I grew up picking mulberries, wild raspberries, blackberries and mulberries (climbing the trees to get them and returning home with ink-stained feet that would remain so for weeks) growing up.
Nowadays I like to gather daylilly buds and sautee them quickly with a little oil and S&P, sometimes add into a pasta dish.
I'm fascinated by foraging, though, and want to learn a lot more about it. If anyone can recommend a great book or other resource for foraging in the Mid-Atlantic, I'd be grateful.
All sorts of wild herbs and edibles out there. Recently I learned that the Queen Anne's Lace that growns along all our roadsides is the progenitor of the modern carrot. Its blossoms are also useful as an herb, but it's apparently quite important to identify the plant correctly, for it closely resembles the deadly water hemlock (which also grows in abundance around here).
I've heard there are many culinary uses for cattails, but I've never tried them.
I wonder if my green tomato hornworm experiment from a few years back is considered foraging? On that note, the marshes around my father's house are loaded with periwinkles, which I hear are cherished in other parts of the world.
One time in Ocean City, Md. I used a plastic colander to sieve sand for a few hours until I'd filled it over halfway with coquinas, which I used to make a light and flavorful broth for sipping.
Let's keep this thread alive.
Edited by chappie, 05 July 2007 - 03:13 PM.