includes both the honey bee, which was imported from the “Old World” European countries, as well as native bees, such as the bumble bee. And, since these insects pollinate our edibles, they deserve a mention in our newsletter.

Fritalaries ae a common southern butterfly. Photo by Green Deane

Fritalaries are a common southern Passionflower vines.

We are all keenly aware and welcoming of the varied and colorful butterfly in our communities, our yards, and our gardens. They don’t bite and they don’t sting. They are pleasantly colorful and, in our hurried lives, lend a thought to a slower life drifting on the currents of time. And while they do pollinate, they are not as efficient as bees. Moths are often considered a nocturnal (night time) traveler, seldom seen during the day. But did you know that some moths are day fliers? And they, too, are pollinators, regardless of their time to be up. While butterflies typically, but not always, seek out brightly colored red, yellow, orange, purple, and etc. flowers with mild sweet smells, moths tend toward less colorful flowers with stronger, sweet, odors. And, like butterflies, are not good pollinators of our favorite plants.

Moths are often smaller than butterflies and like the night. Photo by Green Deane

Moths are often smaller than butterflies and like the night. Photo by Green Deane

Bees are defined as being insects with, shall we say, fuzzy hairs on their bodies. They have been around for some 65 to 120 million years. And they have been a major pollinator for most, if not all, of their existence. During this time, some plants have come to rely on bees as their only source for pollination, and thus for their existence. One of our favorite nuts, the almond (though for you who are in the know, the almond is not really a nut), comes to mind. We rely, whether we know it or not, on bees to provide our food. It is estimated that 4 out of every 5 foods we eat, at some point, require pollination by bees.

A bat pollenating a banana. They also visit kapok trees. Photo by Merlin Tuttle.

A bat pollinating a banana. They also visit kapok trees. Photo by Merlin Tuttle.

So why do people kill bees? Well, they sting, of course. And who, besides the beekeeper, ignores a stinging insect? But, did you know that less than 1 of every 4 “bee stings” is really a bee sting? A study in a California emergency room found that over 3/4 of all bee stings are really wasp and hornet stings. Further, bees, and especially honey bees, do not like to sting. It is their last – literally last – resort. With the exception of the queen bee, a bee dies shortly after stinging because it rips its stinger out of its body when it pulls away, leaving the stinger in you. Queen bees are the only bee that can sting multiple times, and they are seldom found outside the beehive. By the way, bee drones – the male bee – do not even have a stinger. And there are a few stingless bees to boot. So why do bees sting if they are going to die anyway? The most common reason is they are protecting their home, the beehive. But, they will sting if you step on them or otherwise threaten their life, as in swatting at them. Other triggers for stings are certain perfumes and scents. While many question why these perfumes cause the sting response, personally, I suspect that some of the “flavors” of the perfumes mimic certain chemicals in the scent of a skunk – a raider of beehives.

Bumble bee landing on a Spiderwort. Phot by Green Deane

Bumble bee landing on a Spiderwort. Photo by Green Deane

Foraging bees, those you see in your yard or on flowers, are usually too busy collecting nectar and pollen to think about stinging. So next time you see a bee, even if it is crawling on you, it is probably better to say hi and calmly let it alone. It will soon leave without even saying goodbye. Oh, and one other interesting thing about bees; while they won’t remember you later, they have great facial recognition. In other words, they can tell one person from another, just on their facial features.

Now, back to foraging. Honey has been foraged for thousands of years by humans. But, unless you are willing to suffer a multitude of stings, this is best left to the experts. Still, no conversation about bees would be complete without a bit on honey.

Many people like to chew the waxy comb once the raw honey is extracted.

Many people like to chew the waxy comb once the raw honey is extracted.

Honey, as you buy it from the grocer, is usually not in its natural, raw state. It is often heated, sometimes pasteurized, and on a rare occasion, is adulterated with products like high fructose corn syrup. Usually, with the exception of adulteration, this is done to present the honey in a marketable fashion, meaning in its liquid form – people don’t like to buy crystallized honey; or in the case of pasteurization, to make it safe for human consumption. By heating honey, it limits the crystallization of the honey, something that is a normal process in honey. Heating also alters some of the sugars found in honey, and additionally destroys some of the enzymes contained in honey. Many of these enzymes aid in the digestive process of honey, but are not required to be present as your body produces these enzymes. So, if you want honey as it is found in the beehive, you must either find honey labeled “raw”, or purchase it from a known source.

One thing is certain though, without bees, butterflies, and moths, our world of greens would be vastly different. When you see them, give pause in wonderment to the intricate ways the world around us works.

Florida Herbal Conference 2015

Florida Herbal Conference 2015

The Florida Herbal Conference is our next big event, February 27th to March 1st. I’ve taught edible plants there for the last three years and will be there again this year. It’s a must for all southern herbalists and well as those northern ones who want to escape freezing cold and study their craft in the dead of winter. It always has interesting speakers and great classes. While there is some cross over between Earthskills and Herbalism the conferences are sufficiently different to justify attending both. For more information and to register go here.

Green Deane Forum

Green Deane Forum

In nearly every class and daily on-line I am asked if I can identify a plant if a picture is sent to me. I say I will try and also suggest the sender join the Green Deane Forum.  There’s  a UFO page there, Unidentified Flowering Objects. On the forum we chat about foraging — and other topics — every day along with techniques to harvest and use the bounty you have found. And it’s not just about Florida or the southeast. There are members from all around North America and the world. The link to join is on this page just to the right of this article. You do have to pick a screen name and the forum let members private message each other. There are only three rules: Keep it civil, keep it clean, and try to avoid mentioning Wikipedia (which Green Deane has a significant dislike for.) Recent topics include Golden Rod’s Edible? Fire Roll, Wahoo Bark, Eating Bitter Foods, Witches Butter, Braiding Natural Cordage, Smilax-Asparagus alternative, Loquats Pie and Grappa, Wild Possum Grape Jelly, Young People Want Healthier Food, Leather Root? Horsemint,  and Gnarly Mushroom.

Can you identify these winter tree/shrub buds. Photo courtesy of Kew The Botanist.

18 Tree and Shrub Buds for you to identify

18 Tree and Shrub Buds for you to identify. To enlarge click on the picture. If still too small click on the link above. Here’s the key: 1. Ash 2. Maple. 3 Birch. 4. Alder 5. Elderberry 6. Hazel 7. Beech 8 Horse Chestnut 9. Rowan 10. Oak 11. Basswood 12. Lilac 13. Hawthorn. 14. Blackthorn 15. Larch 16. Sycamore 17 Dog Rose. 18 Elm

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Pyracantha berries look more appealing than they taste but can be made into jelly. Photo by Green Deane

Pyracantha berries look more appealing than they taste but can be made into jelly. Photo by Green Deane

Forced vacations can turn into a busman’s holiday so when I was in Savannah, Georgia, for three days I couldn’t help but notice the edible species one could see while walking around the historic city.

Pyracanthas along Savannah's Bay Street. Photo by Green Deane

Pyracantha along Savannah’s Bay Street. Photo by Green Deane

In full fall fury were Pyracanthas, their brilliant red berries covering wrought iron fences riverside along Bay Street. Like many species in that family the Pyracantha has a small amount of (glyco-) cyanide in its seeds so they are not eaten. And the pulp of the berry has the texture of an overripe apple with a hint of that pome’s flavor. So they are usually processed into jelly, syrup or even wine. Fortunately we don’t have to remove the seeds before processing the berries. You can cook the berries seeds and all but then have to strain out the seeds. Also know that while in northern climates the Pyracantha fruit once a year in warmer climates they can fruit twice. To read more about the Pyracantha go here.

Under the shedding Ginkgo tree in Savannah is photographer Kelly Fagan. Photo by Green Deane

Fall yellow Ginkgo tree. Photo by Green Deane

My most significant surprise in Savannah was while rummaging around Colonial Cemetery. Besides a lot of noteworthy people being planted there it is also the site of a large Ginkgo tree. I would call it maturing but as they live to be thousands of years old identifying exactly when a tree is mature is a bit iffy. However, they do fruit when fairly young. All the Ginkgo trees I have seen in North American have always been on the young side even when fruiting, around 12 to 15 feet. This specimen was approaching 35 feet and was in attractive fall foliage. The bark resembled an oak and had a few holes where the insect-eating birds had scrounged for lunch. Historically the first US ship to go to China and back was in 1784-85 thus it is doubtful there are any Ginkgo trees more than 330 years old or so in North America. However, some Ginkgo trees were reportedly planted in Augusta, Georgia as early as 1801-02 in honor of George Washington. To read more about the Ginkgo go here.

Swinecress is one of the tastier micro-mustards. Photo by Green Deane

Swinecress is one of the tastier micro-mustards. Photo by Green Deane

One discovery found under my feet was Swinecress. It is strictly a wintertime species in Central Florida but as I was some 300 miles farther north it was easy to find under underfoot. Also along the streets were Pony Foot, Florida Betony, Pellitory, and at least two species of Oxalis, the smaller native yellow-blossomed Oxalis and the larger pink-blossomed one from the Caribbean Islands. Swinecress is pleasant and quite tasty, always a pleasure to harvest.  It is also nearly impossible to mis-identify. The only other species that comes close to it — and remotely so only because of the seed arrangement — is Goosegrass, a velcro-like spring-time edible. To read more about Swinecress go here.

Related to the mints Henbit is a sweet winter green. Photo by Green Deane

Related to the mints Henbit is a sweet winter green. Photo by Green Deane

Another wintertime visitor I have yet to spy locally this season is Henbit. In Savannah it was actually flowering. Further north it is a spring-time species. Here it likes the cooler winter. In the mint family it’s unlike many of the southern winter or north spring greens. It is mild to sweet in flavor, not peppery, bitter or sharp like many seasonal greens can be. The square stem, scalloped leaves and mint blossoms help in the identification. To read more about Henbit and it’s relative the Dead Nettle go here.

Also fruiting red on Bay Street was a holly, perhaps a Yaupon. Photo By Green Deane

Also fruiting red on Bay Street was a holly, perhaps a Yaupon. Photo By Green Deane

One of my Savannah mysteries is what appears to be a Yaupon Holly, the one the natives used for a caffeinated tea or as a decoction an an emetic. I say it “looked like” because the leaves were right but it had more berries than one usually sees on a Yaupon Holly locally. Such red sprays are usually found on the Dahoon Holly. The bark looked more like a Dahoon Holly than the Yaupon but the leaves were wrong for a Dahoon Holly. So it is a temporary  mystery tree, looking close to a Yaupon Holly but not exactly enough for a good identification. Perhaps it is some other holly. To read about the Yaupon Holly go here.

Winter Cattails, Savannah Wild Life Refuge. Photo by Green Deane.

Winter Cattails, Savannah Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Green Deane.

On my last day in Savannah I did manage to barely get into South Carolina by visiting the Savannah National Wildlife Refuge, which in places is a sea of cattails. No starving there. Saw true thistles — nice edible roots — dock and seeding plantagos. They looked European but I did not dig out the taxonomy books to make sure. Our native plantagos are past season. A few hundred miles can make quite a difference. When I was young growing up in Maine we viewed a hundred miles as two weeks of weather. So 200 miles south they were a month warmer into the season, and two hundred miles north they were a month cooler behind us. This also affects the length of the growing season. Indeed, they raise tobacco in Connecticut. The Solanaceae species they settle for in Maine is potatoes.

I am often asked about herbal medicine. My answer to the inquirer is often the question: Are you a cook or a baker? Their answer is instructive.

While one person can be a good cook and a good baker they usually are not both. Usually one is a very good cook and a mediocre baker or a very good baker and a mediocre cook. Why? They are two different mind sets, as can be foraging for food and herbal medicine.

Too many cooks spoil the broth...

Cooking leans towards the creative…

Cooking tends to be more flexible than baking. If a recipe calls for a cup of water many a cook will try a cup of wine, or milk, or beer. If a recipe calls for liver emu might work. There can be experimentation and non-directed creativity. Bakers are more like chemists. They follow recipes and often they must do so carefully or they end up with a mess. When a baking recipe calls for a certain size pan, a certain temperature of the sugar, and a specific amount of time in the oven, it means exactly that, no taking liberties, no changing ingredients, no changing the size of the pan, follow the recipe exactly or the chance of failure increases greatly. Dionysus and Apollo, creativity, restraint. Foraging and herbalism are so cleaved. I happen to be a genius cook but an imbecile baker. My mother was horrible at both. For us TV dinners were gourmet, fast food take out was a god send, and when I joined the Army the mess hall food was so good in comparison I thought I had died and gone to heaven.

Herbalism and baking is more scientific...

Herbalism and baking are more scientific…

There is another separation between forager and herbalist. I spend a lot of time and care to make sure the plant I have eaten does not remind me that I ate it. I want to enjoy it and move on. I do not want to be reminded in an hour or two or more than I consumed it. An herbalist has a very different point of view. They want the plant to do something after its use. In fact, often they are counting on it, and sometimes quickly, too. Where I just make sure I’ve got the right plant and preparation, they have preparation, dose, and effects to consider. For the herbalist it’s like baking or being a pharmacist: Know you materials, use them in a particular way, create an effect, and measure the effect. It’s really the difference between the chemist and the artist.

So yes, I know many herbals plants, and make it a point to mention herbal uses of plants particularly when confirmed by modern research. But I am a forager, not a herbalist. And I suspect mushroom hunters have to be even more dedicated to detail than herbalists. Then again, if they are not, it is a self-correcting problem.

Pellitory growing from Savannah Stone Steps. Photo  by Green Deane

Pellitory growing from stone stairs. Photo by Green Deane

Upcoming classes: Saturday, January 3rd, Mead Garden: 1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789. 9 a.m.; Sunday, January 4th, John Chestnut State Park: 2200 East Lake Road, Palm Harbor, FL 34685, 9 a.m.; Saturday, January 10th, Wickham Park: 2500 Parkway Drive, Melbourne, FL 32935-2335, 9 a.m.; Sunday, January 11th, Dreher Park, 1200 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 33405, 9 a.m.; Saturday, January 24th, Red Bug Slough Preserve, 5200 Beneva Road, Sarasota, FL, 34233, 9 a.m.; Sunday, January 25th, Bayshore Live Oak Park, 23000 Bayshore Rd., Port Charlotte, FL 33980, 9 a.m., meet at the parking lot at the intersection of Bayshore Road and Ganyard Street. For more information about classes click here.

