Akili Li wrote:Oh, definitely.
Cattails, of course, all the time (as in "all year long" as well as in "frequently"). I regularly go through and thin them at the nearby streams and rivers and ponds and lakes, it's a free source of food and nearly everyone in the family likes most of the parts, so....
Nettles are another spring one, but my father always complains that it "tastes like grass" so mostly I only bother with that if a patch of it comes up somewhere particularly convenient to harvest.
Daylillies, of course. I adore daylillies. I've got those planted all over because I love the taste of the daylilly flowers almost as much as squash blossoms. They're only semi-foraging though because I planted them initially, even if they do spread to the nearby undeveloped lands where anyone can eat them.
Fried clover roots, though those are often more trouble than they're worth.
Spring shoots off some of the evergreens, but you can't eat too many because they'll leach certain minerals from you even as they give you others. I mostly just sometimes will browse through and eat a few when I'm walking by them on my way somewhere.
Various others... it's the sort of thing where you are heading somewhere and spot something and stop on your way home to harvest some rather than the sort of thing where you make a "shopping list" in your mind and go out looking, you know? So it's harder to think of them off the top of my head.
A lot of people in the neighborhood let me take their rose hips, since they don't use them, so I do go out looking for those in late summer.
Mushrooming; some of those are worth hunting down.
There are a number of berry varieties around here, and some places that used to be orchard or farm lands and have gone fallow where you can head in and find stuff available for the taking.
I don't do ferns much, but the fiddleheads are yummy.... only I don't want to overtake, you know? So I don't do any of the ferns much.
Eh, I don't know. Whatever you wander by and see that looks good. Borrage is a common one all through here. People plant it in their gardens in the city for the flowers, and then it escapes and ends up everywhere. It's pretty tasty, though, if you get it when the leaves are still young enough not to have too much of that fuzz on them. Kind of refreshing tasting, but without being as strongly flavored as mint.
Makes a good salad.
Wow.. youre like an expert forager..
I wish I could find someone here to help me identify plants.
I knew a few people, one died, one moved away, and the other doesnt feel motivated to help me. [My dad knows about mushrooms.]
I do know what you mean by the grocery list. There are more that I know how to identify, I just cant think of them.
My boyfriend gets annoyed when I start looking for edible plants.. I always joke like.. I think this is edible. and he gets upset because he thinks I will die if I eat the wrong thing. but A LOT of plants are surprisingly edible.
I love the website called Eat The Weeds.
Ive never tried cattails before. I think I know where some are at. I will have to try them. ^_^