Worldwide Beekeeping

Sustainable Living => Gardening => Topic started by: Marbees on February 01, 2014, 10:41:41 pm

Title: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Marbees on February 01, 2014, 10:41:41 pm
It's always a good thing to know more about  wild edible plants already growing in our surroundings.
If you can think of one, please post. I will start with Common Nettle or Stinging Nettle.
After cooking in salted boiling water, drain, cut in bite size pieces. Could be prepared as a side dish, served with fish, mixed with cooked potato,
or in making of corn bread squares, good in soups. Great alternative to spinach.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Slowmodem on February 01, 2014, 10:46:55 pm
When my wife and I were visiting NYC several years ago, I was told that my salad had dandelions in it.   :o  Yuck.  Good for bees, bad for people!
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: LazyBkpr on February 01, 2014, 11:34:29 pm
My fav wild edible plant isnt really a plant.. Morel Mushrooms!  Picked fresh, soaked in light saltwater overnight, fried in REAL butter the next day!   Good deep fried too, but the REAL butter makes the meal!
  The big yellows are fantastic, but the greys get my vote for best flavor and richness!

   
(https://worldwidebeekeeping.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fs1.postimg.cc%2Fr0qj4up23%2FGreys.jpg&hash=4ffaee35eb11eefec2ea46834f2171c73656aae0) (http://postimg.cc/image/r0qj4up23/)
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: iddee on February 02, 2014, 08:45:20 am
Creasy greens


http://www.motherearthnews.com/real-food/edible-wild-plant-creasy-greens-zmaz84zloeck.aspx

They grow in last year's corn fields mostly. Fresh greens in February.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Ziffa on February 07, 2014, 09:53:53 am
My mum always said her grandmother liked poke salad greens, but now I understand they are poisonous?

love,
ziffa

ps - ooo, i think we have creasy greens in our yard.  I'll be on the look out this year.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Riverrat on February 07, 2014, 10:03:02 am
lazy darned you!!!! now I'm hungry for a plate of morels. :)  I have been told people around these parts ate a lot of Polk weed during the depression.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: iddee on February 07, 2014, 12:42:25 pm
Polk is good when the leaves first come up. The plant is poison once it stalks.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Ziffa on February 07, 2014, 02:15:25 pm
Thanks iddee ,

Sounds like something that is better learned in person than on the internet.  :)  Like mushrooms, i'll wait until i'm standing next to the person who is showing me what is ok or not ok to eat when there is poison involved :).

'preciate the replies!

love,
ziffa
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Slowmodem on February 07, 2014, 03:29:16 pm
My mum always said her grandmother liked poke salad greens, but now I understand they are poisonous?

love,
ziffa

ps - ooo, i think we have creasy greens in our yard.  I'll be on the look out this year.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phytolacca_americana

People have ate it for years and years.  Tony Joe White even wrote a song about it - Poke Salad Annie.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poke_Salad_Annie
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Ziffa on February 07, 2014, 04:04:43 pm
I love that song, but I always mess up and sing Poke Salad Sally!  :-\

If you like that that Slowmodem, you should check out the Wood Brothers.  right up their alley!

I'd be afraid i'd pick it at the wrong time and kill both me and my husband.  He'd never let me live that down.  ;)

love,
ziffa
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: LazyBkpr on February 07, 2014, 04:24:37 pm
lazy darned you!!!! now I'm hungry for a plate of morels. :)  I have been told people around these parts ate a lot of Polk weed during the depression.

   I know Right??!!  Few more weeks I'll be hitting the secret patches! Hopefully before anyone else decides to check them!
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Slowmodem on February 07, 2014, 04:26:56 pm
I love that song, but I always mess up and sing Poke Salad Sally!  :-\

When I owned a nightclub and played in the band, that was our most requested song.  When we traveled, it was more like our theme song.   8)
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: riverbee on February 08, 2014, 05:29:56 pm
like lazy, we enjoy hunting for morels, love morels, but we also have large patches of wild asparagus on our property, hmmmmm,mmmmm good stuff! a little olive oil, a little salt and pepper, on the grill....yum!
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Ladyleo191 on February 09, 2014, 09:06:42 am
Creasy greens


http://www.motherearthnews.com/real-food/edible-wild-plant-creasy-greens-zmaz84zloeck.aspx

They grow in last year's corn fields mostly. Fresh greens in February.