Plantagos in Savannah National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Green Deane

Plantagos in Savannah National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Green Deane

Eat The Weeds On DVD. My foraging videos do Plantagos and scores of other edible plants. The set has nine DVD. Each DVD has 15 videos for 135 in all. Some of these videos are of better quality than my free ones on the Internet. They are the same videos but many people like to have their own copy. I burn and compile the sets myself so if you have any issues I handle it. There are no middle foragers. And I’m working on adding a tenth DVD. To learn more about the DVDs or to order them click here.

Gingkoes, a recent topic on the Green Deane Forum. Photo by Green Deane

Gingkoes, a recent topic on the Green Deane Forum. Photo by Green Deane

On the Green Deane Forum we post messages and pictures about foraging all year-long. There’s also a UFO page, for Unidentified Flowering Objects so plants can be identified. Recent topics include: Ginkgo Tree, Flint Knapping, Squash? Hawthorn Catsup, Your Traditional Thanksgiving, Paw Paw Seeds, Flint Knapping, Dried Persimmons, Tell You Love Them, Indian Pipes, Amaranth, Mushrooms: Winter Is Here Six Weeks Early, Chicken of the Woods, Coco Plums? Bush has THorns, Acorns All Colors And Sizes, Turn On The Water, Nanoscopy, Puff on This, Lab To Determine Plant Composition, Orange Red Berry, Atlatl, Odd Trees, and a Grinder for Tough Roots. The link to join is on the right hand side of this page.

Emily Ruff

Emily Ruff

Now is the time too to think about going to the Florida Herbal Conference in late February, organized by Emily Ruff. I’ve taught edible plants there for the last three years and will be there again this year. In fact I plan to spend a lot of time there. It’s a must for all southern herbalists and well as those northern ones who want to escape the cold and study their craft in the dead of winter. It always has interesting speakers and great classes. For more information and to register go here.

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Often where to look for edibles is half the battle.

Often where to look for edibles is half the battle.

As you know I use I.T.E.M. to help organize the information one needs to safely eat a wild plant: Identification, Time of Year, Environment, Method of Preparation. Environment means more than just where it likes to grow. It can also means things such as what does it grow with, or under, or on.

Growing between seasonal hedge trimming is the wild cucumber. Photo by Green Deane

Growing between seasonal hedge trimming is the wild cucumber. Photo by Green Deane

The top picture is a common sight, a woody hedge in suburbia. Not edible. It is moderately slow growing, needing trimming now and then, sometimes once or twice a season. In between the trimmings faster vines can take hold. They also often fill niches the trimming misses. Notice in the picture above the hedge has some cowlicks. They are commonly Smilax tips (edible) Skunk Vine (edible) or Virginia Creeper (toxic.) In this case they are what you see in the picture to the left, wild cucumbers, Melothria pendula.  These tasty little cukes like to grow on hedges and fences in town. In the wild they can be found either creeping along the ground or climbing on low shrubs and the like. They will produce now through a winter freeze. Casually looking at hedges can often produce several edibles not only on them but under them as well.

Basswood leaves are the tree lettuce of spring.

Basswood leaves are the tree lettuce of spring.

Tongue depressors. You’ll find something that looks like a wooden stick from a Popsicle on the Basswood Tree. It’s not wood but rather one bract of the flower. Blossoms are defined/arranged by their parts, from the outer most parts in, or the inner most parts out. Next out from flower petals are bracts (which can sometimes look just like a petal as they do in the daylilies.) The Basswood has a bract that looks like a tongue depressor or a Popsicle stick. If I remember correctly it is the only native tree in North America to do that so identification when blossoming is easy. (The Tropical Chestnut has odd bracts as well but they look more like several banana peelings than one tongue depressor. I’ll writer more about that next week.) The Basswood is quite edible, most of it at one time or another, from spring fresh leaves to inner bark. They are quite common locally with one in my neighborhood as a lawn tree. We also used to use them to make pipe stems. Basswood, also called the Linden Tree, often can be found near water. You can read more about the Basswood here.

Black Medic Blossom

Black Medic Blossom

There quite a few species which at a quick glance from afar can look alike. Pellitory and Chickweed are two. The lichens Usnea and Ramalina two more. A couple of common plants that can look similar even at a close glance is Black Medic and Hop Clover (Medicago lupulina and Trifolium campestre.)  Every season I have to remind myself which is which. Most often locally it is Black Medic. I am fond of saying there are no “look alikes” if you look closely enough. Black Medic and Hop Clover put that to the test. Hop Clover also looks like other clovers as well. It can be difficult to sort out.

Hop Clover Blossom

Hop Clover Blossom

We have a lot of good plant people on the Green Deane Forum and one of them, Josey, has contributed much to list the differences between the two species. In this regard I will admit to being dense. It took me a long time to get confident with these identifications.  When the plants are in blossom a close look at the blossom is one clue. Hop clover’s petals come out from the center, widen, then bend down at the outer end. Black Medic’s blossoms open and fold up. They are also of a slightly different color: Gold yellow for the Hop Clover, lemon yellow for the Black Medic. The latter is also more furry. When both species have gone to seed quickest way to tell them apart is Black Medic’s seeds are black, Hop Clover’s brown.  

Black Medic seeds.

Black Medic seeds.

To complicate issues there is also T. dubium, aka the Suckling Clover or the Lesser Trefoil. It looks similar to Hop Clover but has less petals and smaller blossoms. Its stems have a reddish tint. None of these species are on the top of the edible list but every little bit counts. Black Medic has also been called a Native American food which begs the definition some. Black Medic is from southern Europe or  Eurasia. It came with the Europeans to North America. The first written reference to it in the New World is in 1807.  There’s no ethnobotanical evidence the Europeans ate the seeds or any that the Native American’s ate the leaves.

Upcoming Foraging Classes: Sunday, March 30th Mead Garden,  1500 S. Denning Dr., Winter Park, FL 32789, 9 a.m.

Saturday, April 5th, Lake Woodruff National Wildlife Refuge, 2045 Mud Lake Road,  DeLeon Springs, FL 9 a.m.

What Do You See 08 (below) should be easy this week. There are at least two edibles in the picture. 

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This is what you should be seeing from the road right now. 

Below is What Do You See 07 from last week and its answers.

What Do You See 07. Photo by Green Deane

What Do You See 07. Photo by Green Deane

WDYS07: There are many weeds in this picture and much duplication… Mother Nature rolls all the dice she can.  Number One is the Common Sow Thistle, which is a Sonchus. Two is a Sonchus as well. It could be the common one but looks more like it could be the Spiny Sow Thistle. It’s color is darker and a closer look at the leaves would sort which it is as the Spiny has soft spines. Three is the common Dandelion, not a common sight here in Florida. Four is Oxalis stricta, or Sour Grass though it is not a grass. It is our native oxalis. Five is Poor Man’s Pepper Grass though Mycol Stevens thinks it should be called Rich Man’s Pepper Grass. Six is Spanish Needles, or Bidens alba, quite young here. You have to be careful in that some other plants when young can look like young Bidens. Look for older plants or last season’s plants. Seven is Dollar Weed also called Pennyworts. Eight is NOT edible. It’s cudweed, or a Pseudognaphalium. P. purpureum leaves were smoked for tobacco and was used to treat colds, lung pain, mumps, upset stomachs, nervousness and insomnia.

https://www.eattheweeds.com/sonchus-sow-thistle-in-a-pigs-eye-2/
https://www.eattheweeds.com/dandelions-hear-them-roar/
https://www.eattheweeds.com/oxalis-how-to-drown-your-sorrels/
https://www.eattheweeds.com/peppergrass-potent-pipsqueak/
https://www.eattheweeds.com/spanish-needles-pitchfork-weed/
https://www.eattheweeds.com/a-pennywort-for-your-thoughts-2/ 

Brevard Botanical Garden pond overlook. Photo by Bill Zoby

Brevard Botanical Garden pond overlook.
Photo by Bill Zoby

Last week it was Brimingham now it is Brevard. The Brevard County Extension office is having a plant sale on Saturday, April 12. It’s a fundraiser for the Brevard Botanical Garden, 3695 Lake Drive, Cocoa, Florida. The annual spring plant sale features hard-to-find plants for your garden all grown by Brevard Master Gardeners. Garden crafts will also be available. The Brevard Botanical Garden was formed in May 2010 by garden enthusiasts, the University of Florida/IFAS Extension Agents, and environmentally concerned citizens who want to improve the quality of life in Brevard County by opening a research-based botanical garden for demonstrations, collections, and displays.  

That's me sitting amongst poppies near the Acropolis in Athens.

That’s me sitting amongst poppies near the Acropolis in Athens.

Though your foraging may drop off during the winter it’s a great time to study wild edibles with my nine DVD set. Each DVD has 15 videos for 135 in all. They make a great gift. Order today. Some of these videos are of better quality than my free ones on the Internet. They are the same videos but many people like to have their own copy. I  burn and compile the sets myself so if you have any issues I handle them personally. There are no middle foragers. And I’m working on adding a tenth DVD.  To learn more about the DVDs or to order them click here.

To donate to the Green Deane Newsletter click here.

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I have written extensively on this site about edible flowers, both cultivated and wild. Here 98  previous separate entries about cultivated flowers are in one spot. So if it seems you have read parts of this before, you might have. However, this focus is just on cultivated flowers.

It’s difficult to imagine a kitchen or herbal medicine cabinet without Angelica around someplace. Angelica has long been valued for its seeds, stems, leaves and shoots. The first two for flavoring — such as in Chartreuse — and second pair as cooked greens, particularly in the Izu Islands of Japan where there are a favored addition to springtime tempura. They have a celery-like flavor. North American Indians, however, smoked the leaves for medicinal purposes. Celery-ish may its green parts be the blossoms however have a light anise flavor.

Artichoke blossom

If I don’t include artichokes among the edible flowers several will gleefully write and tell me I missed one. No doubt I have missed many. That said we really don’t eat the blossoms of the artichoke. They are actually bitter but if you want to have at it. We eat the floral bracts, read fat leaves below what will become the flower. We eat them raw, boiled, steamed, baked, fried, stuffed, and marinated. When marinated they are called artichokes hearts. In Europe they are dried and used in soups. The inner portion of the flower stalk is also edible, much like true thistles. The flowers themselves are used for a substitute for rennet, meaning they will curdle milk. I said they were bitter. Young artichoke leaves are fed to snails to improve their flavor. Yum. Artichokes have been around for a long time. Zeus (said Zeff in Greek) turned a scorned lover into an artichoke. It doesn’t pay to irritate a god. And young Norma Mortenson got her start in 1948 when she became the first “Artichoke Queen.” You know her as Marilyn Monroe

Arugula blossoms are peppery

Among the more peppery blossoms of the garden is Arugula, also called rocket and roquette. It’s a popular aromatic salad green grown for its leaves but also its seeds. Somehow the blossom gets overlooked… well, not in my kitchen. Arugula is one of those garden vegetables that is also very easy to grow in a patio pot and lasts for many months with repeated cuttings. Though a forager I have grown arugula in my gardens for many years. When the plant finally wants to go to seed you can prolong it by harvesting the flowers. Then enjoy the seeds. Greeks call Arugula Roka.

Bachelor Buttons, spicy and cloves

When you’re a kid you’re told everything is poisonous, and for me that included Bachelor Buttons. Also called the cornflower, they have been tossed into salads and used for a garnish for a long time. They got the name cornflower because the hardly species grew in English grain fields, and corn once meant any grain. Long before wedding rings were common bachelors indeed did wear a cornflower in a jacket button hole to let the ladies know they were single. How did she let them know the same thing? Curiously, she showed cleavage. Married women covered up, single women advertised.  Another version is that if the flower retained it color while worn his love was true, but if it faded it was not… sounds a bit rigged to me… Then again, I might not have been a lifelong bachelor if I had picked a few of these. Bachelor’s Buttons were the favorite flower of President John Kennedy. His son John John wore one at his wedding to honor his father.  The flower also reaches back into history in that it was used in the funeral wreath made for Pharaoh Tutankhamun, about 3,300 years ago. Their flavor is spicy, sweet, reminds one of cloves.

Baloon Flower and Bee

Let’s start at the bottom and work up. Our next plant is known for its root. In the greater Campanula clan, the root of the Balloon Flower, Platycodon grandiflorus, is very popular in Korea where it is cut into strips, seasoned with chilis, vinegar, sesame oil and soy  sauce and eaten as a salad (which also tells you you can can get the root still alive in Korean markets, plant it, and get blossoms.) It is also used in soups, stews, dishes with vinegar, and is one of the ingredients in Toso, or sweet Japanese sake. Boiled young leaves are eaten in salads. Its blossoms are sweet in taste, have a bit of texture, and are used in salads, stuffed, candied or dipped in butter. The Balloon Flower is so called because before the petals open are fused at first making the blossom look like a balloon.

Few people in temperate North America ever think of eating a Banana blossom, but a lot of folks in warm areas do, and it does not prevent your banana tree from producing fruit. The entire flower/fruit arrangement of the Banana is odd with the blossom being a purplish torpedo. Look closely at the stalk end of the blossom and you can see what will eventually become a hand of Bananas. The blossom can be eaten raw (bitterish) or cooked, less or no bitterness. Usually it is peeled to get the more tender parts then shredded or sliced thin and soaked to reduce the bitterness. The flavor is not of the Banana but rather more of a vegetable.

Baobob Blossom

With so many readers around the world I have to include an exotic or two though this next flower does grow in Florida and other warm areas. The Baobob Tree, Adansonia digitata, is extremely odd looking and versatile. Like the Kapok tree it is pollinated by bats. The fruit is eaten, the leaves boiled as a potherb or dried and ground and used like file, to flavor and thicken sauces, stews and soups. The seeds are used as a coffee substitute or as a baking powder substitute. Germinating shoots and tender shoots are eaten. And the flowers are edible raw.

