zimmerstutzen
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In the discussion about grits, there were references to the foods that came from the Americas, and somebody mentioned potatoes as if they were European. Nope from the Americas. The whole world now eats some of those foods, but there are several that are still only regional dishes, or little known.
For instance last year for the first time, I tasted paw-paws and also persimmons for the first time. Didn't care for either. But I grew up eating a relative of the tomato which I believe in England is called the Cape Gooseberry, lovely little orange berries tasting slightly sweet and citrus like.
A few years ago, I tasted a mayapple for the first time. It was dead ripe and about the tastiest most aromatic fruit I ever picked in the wild. Had cat tails a few times, both the heads steamed and served with a little butter and the tubers steamed like potatoes. In West Virginia the whole state seems to go nuts every spring over ramps. We have sheepsheads in the fall and eat dandelion in the spring.
Every February we tap a few maples and a few walnut trees for syrup. In july we have wild red berries similar to rasberries but the are covered with a fuzzy husk until just before they get ripe. Locals call them Wineberries and they are quite good.
What wild plant foods have you tried?
For instance last year for the first time, I tasted paw-paws and also persimmons for the first time. Didn't care for either. But I grew up eating a relative of the tomato which I believe in England is called the Cape Gooseberry, lovely little orange berries tasting slightly sweet and citrus like.
A few years ago, I tasted a mayapple for the first time. It was dead ripe and about the tastiest most aromatic fruit I ever picked in the wild. Had cat tails a few times, both the heads steamed and served with a little butter and the tubers steamed like potatoes. In West Virginia the whole state seems to go nuts every spring over ramps. We have sheepsheads in the fall and eat dandelion in the spring.
Every February we tap a few maples and a few walnut trees for syrup. In july we have wild red berries similar to rasberries but the are covered with a fuzzy husk until just before they get ripe. Locals call them Wineberries and they are quite good.
What wild plant foods have you tried?