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It's a funny month is February. Frequently wintry, cold, wet and
miserable, but the signs of approaching spring are all around if you
know where to look for them. Garden birds are all pairing off and
making an almighty racket, and for the first time in months the world
is becoming a vibrant green again. Although we'd be kidding ourselves
if we said that it's actually Spring, the growth spurt of wild plants
that will go on to flower and produce seed in Summer has begun, and
it's that young, succulent growth that can keep the forager happy until
Springtime really gets going. It is with this in mind that I've
compiled a list of my top ten February forages. Not a lot of mushrooms
on this list; we're in the worst part of the year for mushrooming, I'm
afraid, and no fruit either, but there is still a nut to be had for
free if you're lucky.
(1)Chives (Allium schoenoprasum)
Chives aren't
uncommon; I find them most often in hedgerows around gardens, where
they've escaped into the wild. If you've grown them yourself, you
already know how to use these onion-tasting shoots. If you've only
bought them, then I urge you to either grow some (scavenge a clump from
a friend or neighbour, or grow them from seed) or forage for them.
They're much more pleasant freshly picked. In February it's mostly just
the shoots and young flower buds you'll see. Near the end of the month
you may come across the vibrant purple flower heads, which make an
almost irresistible addition to Spring salads. The shoots aren't easy
to mistake for anything else, when you've got an eye for them, but till
then me careful, as you could mistake some of the other wild bulbs for
them. Pictures at:
http://www.cjb.unige.ch/BotSyst/APG2/Lilid/100_ALL_As.jpg
http://www.bungalow104.com/garden/terrace/image_chives.html
(2) Alexanders (Smyrnium olusatrum)
It's
really in March that Alexanders will be easy to spot, but if you know
where to look you can find this plant growing near the coast and
occasionally on waste places inland in February. It's one of the
umbellifers which we can thank the Romans for introducing, they brought
it over as a green vegetable, and a superb one it is too. Pick the
young stems at this time of year and steam them gently, perhaps coating
in butter when they're done. Or chop them and add them with stock
vegetables in a stew, and they'll impart a delicate, herby flavour
unlike anything else. I personally like to use them to flavour seafood
dishes; try adding the chopped leaves to moules mariniere, or dressing
crab salads with them Like any umbellifer, you could do yourself
serious harm if you were to mistake one of the poisonous wild relatives
of alexanders for the real thing. But don't let that worry you too
much, once you get to know the texture and smell you'll have no trouble
knowing the real thing. Pictures at:
http://www.bioimages.org.uk/HTML/T1059.HTM
http://www.floralimages.co.uk/pic3c9.htm
(3) Chickweed (Stellaria media)
Having
spent all winter skulking in a corner of the vegetable patch or under a
bush, chickweed is about to make a bid to take over your garden. Later
in the year you'll be pulling it out by the handful as the pest that it
is, but at the moment it's a most welcome green vegetable on an
otherwise un-encouraging vegetable plot. This is one of my favourite
greens, and it can be found pretty much anywhere there's disturbed
ground. Its little white flowers and tiny little green leaves belie the
fact that this plant has a superb, succulent texture and a flavour not
unlike a cross between cress and spinach. I eat this one raw, in
salads, more or less all year; it is of course especially useful in
winter when there is so little else around. Mixed with some lettuce and
sorrel, it's a great ingredient in a winter salad. Pictures at:
http://www.esb.utexas.edu/mbierner/bio406d/images/pics/car/stellaria_media.htm
Kulak University
(4) Cow Parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris)
I
love cow parsley. Common as muck, but dangerously similar to other
wild, poisonous umbellifers. I wouldn't recommend picking it to anyone
who isn't entirely confident in their ability to distinguish it from
the water dropworts, rough chervil, and hemlock. But if you are up to
it, it's a great wild plant. Through winter it was sitting in little
crowns in the woods, not doing a great deal, but now you'll see that
it's getting bushier, leafier and softer. It is the nearest wild
relative of chervil, as you can tell by its flavour. It's a super
addition to herb risottos, herb breads and green salads, and I also use
it to flavour potato soup. Pictures at:
Kulak University
http://honeybee.helsinki.fi/USERS/KORPELA/anthriscus_sylvestris.html
(5) Nettle (Urtica dioica)
You
all know what nettles look like, and probably that you can eat them.