I will admit to being lazy and throwing Basil blossoms into my pesto, and soups and stews. That workhorse of the kitchen and Italian cuisine has edible flowers s why not use them. It was a practical matter besides culinary. At some point your Basil plants begins go to blossom. It’s making enough energy to reproduce and send forth seeds. If you let it, the bush senses its purpose is over — no doubt a chemical signal — and retires. But if you keep snipping off the blossoms it keeps on living to reproduce another day. By using the Basil blossoms you get more Basil leaves. The blossoms are usually white but can be pink to lavender. They taste like basil lite, a nice salad sprinkle.

Bauhinias since first discovered have been a pain to sort out, and now there are some 600 species in a variety of colors. The blossom of the Bauhinia variegata  and Bauhinia purpurea are eaten raw, pickled or cooked as a vegetable. Some Bauhinia blossoms are used for their nectar. Check out your local species with a an expert as they are quite varied in use. My friend Sunny Savage, resident of Hawaii and now sailing about the world, uses Bauhinia blossom raw in salads. Often called the Camel Foot Tree because of the shape of the leaf, Bauhinias are also known as the Orchid Tree and the Hong Kong Orchid Tree.

Bee Balm, a Monarda,  is another huge selection of flowers closely related to the mint family. Intense, aromatic, the flavors can vary not only species to species but between cultivated specimens and their wild siblings. The leaves are often used to make tea, some with calming qualities. Often the entire plant is placed in the house to give a pleasant aroma as it dries. The blossoms tend to reflect the flavor of the parent plant but usually have hints of oregano to thyme to citrus flavors.

My video and separate article on Begonias got me mentioned in the national New Zealand magazine about them. It’s a small electronic world. Begonia blossoms are edible raw or cooked, as are the leaves of most of the Begonias, particularly the Wax Begonias. The flavor, like the tulips, varies with the color. It can range from swampy to sweet. The biggest problem you are going to run into with begonias is since they are usually cultivated they are also sprayed with pesticides if not other materials. You either have to raise them specifically to eat or be a lazy gardener. Either will do. Fortunately for me, and not for the state of Florida, Begonias have become naturalized so I can find them in the wild. Indeed, it was some 20 years ago when I was canoeing on Rock Spring Run — read in a swamp — when I saw a Begonia and wondered what it was doing in the modern urban equivalent of the middle of nowhere. The leaves reduced to a paste and mixed with sour cream, a little sugar, and then baked make a delicious tartlet. And of course, the blossoms are an attractive and tasty addition to salads.

Black Salsify

Edible plants collect a lot of names.  This one has been dubbed Black Salsify, Spanish salsify, black oyster plant, serpent root, viper’s herb, viper’s grass, and simply Scorzonera which is also its botanical name, Scorzonera hispanica. A native of the Mediterranean areas it’s cultivate around the world and happens to be naturalized in California. It was cultivated in Europe by the 1600s and is a significant crop there still. The root contains it contains protein, potassium, calcium, phosphorus, iron as well as vitamins A, B1, E and C. It also has inulin which is suitable for diabetics. The long black roots are boiled, steamed, baked, batter-fried, put into soups and stews or roasted as a coffee substitute. Shoots are added to tossed salads. Flower buds raw or cooked are eaten on salads. Blossom petals are also sprinkled on salads or used in omelettes.

I do believe I was the first to publish anywhere in modern times, Internet or otherwise, that Blue Porterweed blossoms are edible. Even the Cornucopia II venerated doesn’t mention it. No doubt their edibility was known long ago because the flower has been used for at least a few hundred years to make tea, beer and as a flavoring. I am sure somewhere along the way someone tried the flowers. Locally we have two versions, a native which grows low, and a tall cultivated one. The flowers on both are edible, and the odd part is they taste like raw mushrooms. As with many delicate flavors the nose is quite involved and it takes a few moments for the flavor to come through. Tasters find it amazing. The flavor does not survive cooking. Incidentally, the leaves are used to make a tea and beer and the stem is used for flavoring.

Where I live there are only two plants that smell like cucumber. One is a wild cucumber. The other smells like cucumber but does not taste like cucumber. But you can also cultivate a flower that has the faint taste of cucumber, Borage. While it is naturalized in southern Europe most of us have to put it in our herb garden. Borage has a long history of medicinal and culinary use. Currently it is a source of gamma linolenic acid, GLA. The sweet blossoms and leaves have the taste of cucumber. The flowers are often used in salads or as a garnish and do well in many drinks. One technique is to put the blossoms in an ice cube tray and freeze them into ice cubes to be used in drinks.

Calamint

Think mint. Now think oregano. Put them together, mint and oregano and you have the Lesser Calamint. Important to Italian cooking, it is an old world plant found in flower gardens and a smattering of states from the Old South northeast to New York.  Hardy perennial to two feet. It is said to be indispensable in bean and mushroom dishes. The regular Calamint (Calamintha grandifolia) also has edible blossoms as well though its flavor is a cross between mint and marjoram, read not quite as strong. They have been cooking with it in Roman since the Romans, particularly meat dishes. Toss the pink to lavender blossoms in salads or use to flavor dishes.

Calendula has been called the poor man’s saffron. There are 12 to 20 species in the family, depending on who is counting. They are native from Micronesia to the Mediterranean area to Iran. Often lumped in and confused with marigolds — which can be used for coloring — the name Calendula comes from the Latin kalendae, meaning the first day of the month, and where we get the English word calender. It is believe they are called that because in warm regions they are always in bloom and always on the first day of every month.  The Calendua’s flavor is similar to saffron, bitter to tangy.

Clustered Bellflower

Campanulas are not a small clan. There’s some 500 of them in the genus. Some are eaten for their roots, leaves or flowers. The rampion, or Campanula rapunculus was widely grown in Europe for its radish-like roots and leaves. In fact, “rapunculus” is dead Latin for “little turnip” and was the Brothers Grimm’s inspiration for the fable name Repunzel. The Clustered Bellflower, Campanula glomerata, has bluish flowers that are eaten raw. They are sweet in flavor as are their leaves. Usually used in salads. Campanula punctata flowers and leaves are cooked like a potherb. Campanula rapunculoides, Rover Bellflower, roots and leaves are eaten (remember, in dead Latin -oides means looks like or resembles. So the C. rapunculoides looks like the C. rapunculus.) In parts of Greece the Campanula versicolor, Variously Colored Bellflower, are eaten and cooked like a vegetable. The leaves are used in salads and taste similar to peas. The flowers are also very good.

Carambola, Star Fruit

I happen to have the next tree growing in my back yard. It flowers twice a year but the second setting is minor. Called Carambola or Star Fruit, its botanical name is Averrhoa carambola.  Known for its edible fruit, which go from green and tart to golden yellow and very sweet. But, it also has edible flowers and leaves that are used like sorrel. The acid flowers are used in salads or used to make conserves. The fruit is eaten fresh, dried, sliced into fruits and salads, or used in sherbets, ices, creams mousses and other desserts. The tart fruit are cooked fish and fowl or made into a relish. Another member of the genus, Averrhoa bilimbi is the cucumber tree. It’s fruit and flowers have various edible uses.

There are few flowers more common than Carnations. They have been cultivated since ancient times and were quite popular in Rome during the empire days. Its botanical name, Dianthus, means flower of the Gods. Originally just in shades of pink or peach now a rainbow of carnations are available, each still keeping it clove-like scent. Like many blossoms Carnations were used to convey sentiments in times when overt expression of love were frowned upon. Thus many a bouquet was carefully constructed to send just the right message with just the right color.

Cantip

Most cats love it, a few don’t. The difference is genetic. The active chemical is Nepetalactone. It’s a mild hallucinogenic that produces euphoria in many cats. In humans it makes you sleepy, like chamomile though in large amounts it is emetic. Catnip (Nepeta cataria) is an herb of the mint family and at one time was spice found in the kitchen. Although a native to Europe, it has been exported to the rest of the world and in some places is considered a weed. It is naturalized in every state except Florida and all the first tier Providences of Canada. Even though it is considered a weed most folks still think of it as a cultivated plant because most buy it for their cats. Indeed, growing catnip can be a problem because feral cats and domestics on the roam won’t leave it alone. When protected catnip grows to about a yard high, branches much, and is topped by small white flowers with purple spots, a common trait of the mint family. The leaves can be candied or brewed into a mint-like aromatic tea. In Europe the leaves and young shoots are put into salads or seasoning for sauces, soups and stews. While the flowers can be sprinkled on salads they are usually used to make tea, often along with leaves. Catnip is also high in Vitamin C.

Three a.m. has to be the absolute worst time of any day. And when I’m awake then I make myself a cup of Chamomile tea. The small flowers taste like the tea, on the sweet side and apple-ish. In a publication North Carolina State University warns that the flowers contain “thuaone” but that is a misprint which has since been proliferated over the Internet. I don’t cut and paste. I do my own research and write every word myself. That’s why there are so many typos.  Chamomile has very low amounts of thujone, which is credited in significant amounts to getting people high. It’s one of the compounds in Absinthe. I’ve had Absinthe in Greece and the liquorish liquor did nothing for me. All Chamomile tea does for me, and most, is make me sleepy. If  you are allergic to ragweed, however, you might want to avoid Chamomile. The two plants are related and Chamomile can bother some people with a ragweed allergy.

One of my favorite dishes used Chervil as a flavoring. In a casserole you put alternating layers of thinly sliced potatoes and sliced onions, a layer of one then a layer of the other. You would dab each separate layer with real butter and then a pinch of tarragon and a sprinkling of Chervil. Then a bit of salt and pepper on each layer to taste. You fill the casserole that way. On top you spice it up one more time, add more butter, and a sprinkle of paprika. Into the oven it would go until tender. It also made great hash. The Chervil was a subtle flavor, and loses much to heat. That is why when you use the flowers for flavoring in a dish or a salad you add them last, in a dish just enough to heat, in a salad just before serving. Their anise flavor is subtle but the nose knows all.

I can remember the first time I saw Chicory in blossom. I was in Alexandria, Virgina, visiting a dear friend for a couple of weeks and wandering amongst parks, monuments, and museums. The mower had somehow missed it and I noticed it immediately. The blue pretty Chicory is a close relative of the dandelion but not sweet at all, In fact it runs towards bitter and earthy. Think radicchio. You can eat the flowers and the bud, or pickle the buds. The root has been roasted and used to extend and flavor coffee.

Our next edible needs little introduction, the Chrysanthemum, also called Mums, one of my grandmother’s favorites. First cultivated in China perhaps 3,500 year ago, they have been on the menu for many millennia. Mums got to Japan in the 8th century and are the flower of the emperor’s family. Yellow and white “mums” Chrysanthemum morifolium, are the ones usually used in the kitchen. The blossoms are boiled to make a sweet drink. In salads the raw flowers are pungent, if not bitter. Use sparingly. They are also used to flavor wine (remember lilac wine?)  The leaves are steamed or boiled and used as greens. I’ve grown them in my vegetable garden for that very purpose. The greens also dehydrate well.

You either like Cilantro, or you don’t. If you do like Cilantro then the flowers are Cilantro lite. The plant has a dual identity. The green part much used in Vietnamese cooking is called Cilantro. Its seeds however are called coriander. Cilantro sparks intense debates. To some people it tastes like soap. The famous chef of French cooking, Julia Childs, said she would take Cilantro out of a dish and throw it on the floor. Others enjoy the flavor. The different perceptions apparently is one of association. The more one is exposed to Cilantro the more it moves from soap to food. It grows on you. While its seeds, coriander, are quite aromatic they don’t seem to engender flavor disagreements like the leafy parts of the plant.

Citrus, use sparingly

For the home crowd one has to mention Citrus blossoms. Orange blossoms, lemons, grapefruit, calamondins, kumquat… The whole citrus club. They are, no surprise, citrusy and in fact the flavors are used often in Mediterranean cooking. When I first moved to Florida back in the Dark Ages I can still remember the first time I detected the wonderful aroma of a citrus grove in blossom. I thought it was Mayflowers, a blossom from my past.

Clary Sage

Clary sage has been in the medicinal bag of tricks for at least 2,400 years. Theophrastus in the 4th century BCE wrote about it. Dioscroides did in the first century CE as did Pliny.  A native to the Old World it is naturalized in a smattering of states with no apparent reason. Like many edible flower it is found mostly under cultivation. It’s called “clary” because the sticky seeds were used to help get small foreign objects out of the eye, to help on see clearly.  Young and tender leaves are dipped in cream and fried, often eaten with an orange sugar sauce. They can also be dipped in an egg batter and cooked into fritters. The pleasant-flavored flowers are sprinkled on salads.

Dame’s Rocket is a mustard

Dame’s Rocket is a declared invasive species in several places. It’s your civic duty eat the weed. Originally from Eurasia some 400 years ago it’s a mustard that at first glance looks like Phlox. Dame’s Rocket has the typical mustard family four petals, Phlox, five. It’s found essentially everywhere in North America except the Old South. Botanically known as Hesperis matronalis, it is cultivated, escaped and is included in wildbird seed mix. Young leave collected before flowering are eaten like cress. Seed pods can be added stews and soups. Seeds are a source of oil and can be sprouted and eaten. The flowers are used to add spicy flavors to fruit dishes and salads.

A foraging standby in all but the southwest desert and northwest Canada is the Daylily. But first a couple of  precautions. I am talking about only the Hemerocallis genus. Also go sparingly, they can be diuretic or laxative. That said day lilies are on the sweet side, vegetable-ish. Like squash and glad blossom they’re used to hold tasty finger food but like other blossoms cut them away from the white bitter base. I used to enjoy them often but the only local patch is now under a highway exit. See full article about them here on sit.

Dendrobium phalaenopsis

If you go to a Thai restaurant often a Dendrobium phalaenopsis is put on your plate. No that not a creature, its an orchid unfortunately without a common name in English. Said Den-DROH-be-um fal-en-NOP-siss their flavor is light, if any, but they are pretty with a crisp texture. This also brings up the debate if all orchids are edible. Personally I think that is impossible for one person to say as there are more than 20,000 of them, maybe 26,000, in some 800 genera. I’m not sure one person can know them all. Many do have edible roots. Edible flower information is sketchy. One would like to think orchids used as garnishes would be edible just to avoid liability. However garnish writers seem to skip over issues of orchid edibility. Kinda like writing about flying and leaving out the airplane. Dendrobium phalaenopsis come in a variety of colors and are native to southeast Asia. They are not difficult to grow. Use in salads and as a garnish.

