Food grows wild all over Madison. In fact, the makings of a tasty salad may be growing right in your backyard. You just have to know where and how to find it.
Finding free edible eats in Madison, basic steps:
1. Educate yourself. Doing your research is by far the most important step. Learn what grows here, what is edible and what is NOT edible.
- Visit and talk with experts at the Schumacher Horticultural Library at Olbrich Gardens.
- Take a class with a local or regional wild food expert such as Kathleen Wildwood at Wildwood Herbs or Rose Barlow at Prodigal Gardens.
- Buy an illustrated plant guide for our area.
Some good ones are Samuel Thayer's The Forager's Harvest: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting and Preparing Edible Wild Plants and Edible and Medicinal Wild Plants in Minnesota and Wisconsin by Mathew Alfs. The Alfs book is out-of-print but available at most libraries.
- Be careful and respectful. Private property without permission is taboo.
- Removal of plants is forbidden at the UW Arboretum and area Conservation Parks, although these often offer educational wild food walks.
- Avoid rail beds or public utilities as these are heavily sprayed with pesticides.
- Illustrated plant guide
- Scissors or knife for cutting
- Small shovel for digging
- Basket or bag to carry your treasure
- Gloves and comfortable clothing
- Notebook and pen to record plentiful areas
- Take an experienced forager with you first time if possible.
- Check a plant guide to know what part of the plant is edible.
- Don't eat if sap is milky or turns black when exposed to oxygen.
Look for these incredible edibles this spring:
- Nettles — Highly nutritious, nettles can be subsituted for spinach.
- Burdock — Burdock root is good in stir fry.
- Dandelions — Great in salad but try dandelion wine or roast roots for a dandelion coffee!
- Violets — Violets pretty up any spring table.
- Wild Leeks — Ramps to some, stir fry these or add to salads.
- Garlic Mustard — Pungent and tasty, garlic mustard is great in a spring salad.
All photos courtesy of shareware via Wikimedia Commons.
Very interested info, and I thought that your imbedded info was very good. I think I would have preferred more pictures for a post like this though (of the different types of plants you had listed etc). A lot of info though, it is clear that you were very thorough.
ReplyDeleteHi, Trish,
ReplyDeleteThanks. I am struggling with the idea of being careful not to use copyrighted images without permission. I did get permission for one photo but otherwise have tried to make sure they were listed as copyright free (Wikimedia is a source) or my own photos. If I had more time I would have wrote away for permission for some stuff I found but it's been a problem...I wish I was a better photographer!
Robin,
ReplyDeleteVery thorough list and resources. I am left wondering if this is a realistic project for people to undertake and also the safety of eating food that you do not know how it may have been treated (intentionally or otherwise) by chemicals, road salt, etc.
You've offered great ways to diversify your diet using locally grown ingredients, I just wonder about obtaining them from a more secure source than the unknown.
Angela
Once again another great blog post. You do an amazing job of utilizing the things we've learned in class.
ReplyDeleteAlso, another useful blog post. I always enjoy reading your blog. I think the things you write about are very useful.
Thank!
Beau