The truth is that most people never try, being put off by the thought
of handling a horribly stinging plant. If you can get past that,
though, you're set for a real feast. Nettles are best young and tender,
and right now you'll find them at their tastiest. Gather your nettles
with care; wear gloves when picking and preparing them or you'll regret
it. Wash them, removing any bits of old stem or any tough material, and
then cook them through rather like spinach, adding a little nutmeg. Or
use them in soup. They're tasty, and very nutritious. Pictures at:
http://linnaeus.nrm.se/flora/di/urtica/urtic/urtidio4.jpg
(6) Watercress (Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum)
Yes,
this is the same watercress that you buy in shops for a lot of money
for a really small bunch. If you can spot it wild it's free, so you can
make watercress soup, you can cook it as a green, etc. Serve it cooked
and mashed in potatoes, with boiled bacon, and you've got a homely meal
but one fit for a king. Pick it from moving water (a ditch with a
really good flow will do), and take the top, mature shoots only to
avoid damaging the root. The only real danger is that you must be very,
very careful to cook any watercress that comes from a water course
where there are animals grazing upstream; the danger of liver flukes is
quite real. I personally always cook wild watercress to make absolutely
sure. Really, you can expect to find it growing abundantly any time
from the middle of February onwards; it's at its best as soon as you
can find it, until it starts flowering. Pictures at:
http://www.coestatepark.com/rorippa_nasturtium_aquaticum.htm
http://www.naturesongs.com/vvplants/watercress1.jpg
(7) Sorrel (Rumex acetosa)
Possibly
the finest, and certainly the trendiest, of all of the wild greens
you'll find. It's a marvellous plant, related to the dock, rhubarb and
the awful, awful Japanese knotweed, and it's common throughout most of
the British Isles in hedgerows and woodlands. It forms dense green
rosettes of leaves, and has a sharp, almost lemony flavour. Use it raw
in salad, add it to potato soup, use it in sauces with meat or fish, in
fact anywhere that its sharp flavour can be appreciated it'll find a
place in your kitchen. In February it's producing lots of leaves, ready
to sprout flowers in May, at which time it will remain edible, but
it'll be a tiny bit more acid. But all through the year, the
combination of rocket, lettuce and sorrel will make a sharp, tasty
salad that is hard to improve upon. Until you get the nose for picking
sorrel, be very careful; the young leaves of ladies fingers, a deadly
poisonous plant, can look somewhat similar to an untrained eye. Keep
your eyes open for your first season looking at such plants, by
midsummer you'll be happily eating sorrel. The related sheeps sorrel
(Rumex acetosella) can be used just the same way, and wood sorrel
(Oxalis acetosa) is a very different plant, but one which can be used
the same way. Pictures at:
http://www.bioimages.org.uk/HTML/P3/P34743.HTM
http://honeybee.helsinki.fi/mmsbl/kurssit/Verso_ja_siementunnistus/sivut/kasvit_tiet_ens/rumex_acetosa.htm
(8) Dandelion (Taraxacum officinalis)
We
all know the humble dandelion. Many people seem obsessed with
eradicating it from their lawns and flower beds, but for me it's a
welcome visitor. It's a tasty, productive, and versatile little weed.
The leaves are just beginning to sprout anew, and you'll find lots of
soft, green growth to add to salads. Towards the end of the month,
you'll also start finding flowers. All of the plant is edible, and it's
all useful. The leaves are never sweet, but at the moment they're not
bitter; mix them in with some good lettuce and sorrel in a salad, and
make sure that you sample your dandelion leaves before serving, just to
make sure you haven't picked any really nasty ones. Serve the leaf
salad with croutons and crispy fried slithers of bacon, and you've got
a filling little side dish. Alternatively, take a plant in your lawn or
by the veg patch in late February and stick a plant pot over it, it'll
bleach like its relative chicory, and you can serve it in the way they
do in really posh restaurants. The roots aren't so good right now, so
don't go digging the plant up. Leave tat till autumn. Pictures at:
http://online-media.uni-marburg.de/biologie/botex/quiz/0042.html
http://www.florelixir.net/html_photo/taraxacum%20officinalis.html
(9) Morel (Morchella esculenta, M. vulgaris, M. rotunda)
This
is one of the most prized mushrooms. It's like a brown brain on a
stick, but rather than the lobes pointing outwards, they all poke
inwards. It's found in Spring, but you'll find it in February in mixed
and coniferous woodlands, especially if the soil is a bit sandy or has
been burned, and occasionally on wood chippings. In my opinion, it's
overrated, but some people go crazy over it. Make sure you get all the
sand and bugs out of the lobes, and be sure to cut it in two to make
sure all the beasties are gone. Then you can cook it down with a little
cream and some seasoning, and serve it on toast. There are many other
ways to cook it, and being a somewhat 'gastronomic' fungus you'll find
all manner of recipes in cook books. Be careful not to confuse it with
the false Morel, Gymomitra esculenta, which rather than being like a
holy-brain is more lobe like. A quick look at pictures of this mushroom
will be enough for you to distinguish it from true morels. Pictures at:
http://www.bioimages.org.uk/HTML/T30294.HTM
http://home.wanadoo.nl/abiemans/e_morch_esc.html
(10) Sweet Chestnut (Castanea sativa)
Bit
of a wild card for February this one, I've found eatable chestnuts
maybe one February in two, but when I do find them they're a real joy.
They'll be sitting amongst the decaying leaves and the new green Spring
growth that's just starting to sprout, and finding good nuts that the
squirrels have missed is always a delight. They fall, ripe, from the
trees in late Autumn, but depending on the conditions they can survive
all winter and still be there to eat until the early Spring; if there
was a good autumn harvest, chances are you'll be able to pick bowls
full into early Febrary. Use them as you would bought ones, there are
thousands of recipes for chestnuts. Pictures at:
http://botany.cs.tamu.edu/FLORA/pic1/chestnut.jpg
http://www.punchstock.com/stock_photography/italiastock/3333107/image_IS1FRU1059.html |