As is often said, travel is a broadening experience. When you go to a different land it’s exciting to see plants you don’t know specifically but you know what family they are in. The first time I went to Greece I saw wild Dill growing everywhere, besides wild figs. Then years later on a business trip to extreme south southern California there was dill again. Wouldn’t you know I happen to live in a state where it’s not found in the wild. Oddly Dill blossoms are stronger flavored than the leaves. Tangy, use the flowers as you would the herb and seeds.

Durian Blossoms

This next tree is infamous for its fruit. You either wildly love its aroma or passionately hate it. Carrying it on trains in Thailand is illegal. It is banned from commercial flights. At least one jet passenger was stopped and a man reeking of it kicked off. Last year a tycoon sent a private to pick up 88 fruit when it came into season. He wanted 100 but they weren’t availabe then. It is the infamous Durian, a spine-covered fruit that smells like a sewer and tastes like microwaved socks, and some people love it. Their passioin is not shared. The flower petals are edible.  Did I mention the huge fruit also has killed people falling from the tree and hiting them on the head.

Many a hibiscus flower can go into salads and the like but I don’t know how many I’ll cover because most of them are virtually flavorless but they are pretty and add texture. I happen to like the False Roselle, Hibiscus acetosella, because beside the edible pink flower the leaves are edible as well, raw or cooked.  I use the young leaves for salads and stir fry. They keep their color. A close relative, Hibiscus sabdariffa is the real roselle and is also known as the “Florida Cranberry” or the “Cranberry Hibiscus.” A tart juice can be made from its fat calyxes. Its blossoms are edible as well.

Another plant I saw growing wild in Greece but is mostly cultivated in the United States is Fennel. In fact, at one mountain pass not far from Sparta the only weed growing in the crack of the curb along the road was fennel, and most of it close to a yard tall. I’ve always included Fennel in my garden because it’s so versatile. Fennel’s blossom is an explosion of yellow and the flavor is of mild Fennel. It’s the hint of anise appreciated in cold soups and many desserts. Incidentally, Fennel is the only species in its genus, Foeniculum vulgare.

Forget-Me-Nots

The story I heard from my mother, not the best source of romantic literature, was that he was in Alaska and braved rushing waters to get some wild flowers she requested. He got the flowers but was swept away by the current and as he was about to meet his watery fate he yelled “Forget Me Not.” Hmmmm… Guy dies, woman doesn’t get flowers, has to walk home alone where she meets Paul Bunyan… Let’s start with the fact Forget-Me-Nots aren’t native to Alaska but they are in England and… In exile in 1398 Henry IV adopted the flower as his symbol and retained when he returned from the hinterlands a year later. Perhaps that is why historically Forget-Me-Nots represent faithfulness and enduring love. They are found sporadically in the wild in the northern half of North America and cultivated elsewhere. As most folks see them only in gardens we’ll call them cultivated though surprisingly they are invasive in Wisconsin. Botanically Forget-Me-Nots are Myosotis sylvatica, which means Mouse Ear of the Woods. Properly they are Wood Forget-Me-Nots. Five petals, flat face, a yellow eye, usually blue but can be pink to white.  The blossoms are added to salads as a garnish and make excellent candied blossoms.

It’s easy to spot the Forsythia in the spring time. Just look for a naked shrub covered with yellow blossoms. You can find them in most urban areas and they escaped cultivation is several locations. The blossoms are spicy, minty, and slightly bitter. They add a cherry garnish to salads, particularly after a long winter. Very young leaves… very young leaves… are edible raw. Better boiled. The enduring argument regarding the Forsythia is who is it named for. See a separate article on site.

Fragrant Water Lily

One of the more difficult things about the Nymphaea odorata is what common name to call it. Fragrant Water Lilly and American White Water Lilly seem to be in the running. We’ll go with Fragrant Water Lilly, and it is! Actually the unopened flower buds can be collected and boiled as a vegetable. Once opened the raw blossom can be used as a garnish or nibble. Whether the plant’s rhizome is useful is something of a debate. Some think our local yellow native Nymphaea mexicana can be used the same way.

Freesia blossoms point one way

As a forager one of the first things you learn is that there isn’t much to offer in the Iris family, or, if it is an Iris beware. Freesia is an exception.  A native of South Africa and Australia, it’s an Iris to about 18 inches tall and grows from a bulb. The stem branches once giving it a classic Y shape. One odd thing about the Freesia is that they grow in a helicoid, that is the flowers attach to the stem in a spiral fashion but they all point the same way.  Fragrance varies with the variety. And the usual debate is whether it’s a wild plant as it is in its native range or a cultivated plant as most of these readers will find it. I opted for cultivated. So far I have put only one flower in both wild and cultivated and that’s Dame’s Rocket. Freesias colors include white, purple, yellow, orange and red. In the language of flowers they represent “innocence.” The highly scented blossoms are used in salads raw or as a garnish. They are reported to be excellent infused with a sugar syrup, and are used in sorbets for flavoring.

Fritilary’s Bell Blossoms

Originally from China but now grown around the world the Fritillary makes an interesting addition to a flower garden. Soft bell-shaped blossoms with a pale green netting on the outside of the petals and a pale red netting on the inside makes this Lily family member easy to identify.  The particular species we’re interested in is Fritillaria verticillata. Their name comes from dead Latin for dice box, fritillus, a reference to the check patttern the veining makes. And while we like fritilaries rodents and deer do not. Young plants, peals and flower buds are eaten after parboiling. They are used in soups or as a herb or cooked with soy sauce. The bulbs are eaten fried or candied. Another members of the genus with edible bulbs is Fritillaria camtschatcensis. The buds might remind you of the Daylily and indeed while in different genera they are botanically standing next to each other. One more point: Do not experiement with fritilaries. The two listed here are known edibles. Others may contain toxic amounts of various alkaloids.

Fuchsia

Discovered by Europeans in the Caribbean in 1703 — the natives already knew it was there — Fuchsia has been an ornamental for centuries. It’s a native of the warmer Americas and parts of New Zealand there’s 110 recognized species now, even some that can grow in cooler climates. Most of them are shrubs though one is known to reach tree height. Fuchsia blossoms are edible as are the peppery grape-tasting berries which grow on long stems. The flower is a favorite garnish because of its many strong colors which can range from white to dark red, purple-blue, and orange. Their flavor is slightly acidic.

You can have a lot of motivation to plant Garden Sorrel. It’s a Rumex and many of the wild sorrels are too bitter to eat, as are their blossoms and seeds. While there are exceptions — I know of only one locally that is pleasant — you can have a steady supply of sorrel leaves and blossoms if you include this old world flavor in your kitchen garden. Rumex acetosa is used in nearly every ethnic cuisine in Europe, from being mixed into mash potatoes to flavoring reindeer milk. The blossoms are tart like the rest of the plan, lemony. Use as you would a lemon.

Is there a flower garden in America without a Gardenia in it? They are so common they are called the Common Gardenia, Gardenia jasminoides. In dead Latin — all Latin is dead whereas Greek is still alive — –oides (OY-deezs) means “look like” or “similar to.” In this case jasminoides means like the Jasmine and indeed Gardenia blossoms are also used to make jasmine tea. It seems a little like bait and switch but since the pallet doesn’t know the difference your Jasmine tea may be flavored with Jasmine or Gardenia. As for the Gardenia flowers they are eaten raw, pickled or preserved in honey. The fruits are also edible and used as yellow coloring for other fruits.

Because of an early botanical scew up — the first of many — the Geranium group can be confusing. Initally all Geraniums were in one group. But by the late 1700s it was decided they were in two different genus but both were called commonly Geraniums. Got it? Folks have been trying to keep it straight ever since. Generally speaking they fall into two groups, bitter Geraniums usually not consumed, though some can be, and scented Geraniums, whose flowers we can use. The latter genus is Pelargonium. The name comes from the Greek word ????????, pelargós, which means stork because part of the flower looks like a stork’s beak. Scented Geraniums have different scents, among them almond, apple, coconut, lemon, nutmeg, old spice, peppermint, rose, and strawberry. The flowers tend to agree with the plant’s name. They are used in salads, desserts, and drinks.

Ginger Blossoms

Right outside my kitchen window grows Ginger, the kind we get genger root from and use in cooking, Zingiber officinale. I planted it several years ago and when I need Ginger for cooking, I did up a piece.  The word ginger comes from French gingembre which was borrowed from Medieval Latin ginginer which was bastardized from the Greek: zingiberis (??????????). Going back further it comes from the Indian subcontinent word inji ver. We just call it good, and a home remedy for motion sickness. Ginger blossoms are gingery and fragrant. They can be eaten raw.

When you live where the ground freezes annually — called winter — you have to wrap some plants and take others inside. That was an annual assignment when I was growing up and on top of the list was digging up Gladiola bulbs every fall. And every year my mother had a huge gladiola garden with boxes of bulbs overwintering in the basement. Had I known gladiola blossoms were edible it might have made the childhood chore more bearable. Glads (Gladiolus) blossoms are bland, lettuce like, and you must remove the anthers… take the middle out.  Basically eat the petals. They can also be cooked. Like squash glad blossoms are often used to hold tasty tid bits.

Hollyhocks look great on a plate, and their taste is bland for those who want strong colors rather than flavors. They have also been used to color wine in the distant past when such things were not regulated. The leaves are also edible raw and it’s still a cultivated vegetable in Egypt (the root has starch.)  Besides plating and salads you can also make a refreshing tea from the Hollyhock, botanically Alcea rosea and related to the Marsh Mallow. There now many colors to choose from.

The greater Honeysuckle family is an odd one. It straddles the edible/non-edible line, with some members long used as food and other members at least mildly toxic. For example, elderberries are in the Honeysuckle family, then tend to be edible in North America and not in the Old World. A famous or should I say infamous invasive member of that family is the Honeysuckle, Lonicera japonica, or Japanese Honeysuckle. It’s definitely the one we have here in the south spreading everywhere. Kids have known for generations that you can suck the sweet nectar out of the blossoms. Most of them don’t know, however, that the blossom is edible as well. It has a sweet, honey flavor. You can flavor wine with them as well. Tea is good, too.

Horseradish Blossoms

My cousin in southern Quebec… actually first cousin once removed, Beulah Knudson nee Smith, grew the largest Horseradish I ever saw. The winters are harsh thereabouts and that horseradish, Armoracia rusticana,  was making the most of their very short growing season. Here in flatland Florida it is too hot to grow horseradish except perhaps in the most extreme northern counties. Most everyone knows that horseradish is a hot root. In fact, the root is rather clever. The two chemicals that make horseradish hot have to be mixed to be hot but the plant keeps them in separate cells so they don’t bother the plant. Only when the cells are crushed together is a hot chemical created. It’s called “horse” radish because “horse” is also used to describe anything big or rough. Young leaves can be added to salads, pickled or cooked as a potherb. Sprouts can be added to salads, or the roots can be cooked as eaten that way. The flowers are edible, quite mild compared to the root. Sprinkle them on salads, throw them in when pickling or cooking string beans and the like.

Hyacinth Bean Blossom

I could almost make an identical entry for the Hyacinth Bean from that of the Scarlet Runner Bean below because they have so much in common and are so  unlike other beans. They’re annuals, ornamentals, have edible roots, leaves, pods, beans and flowers. The difference is the Hyacinth Bean seeds themselves have a different toxin that the Scarlet Runner bean and in a greater amount so they have to cooked far longer. The bean-flavored flowers, however, are edible raw or cooked.

I hate to admit it but the only place I can find this next edible flower is in cemeteries because it doesn’t grow in the wild here, Impatiens wallerana. The cultivated Impatiens are from Africa and their blossom is edible, sweet. There is no report of edibility on our native North American Impatiens blossoms raw, called Jewelweed. Indeed, Jewelweed is edible after two boilings but there are no references to any parts edible raw. Just the opposite, all kinds of warning not to eat our native Jewelweed raw. So this is one case of where the cultivated blossom is on the raw food menu but the wild one is not. Jewelweed seeds are edible, small, flavor similar to walnuts.

Italian Bugloss

One cannot make up a name like Italian Bugloss. Also known as Wild Bugloss, Alkanet and Anchusa. Botanically it’s Anchusa azurea a member of the Forget-Me-Not family. Originally from Europe it’s cultivated around the world, is intensely blue, and is used among other things as a dye. Italian Bugloss has become naturalized without logic in a number of places in North America including New Hampshire, Massachusettes, Conneticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Ohio. Michigan, Iowa, Texas, Colorado, Utah, California, Whyoming, Idahoe, Oregaon, Washington, and British Columbia The bright blue blossoms  are an excellent salad addition and are quite attrative when mixed with rose petals. On Crete it’s called ?????????? ang-GO-gloss-ose. Locals eat the tender stems boiled. Also eaten are the bossoms of Anchusa capensis and Anchusa officinalis. “Bugloss” means ox tongue because of the roughness of the leaves. ?????????? can mean literally “impiety tongue” read rough tongue.

You knew Jasmine was edible. Of course you did. That’s how we get Jasmine flavored tea. But make sure you are getting the right Jasmine, Jasminum officinale not plants in another genus or family falsely called Jasmine. The real Jasmine has tubular white flowers, waxy, and shiny oval leaves. Jasmine is from Asia but because it has been used for so long no one really knows where it got its cultivated start. There are mentions of it in 9th century texts in China and by the 1700s it has spread so well some folks thought it was native to Switzerland. The famous aroma comes from an oil in the petals and it is those petals you use to flavor your tea. If you life in the South do not mistake “Carolina Jasmine” for real Jasmine. It is the offensive and odorous Gelsemium Sempervirens, a significant allergy plant and quite toxic.

I don’t know if I should tell you about Johnny-Jump-Ups or not. Botanically Viola tricolor, they are among the first flowers I can remember my mother picking from the wild and eating on the spot. She did it because her mother did it (and she also never missed harvesting a cowslip either.) Johnny-Jump-Ups like moisture and can tolerate shade so… here goes…. Our house in the country had a septic system and a drain field. That drain field was moist and shaded and Johnny-Jump-Up grew there in profusion. And that is where my mother picked them, one after another, eating them on the spot. She’s now 86. Johnny-Jump-Ups have a mild wintergreen flavor and a variety of uses.  They’re added to salads, desserts, soups, served with cheese and used to decorate confections. Incidentally they are the ancestor of the common pansy.