If you get any creasies this year, will you give me a holler?  I can pick 'em, I just don't know where.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: iddee on February 09, 2014, 09:09:04 am
Check the corn field stubble near you this month. They should be coming up if they didn't use roundup on the corn.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Ladyleo191 on February 09, 2014, 09:23:28 am
Check the corn field stubble near you this month. They should be coming up if they didn't use roundup on the corn.

Okay...I'll ask them! Thannks!
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: brooksbeefarm on February 09, 2014, 05:22:41 pm
If polk will kill you, none of my family including me would have been dead years ago,i've heard that parts of it is poison. We always picked the young leaves for greens and the young new tender stalks we sliced and deep fried in a batter like okra. The big red beefsteak mushrooms come on first in our area then the little gray morels, then the yellow or tan morels in the Spring. In the fall the Coral mushroom are found in the woods, they taste alot like morels to me, and alot easier to find. After a hard frost i like persimmons, my wife makes bread out of them ,like you would pumpkin bread. The possum grapes, and wild summer grapes make good jelly. I'm setting here now with a hot cup of sassafras tea. Cheers :D. Jack
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Ziffa on February 09, 2014, 07:00:08 pm
Wow Jack - what a rich cupboard you live in!!  I am seriously jealous.

I love my urban farmlet, but I'd sure like a place in the country close to those kinds of bounty!

love,
ziffa
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: mamapoppybee on February 26, 2014, 08:53:57 am
I have lots of lambs quarter that grows here can be used like most greens.
http://www.veggiegardeningtips.com/surprising-lambs-quarters/
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: brooksbeefarm on May 14, 2014, 09:25:17 am
Mama, i'm glad Lambs quarter isn't fattening, i break off the young shoots and eat it raw while hoing it and other weeds out of the garden. :-[ Jack
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Beeboy on May 14, 2014, 12:50:29 pm
Water crest. Hard to find, but worth it.

Lambs quarters. I never learned what this looked like as a child, & still don't know, but would love to learn.

Some plant that I recognize as edible, but I don't know what it is called. My dad taught me it was edible.

Ground cherries. I have those growing on my place, & we have made some jelly out of them.

Polk. No one in my family likes it, but with some cornbread, I'm in heaven!

If I think of more, I'll add it.

Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: CpnObvious on May 14, 2014, 01:16:05 pm
This has always interested me... and especially where-as I'm so heavily involved in the local Scouting program I'd love to learn and share.  The problem I run into most often is this, though...

Most literature and many sites that I find and/or get a hold of are drawings... DRAWINGS!!!  When so many edible plants look so similar to poisonous ones... Why on Gods green (and blue) Earth would you use DRAWINGS???  The link to MotherEarthNews.com is just as guilty.  This is a MAJOR pet peeve of mine.  Same with educational literature on poison ivy & poison oak... so much if it is drawn!  I'm not putting my(or others) life/lives or comfort on the line because real photographs couldn't be used.

I'm glad someone up above used pictures of mushrooms, not drawings... I've been given many Edible plants handouts on mushrooms that were drawn... but mushrooms aren't something you want to incorrectly identify.

I'm 100% for eating & enjoying what nature provides... but please use caution!   ;D I think tonight I need to enjoy some aged juniper berry extract.  ;D
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Slowmodem on May 14, 2014, 01:45:31 pm
I was at a fellow keep's house yesterday.  He is a Master Gardener.  He was telling me about borage.  He says it tastes like cucumber and the bees love it.  I have some planted,  but I didn't know it was edible.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: brooksbeefarm on May 14, 2014, 02:00:46 pm
Slow, i planted a row of borage and catnip in my cucumber patch one year and you could hear the bees working before i got to the patch when all of it was in bloom.I picked cucumbers out of that patch all summer without getting stung,if i picked a cucumber next to the bloom they were on they would fly up and zig zag in my face, telling me that was a no, no. :D Jack
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: iddee on May 14, 2014, 02:39:58 pm
Blackberries, dewberries, raspberris, muscadines, persimmons, sassafras, creassy greens, buckeyes, sour grass, lollipops, mulberries, locust pods, hickory nuts, gooseberries, wild blueberries, loganberries, fox grapes, huckleberries.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: LazyBkpr on May 14, 2014, 02:49:33 pm
Buckeyes Iddee?   Do tell!
   Had a buckeye tree in my yard where I grew up, and know of a few places in the wild they are growing, but have never heard they were edible? I have heard the blossums are not good for the bees?
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: iddee on May 14, 2014, 03:06:32 pm
Dry them well and crush into flour. Makes a great bread.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: LazyBkpr on May 14, 2014, 03:30:00 pm
Interesting..   can you do the same with Oak Nuts?
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: brooksbeefarm on May 14, 2014, 04:06:09 pm
I was always told Buckeyes are poison, that if a Hog ate them it would kill them. Also the leaves of Rhubarb is poison. ??? Jack
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Alleyyooper on July 06, 2015, 09:39:08 am
I know old post with out the warning.

