Foraging tips and recipes
With the current trendiness of local, seasonal food and notably wild produce, naturally many foodies and chefs are eager to have a go at foraging themselves. After all, it is a part of our heritage living off the land, a rural practical tradition that was slowly largely lost (luckily except for in my partner François’ family).
Wild edibles being our passion and business, (Les Jardins Sauvages a pioneer, thirty years in now), naturally we are delighted that people are curious and open to eating our terroir treasures; however, there is a downside to this trend.. Many among this new set however excited in theory are city dwellers and completely disconnected from nature; they are not afraid enough, or careless , wanting to go too fast without sufficient knowledge, or respect for nature and awareness of sustainability issues.
It is important to have some background information before attempting to forage on your own.
Equally, if you purchase wild food, you want to know that the seller is first of all certified with an official business, knowledgeable and respectful of nature, picking sustainably, mostly on private property if not owned then with permission. Especially restaurant Chefs who are dealing in larger quantities should take responsibility when they put foraged foods on their menu, ensuring that it is from a reliable sustainable source (paid for with bill). The increasing number of hacks and black market is dangerous on all levels not only in terms of sketchy product commonplace, but in terms of sustainability of the resource with no traceability (picked how, where, by who). Not to mention that without the overhead of running a business, these occasional pickers crash the market making it difficult for an experienced business like ours doing it right, working with the government and schools, dealing with inspectors and paying taxes etc. (and who paved the way to boot).. Awaiting regulation, the best we can do is keep doing our thing while educating..
I recently hosted a crew of explorers who were here for a forest cooking competition (Woods Greatest Canadian Explorer) in a survival type series of challenges (airing July 28th) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIvl5CWwZdw . We gave them a crash course in foraging with many of the wild edibles on our property before they had their cook off using wild foods and regular camping gear and dry goods. When customers come to the restaurant for a workshop dinner too, these are the main points we share with them about foraging before they go out identifying and tasting with François.
Bonus below are also a couple of easy recipes that you can dress up or down, meant to be doable while camping.
Foraging Tips
Chef Nancy Hinton, Les Jardins Sauvages
Know what you’re doing!
Ensure proper identification. Don’t rely on only one book (especially with wild mushrooms).
Ensure proper picking, both for taste and Mother Nature. There is a specific way for each wild edible (how, when and where).
Some greens are hardy, growing like weeds in the right environment (like lambs quarters, garlic mustard..) while others have a slow reproduction cycle so can easily be endangered if over-harvested (like ramps/wild garlic, wild ginger, crinkleroot). Don’t touch unless you know the life cycle of the plant and that it is in a healthy population.
In general, don’t rip out roots. Prune tips or leaves from mature plants, leaving buds; leave young baby sprouts alone.
Leave more than you take.
Besides for sustainability, there is also a proper way to forage for deliciousness and digestibility. Some plants are best picked in the morning (say dandelion), others at noon (say some flowers and goats beard).. Some plants are tasty when growing in a moist humid shady wooded area, while bitter, even inedible in a dry sunny season or spot, as with live-forever, wild rocket and mustard, sea chickweed..
Keep in mind that many wild edibles need to be cooked, for example: fiddleheads, milkweed, most wild mushrooms. It is a good idea to wash your harvest. When cooking, follow your palette: If it is pungent, use sparingly like an herb; if it is mild, then use as a salad green or vegetable.
Don’t be in a rush. Be cautious, not stupid.
Books and google searches might be a fine help, but there is no shortcut for experience.. Time in the Woods is Key! The best way to learn about foraging is to get to know your property or a patch of land/woods nearby that you can visit often, observing patterns, trees and what plants/mushrooms grow where every year, including the impact of your harvest (if you have permission to pick.) Start with a few plants and mushrooms, get to know them well and slowly widen your scope every year.
Some wild greens/vegetables to explore without fear: Live-forever, trout lily, violet leaf, day lily, fiddleheads, lamb’s quarters, amaranth, garlic mustard, wood sorrel, sheppard’s purse, wild mustard leaf, wild celery/lovage.. Always keeping an eye out for familiar wild berries, wild mint and chives..