Kapok, Pollentated by Bats

When one studies edible plants you quickly learn that one group can consider a plant only edible, another only medicinal, a third famine food only and a fourth don’t consider it good for anything. The kapok tree, Ceiba pentandra, falls into medicine and food, depending upon the eyes of the beholder. Like the Baobob Tree it is pollinated by bats. Tender leaves, buds and fruit are eaten like okra. Seeds are roasted and ground, eaten in soups, used as flavoring, or employed to make the fermented drink kantong. They can be used to make tempeh or squeezed for cooking oil. Wood ashes are a salt substitute. Flowers are blanched and often eaten with chili sauce, the dried stamens are added to curries and soups for coloring. A nice specimen of the tree can be seen in Dreher Park just north of the entrance to the zoo in West Palm Beach.

Lavender is an old stand-by found in many home gardens including mine. Its flavor is flowery, sweet and citrusy. Lavender has been used to flavor bread, cookies, jelly, beef, wine, sauces, stews, and custards. The blossoms are an attractive addition to champagne. The blossoms are also used around the house to impart a nice aroma from bedding to baths. They is also slightly diuretic.

Lemon Verbena

There is hardly an established garden that doesn’t have a Lemon Verbena in it. A native of South America it was “discovered” in 1785 in Buenos Aires. By 1797 it was the rage of England and has been exported around the world since around 1785. It’s in a well-known association with a lot of plants used for seasoning and antioxidants.  The Aloysia triphylla was named to compliment the  wife of Infant Carlos de Borbon, Prince of Asturias  and son of King Carlos III of Spain. The Infant was a supporter of the arts and botany.  Young leaves are eaten as spinach. they are also used to flavor fruit cups, jellies, cold drinks, salads, omletes, salad dressings, and vegetable dishes. The leaves or , tiny, citrus-scented, are brewed into a refreshing tea. Tea from just the flowers is sweeter.

As a kid I never associated Lilacs with food. When the fragrant Lilacs blossomed in late May you knew in a couple of weeks school was soon going to be out for the summer and glorious days were ahead. I don’t think I ever experienced more freedom then those summers. I was a latch key kid so summer vacation meant months of roaming through the countryside for days on end. In the greater Olive family the most common blossom color for lilac was … lilac. My 86-year-old mother in Maine still tends to her Lilacs. And just in case you are interested there is a 10-day Lilac Festival in Rochester N.Y. every May. Not bad for a plant with European ancestry. At the festival they have over 500 different lilacs on some 1,200 bushes. You can even sample lilac wine. Where do I sign up? Lilac blossoms are pungent and on the lemony side.

Lovage

Botanists can’t agree exactly where it came from, though the Old World is close enough for our purposes. Lovage’s beginnings may be humble but it has risen to high esteem for its many usages. Native to perhaps the Mediterranean or southwest Asia Lovage is cultivate throughout Europe and North America. Highly aromatic it is similar looking to flat-leaf parsley only much larger. The flavor is similar to parsley and celery combined with a notes of anise and curry. Botanically Levisticum officinale leaf stalks  and stem are blanched and eaten like celery, or peeled and eaten. They can also be candied. Young leaves are chopped and added to salad, soups, stews, seafood, and omelets. The seeds are used for flavoring, often in breads and confections. An aromatic tea can be made from dried leaves or grated roots. And the flowers are edible.

Magnolias are one of the iconic trees of not only the South but exported to many non-hard freeze areas of the world. And people have admired the huge Magnolia blossoms for a long time. Few folks know the blossoms of the Magnolia grandiflora are edible, however their flavor is intense and they taste similar to how they smell. They are not eaten raw per se. They are pickled. Oddly the practice started in England and you only use the petals, not the entire blossom. What works best is to pickle the petals in a sweet/sour pickle recipe. Then take out one petal, dice it, and use it sparingly as a flavoring in salads. The flavor is strong so go easy. Also, M. grandiflora‘s leaf can be used just as Magnolia virginiana‘s can as a bay leaf, that is to flavor soups and the like. However, don’t use the entire leaf because it is way too beg. Cut it into smaller pieces when used like a bay leaf.

Mango Panicle

Did you know Mangos and poison ivy were kissing cousins botanically? And a sensitivity to one can be a sensitivity to the other? In fact there several species related, all in the Anacardiaceae family: Mangos, poison ivy, poison sumac, Brazilian pepper, cashews, and pistachios. You can see the spread, three edibles, one on the cusp of edible/toxic, and two toxics. Some folks might be allergic to all, some to only a couple. Many people get a rash on their mouth after eating mango, called urushiol-induced contact dermatitis. The fruit is originally from India, cultivated for some 4,000 to 6,000 years. It is reported to be the most produced tropical fruit…. yah know…. I question that statistic. I would have thought bananas would have claimed that title. Incidentally, bananas are dying off. Your grandkids may never get to eat a banana. Anyway… when first exported around the world mangos were pickled because of the distances and time involved. In fact “mangoed” became a verb meaning pickled. Mango blossoms grow on long panicles and have a scent similar to Lily of the Valley. Not only are they edible but young leaves as well… as long as you don’t have an allergy. Young leaves and flowers boiled. You can make a natural mosquito repellent by burning dried mango flowers, or use them to make a tea high in tannin. Oh, never burn mango wood. It’s like buring poison ivy. The urushiol gets in the air then your lung then you’re in the emergency room.

There’s a lot of Internet misinformation about Marigolds. All of them are edible from a non-toxic point of view. The more important question is which one have an agreeable flavor? Of them all Tagetes lucida, Tagetes patula, and Tagetes tenuifolia get the culinary nod. Their flavor is citrusy. Usually only the petals are used. No green parts.  I also use them for yellow coloring in various dishes. They’re another flower called the “poor man’s saffron” the other being the Calendula.

DSC_1955Perhaps I have been remiss not mention Mustards more. But they are a huge family and have been touched upon, such as with arugula. They all have yellow to white blossoms, sometimes pink, usually a simple cross which is there the family names Cruciferae comes from. They range from the Mustard that produces the seed that makes the condiment to the radish in our salad to the plant that produces what eventually is cleaned and deodorized into Canola oil. In northern climates they are a spring and summer plant, here in Florida they are wintertime fare, showing up after Thanksgiving and usually totally gone by St. Patrick’s day. Wild radish and wild mustard look similar but have small differences. One is that Mustards grow tall, radishes like to serpentine. Radish blossoms cluster and have noticable veins, mustard blossoms are singular and the veins are not obvious. The seeds pods are different as well. Mustard’s pod is smooth, the radish jointed and why the mustard is called the charlock and the radish the jointed charlock. Their blossoms are both peppery and mustardy. They work best in cold salads or hot soups, the latter they can be tossed in just before serving. And of course Mustard and radish leaves can be cooked up as greens.

Nasturtiums are peppery

Nasturtiums are a favorite nibble of my mother. We always had a row or two of them growing every year. The blossoms are peppery. In fact, the entire plant above ground is edible, even the seeds which can be pickled and used like capers. Nasturtium in Latin mean literally to twist the nose, because of their pungency,. They have have been praised for their flavor for at least 2,000 years. Multi-colored, low growing or trailing, Nasturtiums are often used in kid projects because the seeds are large, they’re fast to germinate and grow, safe, and edible.

While we’re raiding the garden let’s not forget about Okra blossoms. Like many edible flowers already mentioned it is in the hibiscus clan. I have grown Okra in my garden and there are dozens of  cultivars to choose from that produce some variety of blossom colors.  Like most hibiscus blossoms they are shy on taste but add color and texture to salads as well as an attractive garnish. Of course you could also let them go on to produce Okra which is a kitchen vegetable of many uses. In fact, growing Okra is for the blossoms is perhaps the quickest and easiest way to get lovely large blossoms to your table quickly. And there are “dwarf” version for patio pot use. One word of warning, some Okra plants have spines.

There are some 400 species in the Allium association if you include Onions, garlic, chives, sallots, and closely related ramps/leeks, the latter having wide leaves. Usually the flowers have a stronger flavor than the leafy parts, and the developing seed head even stronger flavor. Blossoms are usually white but can also be pink. Onion stems are round, as are chives but smaller. Garlic leaves are flat. Ramps and leeks have large leaves.

Tap to dislodge bees first

I have read there are no toxic Opuntias. With some 300 of them I don’t personally know. I do eat cactus pads on a regular basis. I fry and grill them. But, as with most cactus, one has to contend with glochids and spines. The spines one can see. It’s the tiny hair-like glochids that can make one semi-miserable, tolerable in a finger, maddening in your tongue. Duct tape removes them moderately well. Wear gloves harvesting. The best approach is to use a long shap fillet knife as the flowers are surprisingly thick. Also tap them first to dislodge bees. Among all the Opuntia the Prickly Pear Cactus flower is the most often eaten, not raw but cooked, usually boiled. Their flavor leans towards tart. The blossoms also make a good wine.

Where would Greeks be without Oregano, or the rest of us? And is it a wild plant or cultivated? In most of the New World it is a cultivated plant. In the land of my ancestors it grows wild, particulary on the lopes of Mt. Taygetos (said tah-EE-gah-tos) south of Sparta in The Mani (and from where we get the word maniacs in English because of how the Maniotes fought.) Taygetos means “joy of mountain.”  Oregano is similar. It’s from two Greek words, oros, which means moutain, and ganousthal meaning delight in. “Delight in the mountain is” translated into good eats and where the oregano prefers to grow. There should be some truth to that because oregano also grows in Sanmaria Gorage on mountainous Crete, where I love to hike. We are told Aphrodite, the goddess of beauty, created oregano as a symbol of happiness. Ancient Greeks would crown newlyweds with garlands of oregano to bless of happiness on their marriage.  Oregano’s blossoms are a milder version of the plant’s leaves Incidentaly, majoram is in the same genus as oregano. Oregano is Origanum vulgare, and marjoram is Origanum majorana. Think of majoram as oregano lite and used the same way. In many place in the Mediterraean area Oregano is called Wild Majoram.

The problem with Pansies is the same problem with Begonias: Getting them from a wholesome source. Pansies are actually violets and descended from the much-loved Viola tricolor aka Johnny-Jump-Ups. There is always the question if one should lump all violets in together or do some sorting. I chose to sort a little. Pansies are extremely common bedding plants but they are commercially raised so that can mean some chemicals you don’t want to consume. It is best to raise your own so you know exactly what you’re eating. Like most short violets pansies tend to have a nice scent and are sweet to the taste. There are only two cautions. Violet roots are definitely not edible. The American natives used them for insecticide. And, yellow violets tend to be laxative in less than moderate quantities.

Female papaya blossom

This won’t make much sense to those who live where there is a winter but the first time I climbed Turtle Mound — not a great feat as it is only 80 feet high — I was surprised to see Papaya’s growing on top. Turtle Mound is a midden, an ancient trash heap made mostly of millions of oyster shells dumped there by ancient natives. It’s been more than three decades since my first visit and the papayas are still there, self-seeding as papayas do. A native of Mexico they are naturalized in warm areas of the world. Papaya blossoms, like very young leaves, are edible cooked, which is usually by boiling.  Actually cooking the yellow flowers is a lot easier than pollinating them because there are female blossoms, male blossom, and male/female blossoms, kinda you, me and us. You have to move pollenating material around correctly or you don’t get fruit (also edible.)

Parsley Flowers

Like so many of our spices Parsley is a native of the Mediterranean. While for this article we are interested in the flowers there are actually two major divisions within the parsley realm, leaves and roots. Among the leaves there is curly or flat leaf. Interestinlgy the flat leaf is closer to the wild parlsey than the curly. Flat leaf is easier to grow, more tolerant of agricultural abuses, and has a stronger flavor. Curly leaf is more decorative and milder in flavor. It is the one used mostly for a garnish. There is also a root parsley, not common outside of central and eastern Europe where it is used in soups and stews. It has a nutty celery/parsley taste and is often fried like potato chips. From Argentine salsa to a tea Vitamin C rich parsley has multifold uses in the kitchen. Even the stems can be dried and added to dishes. The blossoms are salad fare or can be added to anything the leaves are used for. Parsley, incidentally, means “forked turnip” though parsely and turnips are not related.

There is a progression, I think. When  you are a kid you hate to eat your Peas. You get past that then run into your first peapod, usually at a Chinese restaurant. You get past that when you eat your first pea blossom. Note, eating pea blossoms will reduce your production of peas but a pea blossom here or there is pleasant. They are crunchy, slightly sweet, and taste like peas. That does vary some with what varity you have planted. Also the pea shoots and tendrils are edible as well. All usually consumed raw though you could cook them. A word of caution. I am referring to edible peas, the genus Pisum, not ornamental peas. Those can be toxic.

When my father passed on six years ago he left a small Peony garden that still has 18 bloomers, one red and a wide variety of pink shades. They’re quite hardy and don’t like to be moved. Peonies have been been cultivated in home gardens since about the time Columbus sailed the ocean blue. Of course there are no good ones where I live because they like temperate climates and need winter chilling. Originally from China they were and still are used for medicine. Petals can be added to salads or will happily float in drinks. Another option is to parboil them, add a little sugar, and use them as a sweet treat.

Petunia x hybrida

One wouldn’t think so but there is an edible Petunia species. Petunias are in the solonace family which has some famous edibles and poisons. This is not just any petunia but Petunia x hybrida probably developed in the early to mid-1800’s.   The P. hybrida was created out of several Petunia species and comes in two types, grandiflora (large flowered) and multiflora (many flowered.) Grandiflora have trailing stems and tend to spread with blossoms up to five inches.  Multiflora petunias are bushier and have smaller flowers from two to three inches in diameter.  Many colors and patterns are available. The mild-tasting flowers are used  in salads or as a garnish.

There are two Phlox, so to speak. One that gets one to two feet high and shows up seasonally  in fields, particularly here in Florida. That’s not the one you want. You want the perennial phlox that grows to three of four feet tall, Phlox paniculata. I’m sure you’ve seen it. Like the Meadowsweet above it is an old world plant found in many home gardens and yards. It has escaped into the wild and can be found in the eastern half of North America plus Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Utah and Washington state. The slightly spicy blossoms range from red to pink to white. They go well with fruit salads.