Ramps lots of them here and I collect them wash dry and freeze for later maybe 10 pounds worth to last a year.

Fiddle heads are great also and fry up nice, never tried to save any for later but then I don't have a bunch on the place either.

Dandelion greens, pig weeds are also good, also from the marchie areas we collect cow slips.

We also get hickory nuts, wall nuts and acorns.

Special care needed when using Acorns as they have a lot of Tannins.
Tannins can be removed by soaking chopped acorns in several changes of water, until water no longer turns brown. Being rich in fat, acorn flour can spoil or get moldy easily and must be carefully stored. Acorns are also sometimes prepared as a massage oil.

Burdock, I cuss the burrs but is healthy to eat.
Burdock possesses anti-fungal and anti-bacterial properties and may be helpful in fighting cancer and tumors due to it’s arctigenin content. It does quite a bit for such a little known herb.



Wild straw berries,black raspberries, huckle berries, goose berries  & cranberries

Morels, Cauliflower fungi,  chicken of the woods and Oyster shroons and ever so often Chicken and Puff balls.

There are other things to collect from the wild for other uses like mothers wart which the bees love too.

 ;D  Al
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: iddee on July 06, 2015, 10:19:03 am
I harvest a lot of wild, edible, just not plants. Fish, frogs, turtles, crayfish, alligator, rattlesnake, along with squirrel, rabbit, dove, quail, pheasant, duck, deer, raccoon, and probably a few I'm forgetting.

There are a few plants I gather, like muscadines, berries and nuts, sassafras and sycamore for tea.

Watermelons are pretty wild, too, when the field owner is shooting rock salt in a shotgun at the teenage heathens stealing them at midnight.   :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: brooksbeefarm on July 06, 2015, 01:48:06 pm
I have Calamus, Water crest,polk, and many other plants that bloom, but the bees don't work them that grow on my farm. Calamus was used ( and still is) by native Americans and our forefathers for medical uses. I don't know of anything that's a predator of it except humans. My wife's grandmother said people used it for stomach problems in her day? i looked it up on the computer and was amazed at what people used it for :o. I use to try and get rid of it, but think maybe i'll keep it around. ;) Jack
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: Alleyyooper on July 07, 2015, 06:31:24 am
I for got the Elder berries till I walked by a bush in bloom yesterday afternoon. You have to be real quick to get any as the birds clean them up real fast. I also for got the sumac for tea.

Plus all the wild critters. Don't eat possum my self but know those who do. They don't eat coyote but I do so I guess we are even.

 ;D  Al
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: lazy shooter on July 07, 2015, 09:23:56 am
I love polk salad and wild elder berry jelly.  As a sidebar, if you google Elvis Presley singing "Polk Salad Annie," you will find the song to be Polk Salad ANNIE, not sally.  At least, it's that way in Louisiana.

I always harvest the new growth on polk salad and bring them to a boil, pour off the juice and then cook.  They are my favorite greens.  I didn't think they were fatally toxic.  I thought they would simply cause an upset stomach.  In a normal year, we have an abundance of polk salad.
Title: Re: Wild Edible Plants
Post by: efmesch on July 07, 2015, 12:15:39 pm
I've got Bay leaves (Laurus nobilis) growing in my yard.  The plant (usually a large shrub) with beautiful leaves is used as an additive for flavoring in cooked fuits, soups and meats. It was apparently planted for me by a bird that dropped the initiating seed about 15 years ago.  It initially escaped my finding it because it grew hidden beneath a pomegrate tree and by the time I realized it was there it was well established.