Some wild mushrooms to start with:
Boletes (A family of hundreds including Porcini with the sponge under the cap) – While not all are of interest, they are not dangerous.
Lobster Mushroom – characteristic red colour and shape
Chanterelles – there is only one ‘look alike’ and easy enough to differentiate
Oyster/Shelf mushrooms on maple trees. Most are good when young, avoid really old rotten trees.
Be afraid of very pretty picture perfect mushrooms – often the deadliest!
Fish baked with crinkleroot, tomato and wild herbs
Chef Nancy Hinton, Les Jardins Sauvages
4 portions
Ingredients:
500g fresh fish fllets (or 1x 2lb whole fish, gutted)
45ml Butter and/or olive oil
1 c (250ml) shallots or onion, sliced thin
60ml (1/4c) sliced wild garlic (or 30ml minced garlic)
15ml (heaping Tbsp) steak spice
125ml (1/2c) white wine
30ml (1 Tbsp) crinkleroot (or horseradish)
375ml (1 1/2c) diced tomato (1 can)
250ml (1 c) heavy cream
1.5L (6 c) wild greens such as lambs quarters, sheppard’s purse/wild rocket sprouts, mustard leaf, amaranth..) or spinach/greens of choice
60ml (1/4 c) wild herbs such as wood sorrel, garlic mustard leaf, lovage, ramp leaf, chives, angelica, yarrow.. (or dill, tarragon, basil/ herbs of choice)
To taste salt, pepper
To taste hot sauce or chili
Method:
The fish can be cooked whole and served off the bone too. It all depends on your camping set up and mood.
Sprinkle the fish with steak spice.
Heat large pan or pot on burner or fire, sweat onions in butter/oil a few minutes, add garlic and crinkleroot, then white wine, tomatoes and cream. Place fish in sauce and top with wild greens and herbs, season to taste. Cover and bake or cook gently for 15-20min or until just starting to pull apart. A whole fish will take twice as long.
For the simplest method: All the ingredients can be put in a covered pot on the fire or in an aluminum foil packet (en papillote)..
Wild Mushroom Rice bowl
Chef Nancy Hinton, Les Jardins Sauvages
4 portions
Ingredients
225g wild mushrooms (such as chanterelles, hedgehogs, lobster mushroom, young king or yellow boletes, black trumpets..), cleaned and sliced
45ml grapeseed or olive oil
15ml (1 Tbsp) butter
1/2c (125ml) chopped shallots or onion
30ml (2 Tbsp) wild garlic (or half as much garlic), sliced thin
10ml (2 tsp) wild ginger, minced
250ml (1c) long grain rice like basmati
125ml (1/2c) white wine
30ml (1 Tbsp) dried mushroom powder
375ml (1 3/4c) water or broth
To taste Spices (ex. clove, bay leaf, pinch thyme or curry powder..)
To taste salt and pepper
1L (4c) Mix of wild greens and herbs such as lambs quarters, dandelion, wild rocket, ramp leaves, day lily shoots, daisy, sorrel, mint.. (or say spinach, watercress and basil, coriander, mint..)
30ml (2 Tbsp) Olive oil
Optional splash sesame oil
100ml pickled mushrooms, fiddleheads, kimchi or pickle of choice
To taste Chilli/hot sauce
Method:
Sauté mushrooms in a hot pan with oil. Once they start to colour, add the butter and onions and turn down the heat to medium, cook a few minutes and add the rice, garlic and ginger, stir to coat the rice. Add the mushroom powder and wine, reduce slightly. Add the water/broth, season with salt, pepper and spices of choice. Cover and cook over low heat for 15-20 minutes, until rice has absorbed liquid and looks almost done. Remove from heat and let sit 5-10 minutes.
Meanwhile, toss greens and herbs with a good oil, salt and pepper.
Serve rice topped with salad and pickle.
Add a fried egg, tofu, cooked sausage, leftover chicken/steak or protein of choice for a more substantial meal.
Reader Comments