Pineapple Guava’s are becoming a popular ornamental with an unusual flower and fruit.  In fact, there is one where I teach regularly. The blossoms are striking and reminds one of several cactus blossoms, in its own way. The fruit, equally unusual, ripens in September or October here. It stays green but does get soft enough to eat. There is a bit of pineapple in the fruit’s flavor if one uses the imagination. I have a Strawberry Guava in my yard and its even more difficult to taste “strawberry” It’s fruit. The flower of the Pineapple Guava,  Strawberry Guava, sweet. Like the fruit it says tropical reminding one of papaya.

Our next edible flower comes with a warning. Don’t eat its similar looking realitive. How can you tell them apart? The one you want smells of pineapple, which is why it is called the Pineapple Sage, Salvia elegans. Sometimes it is also called the Tangerine sage. The point is crush a leaf and you will smell pineapple or tangerine. The one you don’t want is Salvia coccinea, also called the Scarlet Sage, the Texas Sage and the Hummingbird Sage. Crush its leaf and it smells grassy or slightly sage-like.  Flowers of the Pineapple Sage, which taste like a hint of pineapple, are quite edible. However, even a quarter-inch square portion of a Salvia coccinea blossom will give you a big stomach ache and make you more than mildly ill. It’s not go-to-the-emergency-room ill but close to it.  I know this from personal experience beause once, for lack of a better word,  I titrated the S. coccinea for potental edible use. It quickly let me know it is defintely is not an edible, raw at least. After my experience I had no interest in seeing if S. coccinea had any uses cooked.

Carnations (Dianthus caryophyllus) were covered above but let’s revisit the genus Dianthus minature version such as Pinks and Sweet William, respectfully Dianthus plumarius and Dianthus barbatus.)  Dianthus means God Flower… Hmmm… would diandros be godfather? Anyway… These little carnations don’t like heat or alkline soil which made them perfect for the cold acidic landscape of Maine’s summer. They don’t even like to be mulched. Curiously the name “Pink” does not refer to the color but a 14th century verb “to pink” meaning to preforate or create a punched patten. Apparenlty I grew up in the Dark Ages because it was a verb I heard around the home.  Why Sweet William is called that is anyone’s guess but the term for the flower first showed up in 1596. (There were no King Williams at the time but William Shakespeare was mid-careerit’s a guess.) To use the blossoms cut away the bitter white base. The petals are sweet with a clove or nutmeg like scent.  Often used in salads, aspic and soups.

How many Hosta’s there are is a matter of taxonomic debate. Maybe 45. While the flowers of all of them are reported to be edible, according to the Montreal Botanical Garden, at least the young leaves of one, Hosta  lancifolia, the Narrow Leaf Plantain Lily, are eaten cooked or preserved in salt. It’s a common home and landscaping plant that can tolerate shade and has naturalized in several states from Massachusetts to all states touching a straight line west to Indiana. I’m sure you have seen its distinctive leaves.  It’s a good thing you are interested in the flowers because just about every woodland creature loves to eat the leaves, from deer down to insects. In temperate climes look for blossoms at the end of summer or early fall.

The Primrose suffered the fate of several plants. Petty, edible and showed up very early in the spring after folks had spent a long winter with no fresh food. This wasn’t an issue when there were more primroses than humans. The primrose as been so harvested in the wild that it is not illegal in many of its native places in Europe to pick it. However, it is also a common garden flower and a commerial product so getting some primrose legally really isn’t an issue. In the genus Primula vulgaris the blossom reminds me of a small magnolia blossom. Several colors are avaiable now. Also know as Cow Slip the blossoms are bland in flavor but sweet. The can be added to salad, the bud picked, or cooked as a vegetable. They have even been used to make wine.

Long ago and far away I got accepted to law school. The job I had stopped before classes began so to tide me over I delivered flowers. One could tell several stories regarding that including how most women are very suspicious when they get Roses from him other than Valentine’s Day. I even had some deliveries refused! Beyond that, however, the roses I delivered had no scent. None. Zip. Zilch. Nada. No rose aroma at all. Just before I would deliver them I’d take them out of the van and spray them with an artificial rose aroma. The roses were raised for their look and in the process the scent was bred out (and you did not spay them in the van or you smelled roses for weeks.)  Less purebred roses are known for their rosehips and edible petals. The flavor depends on the type, color and conditions of raising. They can range from tart to sweet, spicy. Darker ones have stronger flavor. Remove any white portion of a petal. That will be bitter. All true roses (genus Rosa) are edible.

Rose of Sharon

South Korea is crazy about the Rose of Sharon, Hibiscus syriacus. It’s their national flower. It is on everything, and it’s native to Korean and much of Asia. So why is it called syriacus, which means “from Syria.” They got it wrong a few centuries ago. They thought it was from Syria. Oddly mistakes like that cannot be changed. That it is wrong in not enough. There has to be a botanical reason to change a plant’s name once given, not a geographical one. Called mugunghwa in Korean — which translates into “flower of eternity” or something close to that, been a garden staple in that country since there were gardens — hence the eternity spin. The leaves are made into tea and the flowers eaten, usually raw. It made it to Europe by the 1500s and was in most English gardens by the 1700s. The American colonies followed suit. It’s also my mother’s favorite flower. Had to mention that or I wouldn’t hear the end of it.

I can remember the first time I saw Rosemary growing in the wild in North America. I was on a business trip to California. Of course it grows wild in its native Greece. There it is called ???????????? (then-dro-LEE-vah-row.) Students in ancient Greece wore it around their necks in garlands or braided it into their hair thinking it improved their memory.  In English Rosemary means “remembrance.” I have two bushes of it growing in my yard. The light blue blossoms are sweet, spicy, pungent and taste of rosemary.

Safflower

Because saffron is so expensive, $100 to $150 an ounce, several flowers have been used as substitutes and adulterants, among them Safflower. But, safflower has uses in its own right. Botanically Carthamus tinctorius, safflower blossoms are the source of a yellow or red dye used in butter, confections and liqueurs… and you thought that Sambuca was naturally colored… The seeds are fried  and eaten in chutney. The oil is used in salads and cooking. Young leaves can be eaten as a potherb or seasoned in soy sauce. The flower’s petals are edible, slightly bitter, often cooked with rice.

Three “saffron” stigmas

As of this writing the best price I can find on the Internet for saffron is $92.95 an ounce, free shipping, marked down from $144. Why is it expensive? Because “saffron” is the three red stigmas of the flower and must be picked by hand. Limited amount, labor intensive. It is the most costly spice by weight. Then again, one uses very little of it. Saffron is acually a crocus, Crocus sativus. It does not grow in the wild and is totally cultivated by man. Technically it is a monomorphic clone and believed to be a mutant form of Crocus cartwrightianus. The Greeks were the first to cultivate it, probably on Crete. Historians tell us it has been bought and sold for over four thousand years. Ninety percent of the world’s saffron comes from Iran. The styles are used to flavor and color sauces, creams, breads, preserves, curries, rice, soups, caked, puddings, eggs even butter and cheese. It can be a tea substitute and the roots roasted. It’s not a spice you keep on hand. Usually purchased for a dish specific. It takes about 13,125 dried stigmas to weigh an ounce. Oh, I forgot to mention: In large amounts saffron is deadlly. That’s an expensive way to go.

Scarlet Runner Bean is not your run-of-the-mill bean. It has bright red flowers, multi-colored seeds and puts on a root to be a perennial though most folks view it as an annual. Depends where you live, I suppose.  The root is edible, the young pods are before they get fibrous, and the beans in or out of their pods are edible either cooked fresh or after shelling and drying. Read the beans have to be cooked no matter how you prepare them but young pods don’t. The blossoms are under an inch across, grow in clusters, and are available all season. The flavorful flowers are favored by hummingbirds and butterflies and make excellent garnishes for soups and salads. There are at least 18 varieties of the Scarlet Runner Bean.  Usually the vine is used to cover fences, guy-wires and trellises.

Snapdragons

While most articles on edible flowers include Snapdragons I considered leaving them out. Let me put it this way: If the flavor of the Snapdragons existed in some other plant it would not be eaten. They are edible, they won’t kill you, but when it comes to flavor they are on the poor to bad side. Their taste can run from bland to bitter, depending upon the soil and how they were raised. They get included on edible flower lists — particularly the commercial edible flower list — because they are pretty, a lot of folks recognize or grow them, and few people eat garnishes anyway. If you ever draft a list of edible flowers and you aren’t alphabetizing, put Snapdragons last, better still, as a Post Script, a little asterisk at the bottom. The genus they are in is called Antirrhinum.  It’s Greek and means “opposite the  nose” or “unlike the nose.”  I don’t know why that family is called that but I am sure it is not a compliment. They are called “snapdragons” because of the blosom’s resemblance to a fictional face of a dragon that opens and closes when squeezed.

It’s clearly not wild. It’s clearly a planted ornamental. But I get asked about it all the time. Is Society Garlic edible? The short answer is yes. The blossoms smell and taste far more like a vegetable than a blossom. Their flavor is sweeter than garlic, more like of an onion but still peppery. They’re actually a native of South Africa and only a distant relation to regular garlic. White settlers to South Africa considered it a more polite spice to eat at social functions than real garlic. It’s probably safe to say that there is more Society Garlic growing locally than real garlic. Garlic does not like the hot weather whereas Society Garlic thrives in it. If they are well-established they are drought resistant. The leaves are also edible, and are the bulbs on many species. Use the flowers in salads or soups, anyplace you want a bit of garlic, pepper and onion. I have a separate article on them on site.

Squash blossoms actually cover a wide range of flowers. Zucchini, pumpkins, calabashes. All are squashes for our purposes and all have edible blossoms. Both male and female blossoms are edible but removing female blossoms can reduce squash production in your garden. You can tell the female Squash blossom by looking just behind the blossom. There you will see a miniature Squash or the like. Stuffing Squash blossoms with soft cheese is a time honored means of preparation. What people don’t know is that the leaves and sprouts of most garden variety squashes are edible cooked as are their seeds. Removed the seeds, wash off the debris, and roast in a slow oven for a half hour or so. You can eat them shell and all or shell them.

Stock is bred in many colors

Some like it hot, and some do not, and Stock does not. It’s a fragrant, two-foot tall, attractive flower that likes full sun, good, well-drained soil, and temperatures under 75F. They can even tolerate a light frost. There are some 140 species of Stock. The one we are interested in is Matthiola incana, common stock as it were though it comes in many colors. It’s native along the Mediterranean from Greece to Spain and was a mainstay of European gardens in the 16th and 17th centuries. The Elizabethans called them “gillyflower” and the Victorian allowed them in their cottage gardens. Even Thomas Jefferson got some for Monticello in 1771 and in fact one can still buy seed from Jefferson’s stock. Stock flowers are usually added to salads eaten raw or a garnish with sweet disserts. They can be candied. Their flavor is perfume-ish. The flower’s pods are edible, too. A common cultivated flower in North American it is naturalized in North Carolina, Illinois, Texas, California and British Columbia usually in a few isolated areas but rather well-distributed in coastal southern california and San Francisco. It is also called Tenweeks Stock.

Strawberry Blossom

There’s a real good reason why almost no one knows this next flower is edible. And that’s because nearly everyone eats the fruit! Strawberries are prime food. Botanically Fragaria ananassa, Strawberry blossoms are edible raw though most folks wait for the fruit. Of course, you can be different and toss the flowers on salads just to surprise folks. The leaves are edible as well but are on the astringent side. As with many cultivated crops harvest carefully because as a commercial crop they are often doused wth this or that chemical to keep them living and looking well until they get to market. The cultivated blossoms are pink, the wild white.

Sunflower petals are edible

Nearly everyone knows you can eat Sunflower seeds. There are actually two general kinds of seeds. There are black seeds with a white stripe. Those are the ones you usually buy in the store. Then there are Sunflower seeds that are smaller and totally black. Those are used for oil (and those that don’t make the oil grade end up in bird seed.) But there’s more to eat on a Sunflower that seeds, no matter which kind. The unopened buds are edible cooked. They taste like artichokes, to whom they are closely related. And once the huge blossom is open the petals can be eaten, though they are bittersweet. The petals are often mixed with pasta.

Szechaun Buttons

Szechaun Buttons, Paracress. No, they’re not from China but Brazil. This is an edible flower you will likely want to grow yourself rather than order. Right now a 30 blossom order is selling for $39.95 not including shipping. Why would you order them? Because they are the current party favor but they have other uses as well. Spilanthes acmella, aka, Acmella ocleracea, grow in Brazil. They are peppery like capsaicin, hence their name because of a heat similar to Szechuan peppers… well almost. The active chemical is spilanthol. That used to numb gums for toothaches. It causes a reaction with the trigeminal nerve pathway controling the control motor and sensory functions of your mouth. The result is a tingling, popping sensation in the mouth. Kind of a cross between Pop Rocks and a 9-volt battery. Besides that, they are cooked and used in salads, sauces, soups, sorbets and as cocktail garnishes. You can add shredded uncookled greens to your salad, sparingly, or sprinkle some uncooked petals on your salad. The taste is herbal and slightly bitter. One high end restaurant uses them in a cheese plate.  At another the tiny petals and some lemon thyme are infuse a small pot of honey that accompanies roasted kabocha squash, sweet peppers and toasted walnuts. A third offers patrons a Concord grape soda float with lemon verbena sorbet into which shreds of Sechuan buttons are dispersed through a soda siphon. Did I mention they use Szechaun Bottons to flavor chewing tobacco in India?.

Another escapee from Eurasia now found over most of North America and the rest of the world is the Common Tansy. First mentioned for medicinal uses by the Ancient Greeks, the “bitter buttons” by the 8th century were in Charlemagne’s herb gardens and used by Benedictine monks in Switzerland. In 16th century England it was a “necessary of the garden.” Tansy, related to the thistle, even been used as an insect repellent.  In fact, meat (and corpses) were wrapped in it for preservation and keep insects at bay. It is not a good repellent against mosquitoes but does a good job with the Colorado Potato Beetle.  Like chamomile it contains thujone so it should be used very sparingly. But then again, that’s what spices are for. The blossoms’s flavor is bitter, camphor-like.

Tea Blossom

Our next plant is known by billions. Wars were fought over it, an empire build and fortunes made, Camellia sinensis, better known as Tea. Yep, the tea in your cup. When I first bought land I planted a C. sinensis knowing it was iffy. It was. Didn’t make it. Too warm, too humid. And it is an understatement to say tea change the course of history. Read about Robert Fortune in my article on Forsythia. He was sent by the British government to China, undercover, to steal tea seeds and the like to start a tea industry in India, a thef and resulting Indian tea industry that China has only recently surpassed. Besides a beverage, tea makes a marinade for fish and meat, mixed with anise blossoms it is used to make “tea eggs.” Kombucha is basically tea cider, leaves are used to smoke meat, its fruits are eaten, leaves are chewed to remove the odor of garlic and onions, and the blossoms are cooked. One favorite way is to make tempura out of them, deep frying them.

Tea Olive

If you go to an Asian market and buy “Cassia Blossom Jam” it is not from the Cassia clan at all but rather Osmanthus frangrans, the Tea Olive, also called the Fragrant Olive and Sweet Olive. Its name(s) gives you a good idea what it is used for.  It a glossy evergreen with little white blossoms that bloom almost all year long, making it a favorite landscape plant where it is warm all year. The blossoms smell deliciously fragrant or ripe peaches or apricots. It tends to bloom in autumn, winter and spring. Fruit follows about six months later. The unripe fruit are preserved in brine like olives. The flowers are used to make tea fragrant as well as wine, liqueurs, and confections. The blossoms are either preserved in a salty bring or made into a sugary paste. The Osmanthus americana, the American Olive, is used a similar way.

Thyme

I went to Crete in the spring once to longest gorge in Europe if you count extreme southern Greece as geographically part of Europe proper. There was, however, a late season snow storm and the gorge was closed. So I hiked down Embrose Gorge, much smaller but not without its charms. I remember three things well from the hike. The first was the wonderful scent of wild thyme growing throughout the gorge. Next was literally being run over by a large heard of sheep and goats. And lastly later that evening discovering the local taverna-made rose smelled just like the sheep. Without thyme the chef and the herbalist would be hard pressed to find a suitable substitute. In the kitchen thyme has so many use including the blossoms. Thymus vulgaris, leaves and blossoms are used to flavor stuffing, fish, meat, fowl, cheese vinegar, gravies, sauces, bouquest garni, herbs de Provence, brine for olives, eggs, bread, tea and honey. Shoots are a garnish.  The blossoms are milder than the leaves.

Tuberose has been put to a lot of uses. The Hawians used it to make leis. In Victorian times it was the funeral flower of choice. Then it spent a long time helping perfumes smell the way they do. Now it can be found as a food in five star hotels, well… at least those in the Orient. Botanically it is Polianthes tuberosa and might be a native of Mexico.The flowers open from the bottom of the flower spike up and can last a couple of weeks if you remove the blossoms and eat them. The Aztec so liked the flower their used its oil to flavor their chocolate. They are eaten cooked and are traditonally added to vegetable soups. They are also used to flavor some soy sauces

Tulips’ flavor vary with color

Tulips are one of those wonderful flowers you hear that is toxic. The answer is yes and no. The petals are quite edible raw or cooked though they loose their color on cooking. They can have many flavors: Bland, beans, peas, and cucumbers. Pink, peach and white blossoms are the sweetest, red and yellow the most flavorful. While you can use them to garnish salads their more common use is to hold appetizers or dip. If you use the entire blossom cut off the pistil and stamens from the center of the blossom. The bottom ends of the petals can also be bitter so cut them off as well when used individually. So what is toxic? The yellow inner core of the tulip bulb. It has to be cut out before the rest of the bulb can be cooked and eaten. Also know some people are quite allergic to tulips

Wisteria is a nibble of spring, here for a few weeks and then gone. The blossoms of various species are edible cooked — some raw — but they are usually blanched in boiling water, strained, and mixed into salads or the deep fried. The rest of the plant is toxic per se. In fact, as little as two raw seeds can kill a child. That is not uncommon for a member of the pea family which ranges from edible to toxic. See my full article on wisteria on this site for edible variations. One of the most common of the 8 to 10 species of wisteria is Wisteria sinsensis, or the Chinese Wisteria. It’s a vigorous, fast grower that doesn’t need fertilizer and fixes nitrogen. In fact, abuse improves blossoming as does pruning. It can live at least 115 years (as of April 2011) and is consider an invasive species is some areas.  It has naturalized from  Maine to Florida and as far west as Arkansas. Not bad since its arrival in 1816. Another one commonly eaten wisteria is Wisteria floribunda from Japan, also escaped in the US.

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People have written about edible flowers ever since the Romans

Black Salsify, Coltsfoot, Yellow Pond Lily, Mexican Hyssop, Carambola, Baobob, Kapok, Durian, Italian Bugloss, Blueweed

Black Salsify

Edible plants collect a lot of names.  This one has been dubbed black salsify, Spanish salsify, black oyster plant, serpent root, viper’s herb, viper’s grass, and simply Scorzonera which is also its botanical name, Scorzonera hispanica. A native of the Mediterranean areas it’s cultivated around the world and happens to be naturalized in California. It was cultivated in Europe by the 1600s and is a significant crop there still. The root contains protein, potassium, calcium, phosphorus, iron as well as vitamins A, B1, E and C. It also has inulin which is suitable for diabetics. The long black roots are boiled, steamed, baked, batter-fried, put into soups and stews or roasted as a coffee substitute. Shoots are added to tossed salads. Flower buds raw or cooked are eaten on salads. Blossom petals are also sprinkled on salads or used in omelets.

Coltsfoot

Coltsfoot has become controversial. Young leaves, flower buds, and young flowers can be use in soups or as potherbs. Fresh or dried flowers are used to make an aromatic tea. A delicious wine is made from the blossoms and ashes from the plant are a salt substitute. Used for centuries it has come under scrutiny for chemical that might cause liver damage, at least in infants. There is one documented case of coltsfoot tea causing severe liver problems in one infant. In another case, an infant developed liver disease and died because the mother drank tea containing coltsfoot during her pregnancy. The plant has also been used for centuries to make a cough suppressant. Indeed, its botanical name Tussilago farfara means “cough suppressing activity.” A European native it is naturalized in the northeast quadrant of North America as well as Washington State and British Columbia.

Yellow Pond Lily

The Yellow Pond Lily has been on the botanical move. It’s been Nuphar Luteum, Nuphar lutea, Nuphar lutea var. advena and Nuphar advena. The latter will probably stick for a while. Genetically it never was Nuphar luteum/lutea. Indeed, the Yellow Pond Lilies in North America might go from one wrong species to eight new right ones, once the botanists have argued it all out. One hint that the yellow pond lilies in North America were different than the yellow pond lilies of Europe was the total lack of their use in Europe and their common use “across the pond.”  While the local root is too bitter to eat it’s seeds are only mildly bitter and can be retted to get rid of that quality.  See my article on the Yellow Pond Lily. The large-petaled yellow blossom of the Nuphar advena can be used to make a tea.

Mexican Hyssop

The Agastache genus provides a lot of flowers and leaves for salads and teas. At least nine if not ten species have consumer friendly parts. Despite that one of my readers, a teacher, took some blossoms in for a tasting in her mostly Hispanic class and ran brick wall into the administration who viewed anything not from the grocery store as toxic. So much for ethnobotany. Pictured here is Agastache mexicana, Mexican Hyssop, which is in the greater mint family. It’s highly aromatic leaves and flowers are used in salads, for flavoring and tea. Other useable Agastache include: Agastache cana, Agastache foeniculum, Agastache neomexicana, Agastache rugusa, Agastache urticifolia, and Agastache anethiodora.

Carambola

I happen to have the next tree growing in my back yard, which is about 50 miles north of where the tree would choose to grow. It flowers twice a year but the second setting is minor. Called Carambola or Star Fruit, its botanical name is Averrhoa carambola.  The edible fruit go from small, green and tart to large, golden yellow and very sweet. But, it also has edible flowers and leaves that are used like sorrel. The acid flowers are used in salads or used to make conserves. The fruit is eaten fresh, dried, sliced into fruits and salads, or used in sherbets, ices, creams mousses and other desserts. When the tart the fruit is cooked with fish and fowl or made into a relish. Another member of the genus, Averrhoa bilimbi is the cucumber tree. It’s fruit and flowers have various edible uses as well.

Baobob Blossom

With so many readers around the world I have to include an exotic or two though this next flower does grow in Florida and other warm areas. The Baobob Tree, Adansonia digitata, is extremely odd looking and versatile. Like the Kapok Tree it is pollinated by bats. The fruit is eaten, the leaves boiled as a potherb or dried and ground and used like file, to flavor and thicken sauces, stews and soups. The seeds are used as a coffee substitute or as a baking powder substitute. Germinating shoots and tender shoots are eaten. And the flowers are edible raw.

Kapok Blossom

When one studies edible plants you quickly learn that one group can consider a plant only edible, another will think of the same plant as only medicinal, a third will view it as famine food only and a fourth don’t consider it good for anything. The Kapok Tree, Ceiba pentandra, falls into medicine and food, depending upon the eyes of the beholder. Like the Baobob Tree it is pollinated by bats. Tender leaves, buds and fruit are eaten like okra. Seeds are roasted and ground, eaten in soups, used as flavoring, or employed to make the fermented drink kantong. They can be used to make tempeh or squeezed for cooking oil. Wood ashes are a salt substitute. Flowers are blanched and often eaten with chili sauce, the dried stamens are added to curries and soups for coloring. A nice specimen of the tree can be seen in Dreher Park just north of the entrance to the zoo in West Palm Beach.

Durian Blossoms

This next tree is infamous for its fruit. You either wildly love its aroma or passionately hate it. Carrying it on trains in Thailand is illegal. It is banned from commercial flights. At least one jet passenger was stopped and a man reeking of it kicked off. Last year a tycoon sent a private jet to pick up 88 fruit when it came into season. He wanted 100 but they weren’t available then. It is the infamous Durian, a spine-covered fruit that smells like a sewer and tastes like microwaved socks, and some people love it. Their passion is not shared. The flower petals are edible.  Did I mention the huge fruit falling from the tree has hit people on the head, killing them. As with coconut, in some areas where there are Durian trees and hotels the fruit is intentionally removed to decrease the likelihood of someone being beaned.

Italian Bugloss

One cannot make up a name like Italian Bugloss. Also known as Wild Bugloss, Alkanet and Anchusa, botanically it’s Anchusa azurea a member of the Forget-Me-Not family. Originally from Europe it’s cultivated around the world, is intensely blue, and is used among other things as a dye. Italian Bugloss has become naturalized without logic in a number of places in North America including New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Ohio. Michigan, Iowa, Texas, Colorado, Utah, California, Wyoming, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia The bright blue blossoms  are an excellent salad addition and are quite attractive when mixed with rose petals. On Crete it’s called αγόγλωσσος, ang-GO-gloss-ose. Locals eat the tender stems boiled. Also eaten are the bosoms of Anchusa capensis and Anchusa officinalis. “Bugloss” means ox tongue because of the roughness of the leaves. αγόγλωσσος can mean literally “impiety tongue” read rough tongue.

Blueweed blossoms start pink then turn blue.

Closely related to borage and Italian Bugloss, Blueweed, Echium vulgare, is naturalized throughout most of North America, missing only from Florida, Mississippi, Alabama, North Dakota, Arizona, Nevada, California, Canada’s Northwest Territory and the Yukon.  A native of Europe, it’s an invasive species in Washington state. What is slightly odd about Blueweed is that the blossoms start out pink and turn blue. However, the stamens remain red making the blossom striking. Echium is grown as an oilseed crop and contains significant amounts of gamma linolenic acid (GLA) and the rarer stearidonic acid. Leaves are cooked and used like spinach. The flowers are candied and added to salads. The plant is covered with spines, so pick carefully.

See Edible Flowers: Part Eighteen

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How did primitive man cook without pots or pans?

Mesolithic Cooking: It’s the Pits

How do you cook without pots or pans?

It’s a question our distant ancestors never asked because pots and pans didn’t exist. They just cooked food as best they could, and it wasn’t always easy. When Europeans first came to North America the first request and the one thing the American Indians wanted most was metal pots. I can’t help but think squaws knew a good thing when they saw one and told the braves “no metal pot, no come into the wigwam tonight.”

Several books and numerous professional monographs have been published on cooking before metalware, particularly in the Mesolithic Age, or the middle stone age.  And of course there are hundreds of camping books with various tips about primitive cooking. Not wanting to reinvent the wheel this will just be a random collection of some techniques and food in rough alphabetical order.

Historically, the experts tell us man has been cooking food for close to a million years. For most of man’s history he cooked without pots, pans, or ovens. The first containers would have been wooden, dug out bowls (and canoes.) Baskets can also be made to be water tight or to cook grain in. One would like to think clay pots were instrumental in cooking, and there is some evidence they were, but they seemed to be more a vessel of storage. Clay is fragile and porous. This is how the ancient Greek invented their wine called retsina. They had to line clay pots with pine pitch to keep them from seeping away the wine. The pitch-flavored wine has been drank ever since.

The first metal pots appeared about 4,000 years old in the Old world, which means they are found in digs from about 2,000 BCE on. It is difficult to think of a metal pot as being revolutionary but it was, nearly as revolutionary as the invention of another metal marvel, the stirrup, which dramatically changed warfare. Today we boil an egg within a few minutes over instant fire. We rarely consider that same act took at least a half a day in the past to do, which is why eggs were roasted. It only took minutes. I suspect boiling was used mostly for medicines or occasionally for variety.

More to the point, many of the techniques can still be used. Some are very convenient. Some are still labor intensive. But if you are going to go into the woods and you also plan to eat knowing how cook without pots and pans is a skill every forager should know. In hunter-gatherer societies today they often cook without pots and pans and are very particular how they use their fire. They are using well-proven techniques as old as man.

Acorn mush: Drop hot acorn mush into cold water. It will form a rubbery ball that keeps well. (I am presuming you leached the acorns first.)

Ash cooking: Fish and simple breads wrapped in leaves can be easily and quickly cooked on near-dead coals. There are still coals but they are covered with gray ash. Turn the fish in seven to 10 minutes. Or, put some coals on top. Thin dough wrapped in leaves cook quickly.

Bamboo: Bamboo is hollow between nodes. You can stuff the hollow section with food, plug the top with grass or the like, then lean the tube over a fire. You can boil water the same way or make soup. Another method is to get a three section piece. Punch a small hole through the top and middle nodes (inside.) Put in water and let drain to bottom section, put food in top section. Place the bottom section near the fire, steam will rise and cook food in the top section.

Boiling water: Any boiling in the distant past, which was rare, was done in dug out canoes, wooden bowls, animal skin buckets, or clay pots. Hot rocks were put in the wooden, kin, or clay containers to heat the water. Know that a skin bucket of water suspended over a low fire will not burn. In England at ancient hut sites yard-wide and half as deep holes were carved into the solid rock. With hot coals in the bottom a skin could be stretched partially across the top for making soup or the like. No doubt the hide also added flavor… welcomed or not… Another technique was to put water in a natural shallow rock pit then add hot rocks. Whenever you use hot rocks to boil water the food should be wrapped in grass or leaves. This keeps ash and bits of debris from the rocks from dropping onto the food.

Bread: Bread can be rolled into a long skinny roll then wrapped around a branch like a climbing vine around a trunk and then positioned over the fire. Make sure you pick a safe wood to use such as sycamore, maple, dogwood, willow et cetera.  Bread can also be cooked on a flat hot rock or wrapped in leaves (see Large Leaf entry.)  If you have a primitive (or modern oven) one way to bake bread is to pour several pounds of honey in a bowl, drop the bread dough into the honey, and put the whole thing in the oven. The result is a sweet bread from a very ancient recipe and cooking method. Bread can also be cooked directly on hot coals. The outside will burn but the inside will be edible.

If you have boiling water and a square of cloth you can mix some spices, greens, bits of meat and flour together with a small amount of water to make a dough. Wrap it in the cloth and drop it in the boiling water. It will cook quite quickly.

Cattails: Take a clean cattail rhizome (root) and put it next to a fire or on coals. Literally burn black the outer layers of the root. This cooks the starch in the root fibers. After the outside is burned, open the root peeling the black part back or off. Pull the white fiber between your teeth to get the starch off. This is very easy and take a minimal amount of energy to get a high calorie meal (see my video on said.)

Clay:  Fine clay mixed with a little fine sand was a common means of cooking food where it was abundant. Stuff the food to be cooked, such as a fish or a duck, wrap it in grass, secure, then give it a good coating of clay. Put the clay-covered meat on a flat surface a bit of a distance from the fire and gently dry the clay, turning the meat as needed to ensure all of the clay is dry including the bottom. You do not want any wet spots or holes for the moisture to escape.  Once dry the clay-encrusted meat can be put on the coals or closer to the fire.  The grasses keep the clay and the flesh apart. Your average duck takes two hours to cook this way, turning once.

Small birds can be cooked without plucking. Smeared the clay onto their feathers, dry, then cook. When done this way the bird’s skin cannot be eaten. Porcupines can also be cooked by covering them with clay. When the clay is removed the spines come with it.

Conch: Lay the whole conch, or similar large mollusk, foot side up directly on coals. The entire shell acts as a pot. It is done when it froths.

Crab apples: Some bitter crab apples can be made edible by roasting them next to a fire.

Crayfish: Dispatch them by putting the tip of you knife into their backs just behind the head. Put them on short skewers, tail to head, then arrange vertically near the fire. Their legs et cetera will wiggle as they cook even though dead. When they are hot and red, enjoy.

Drying meat: Suspend thin strips of meat on a tree branch and put over a small fire. It is the updraft that dries the meat, not the heat. You don’t want to cook the meat. A smokey fire reduces the number of interested flies. Do not use conifer wood for the fire or to make smoke or you meat will taste like a pine tree. You can also put strips of meat to dry in the sun on rocks. If you need salt, you can evaporate sea water.

Eggs: All bird and reptile eggs can be cooked in the coals of a fire, or next to a fire. But you must do it correctly or you will have an egg explosion, not a deadly one but it could take out an eye. Practice with a chicken egg. All eggs have a fat end and a skinny end. Find the fat end. Make a small hole in the tip of the fat end then enlarge the hole to the size of a nickel, a quarter if a goose egg, half a penny if a quail egg. With a small pocket knife or a stick pierce the air membrane and the yoke. Nestle the egg, hole up, in coals near the fire. If using a chicken egg, turn it after five minutes, and cook for another 5 minutes. By then the white should be solid and the yoke semisolid like dough. Quail eggs take about two minutes per side, a goose egg 10 minutes per side.

Want a fried egg?  If you have a banana leaf you can arrange the leaf carefully near the coals and fry an egg on the leaf. It has just enough oil and toughness to do the job. (I should add there are two birds in the South Seas that are not eaten because they eat toxic bugs.)

Fish: While nearly every boy scout knows several ways to cook a fish over a fire little thought is given to flavor. The cleaned fish has a natural cavity to put items for seasoning. Among the items one can flavor a cooking fish with in the body cavity are plums, elderberries, bay leaves, blackberries, grapes, nuts, wild garlic, pepper grass, smartweed, sorrel, oxalic, sea purslane, seablite, sea mustard, gorse flowers, dandelion, hibiscus, violets, ramps, pepper grass roots, shepherd’s purse roots and others. (See “Clay” entry.)  Small fish can be wrapped in leaves and cooked on a low coals.

Gar and mullet can be cooked as is uncleaned directly on ashes, about 10 minutes a side for a foot long fish. When dons just pull off the skin. Do not eat Gar eggs. They are toxic to mammals.

Flat Rocks: While hot rocks are commonly used for pit cooking they can be used directly. Start a fire one several flat rocks. Let it burn down. Brush away the coals and cook your food directly on the flat rocks. This is good for small game and fish. You can also put a flat rock into the coals or prop a flat rock between two rocks with coals underneath. Grease the rock or your food will stick.

The ultimate flat rock is a polished slab of granite over a fire (or charcoal.)  You can hold it up with four bricks or the like. Remember to oil it before cooking.

Hot Rocks: Can be used to open difficult fruit or nuts. Take the rock to the nut, or the nut to the rock.

Insects: Some North American Indians would dig a pit in the middle of a field and build a fire in it. When it had reduce to coals they would fan out around the field and drive grasshoppers and crickets towards the pit. The insects would fall in the pit and get cooked. Once the fire had cooled the insects were eaten. In your backpack you can carry a piece of iron wire to skewer grasshoppers for roasting. Insects must be cooked thoroughly because they have parasites. See “Parching” entry. As for grasshoppers, eat those that are solid colors, such as all brown, all black, all green. Avoid multi-colored grasshoppers especially orange and black ones.

Large leaves: Several large leaves can be used to wrap food for cooking. Sometimes the leaves have to be wilted (burdock, water dock) other times the spine needs to be bent (bananas and Alligator Flag, read Thalia geniculata.) Other leaves, such as Paper Mulberry, can wrap small items. Indians in the southern United States cooked corn bread wrapped in the leaves of the Alligator Flag. Eggs can be fried on a banana leaf and many Asian cultures wrap food for steaming or roasting in banana leaves. The most common packaging via a banana leaf is pyramidal.

Meat: Any piece of meat weighing a few pounds can be easily roasted if you have a leather thong (or boot lace.) Using the thong (or strong string) suspend the meat beside the fire and twist the meat so when you let it go it spins. Depending upon the weight and materials used the chunk can spin back and fourth for 10 to 20 minutes. This assures even cooking.  The down side is that it needs nearly constant attending and rewinding. Also if you use string, you should wet the string occasionally to keep it from burning. Cooking time depends upon how close to the fire you suspend the meat and its size. A four-pound chicken a foot from the fire takes about four hours to cook thoroughly, or an hour a pound.  Smaller portions of meat can be put on a spit.

Another technique if using a hot stone pit is to wrap a hunk of meat in a simple flour and water dough. The dough cooks to a rock-hard consistency but holds in the meat juices and stays soft next to the meat. If you wrap the meat carefully and take it out with the dough seam on top the dough makes a perfect bowl.

Meat can also be placed directly on hot coals. The outside will get covered with ash and burn but the inside will be edible.

Nettles: Most members of the Urtica genus sting. Usually you collect them with gloves and then boil them. A different technique is to hold or suspend the entire plant near your fire or hot coals until it is very wilted. Remember to turn the plant in the process. The heat renders the chemical in the sting harmless and you can eat the plant raw.

Nuts: Make a bed of sand, bury the nuts in their shells in the sand, one to two inches depending upon the size of the nut. Build a small fire over the nuts. When the fire has died, dig up the nuts. This is particularly good with hazelnuts (filberts.)  Do not do this with acorns as they have tannic acid that must first be leached out.

Parching grain:  Put seeds in a basket or wooden bowl. Add a series of fire-hot rocks and stir around the bowl, cooking the seeds. When the rock cools remove and add another. Your nose will tell you when the grain is cooked. You might find it interesting that ancient man in Britain had a novel way of storing grain. He would dig a bell-shaped hole in the ground and fill it with grain. Then he plugged the top with a clay clump. The grain on the outside of the hole against the damp earth would germinate. The germinating grain would use up the oxygen in the hole leaving carbon dioxide. Without air the germinating grain died and formed a crust around the rest of the grain protecting it. Research shows the method works better than modern grain storage.

Some Insects, nuts and small tubers can also can be parched.

Pit baking: This technique works for a variety of food, just change the size of the pit, the materials and cooking time. When I was a boy we would often go out to an island at low tide, spend the day, usually over night, and then return on the next low tide. First we would dig a hole, line it with dry rocks, and start a fire in the pit. Then we would dig up clams, knock muscles of the rocks, and rummage around the seaweed for small crabs. When the fire had burned down we put seaweed in the pit, tossed in the shellfish, covered it with seaweed. After about an hour, or when we remembered, we would open the pit and have our feast. A matt or the like over the seaweed made things cook faster.

With large game you dig a larger hole, use more rocks, and build a larger fire. With large hunks of meat you must remove some of the rocks, put the meat in,  and put on rocks on top of the meat and then cover it all well. A grass mat helps hold the heat in. Give a leg of lamb three hours. Never use rocks from a stream. They can explode when heated.

Variation: After the rocks are hot, lay in the food and the rest around a stick placed vertically in the middle. Before closing pull the stick out, pour a couple of cups of water down the hole then cover the hole. Good for steaming vegetables.

A second pit method is to dig the pit, line it with stones if you have them, cover the food with leaves, cover that with three inches of dirt and then build a fire over the pit.

If you don’t have rocks you can use clay. Aboriginals dug pits about 4 feet long and 3 feet deep. They put firewood in the pit along with large lumps of clay.  After the fire burn down the lumps of hot clay were removed, the pit swept clean, lined with green leaves or grasses, then small game were put in, covered with green grass, weighted down with the hot clay, then everything buried again. Small game took and hour or so, larger game like small pigs or possums two hours or more.

Pumpkin cook pot: Think about. A pumpkin is hollow, has edible pulp and is a natural pot. Take off the top in a manner that allows you to put it back on like a lid. Scoop out the seeds for roasting. Put what you want to cook in the water proof hollow, replace the lid, put near the fire or in the coals. Watch closely. You can also put a spicy custard in the pumpkin for a seasonal treat. Actually nearly every edible squash member with a hard outer peel can be used this way.

Alternative method. Put a series of clean hot rocks in the pumpkin to cook the content, especially if it is a soup or stew.

Salt: Small amounts of salt water can be held on large leaves in the sun to evaporate leaving salt. Or along the shore several plants exude salt on their leaves or contain salt and can be used for salt flavoring, such as glasswort and seablight.

Sandspurs: These highly nutritious and calorie-dense grains are protected by painful spines. Harvest the plant by cutting it off near the ground. Use the stalk as a handle. Hold the seed heads over the fire or near the coals and burn off the spines. This also parches the seed. Once the spines are burned away consume the seeds right off the stem. The only caution is the seed has a lot of oil and burns easily so several passes into the fire is better than putting it in the fire and leaving it there. That usually ends up with it just catching on fire. (See my video.)

Seal blubber: Can be eaten raw or cooked.

Shellfish: Line saltwater shellfish up on a flat rock then rake coals over them. You can do the same with fresh water shellfish but they don’t taste as good and must be cooked very thoroughly because of dangerous parasites.  You can also “cook” small saltwater shellfish with citric acid using juice from wild oranges and the like.

Australian Aboriginals cooked saltwater shellfish quickly by putting them on coals next to the fire, foot up. When the frothed they were done. This also helps to avoid overcooking the shellfish and making them tough. They also consumed cockles (mollusks) by the tens of millions. They heaped them into a pile and built a small fire on the heap. That caused the shells to pop open eliminating the need to break them open.

Spit cooking: A spit is a usually green stick skewering small amounts of meats, vegetables. It is held over hot coals. You can hold the spit or prop it with two rocks, one over the end and one under it to regulate height. You can cut a forked branch to hold meat so you can rotate the meat easily. You can also split the spit and run small sticks through the split in the spit and the meat to hold it firm.

Reflector: Any material that can be used to reflect heat can make cooking go faster. A rock wall, piled stones, logs, all can reflect heat. Put the meat you are cooking between your fire and the reflector

Sugar: Young Bulrush (Scirpus) shoots can be harvested green. Dried then pounded and sieved the resulting white powder is sweet. Young peas can be used as a sugar substitute or as a fruit.

Turtles: Their shells make good cooking pots but boil water in them first to clean and disinfect. Skulls can be used likewise. Roast ungutted turtle on coals. When the shell splits they are done. Almost the entire turtle is edible except the lungs, gall bladder, skeleton, skull and nails. You really want to avoid the gall bladder and take steps not to rupture it.

Vegetables: Most roots vegetables can be baked next to a fire or in the coals of a fire. More so, with many root vegetables their peel protects them and dry heat intensifies the flavor. Depending upon the root it can be next to the fire, on the coals, or buried in the coals.

Yeast: Sources of wild yeast are grapes and elderberries. Each have a lot of yeast on their skins. This yeast can be used to make wine, beer, and raise bread.

 

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