Mulberries

Jul. 16th, 2003 01:15 pm
lydy: (Default)
[personal profile] lydy
I love mulberries. The mulberry season is almost over, here, and I'm feeling sad. We have mulberry trees in the back yard, and for the past few weeks, I've been coming home through the back yard and stopping to eaten handfuls, right off the tree. Mulberries are not a great fruit. There's little wonder why they're not raised commercially. The flavor is weak, and highly variable. The fruit is prone to fall off the tree the instant it is ripe, meaning that every berry picked causes three or four to drop to the ground. The berry itself is incredibly delicate; if you filled a pint container with mulberries, the bottom third would probably be crushed from the weight of the berries on top. Nevertheless, I love them. They grow in the back yard, they grow in other people's yards, they grow in the little bit of green bordering the Walgreen's pharmacy on Hennepin (and those trees have particularly flavorful berries). No one has ever yelled at me for eating their mulberries. They're one of the pleasures of summer. I wouldn't ever steal someone's raspberries, or blackberries, but mulberries are simply a weed. A weed fruit. (I do wonder, sometimes, why a hoity-toity restaurant such as Goodfellows hasn't used mulberries, for the novelty of it. There must be some sort of wine reduction flavored with Minnesota grown, organic mulberries that would be tasty, if only because of the wine.)

Only last year, I discovered that all children are not, by nature, hunter gatherers. I was walking along with DDB during wild grape season (which is after mulberry season). I'd snagged several bunches of wild grapes as we'd walked, much to his disapproval. Grape vines grow on cyclone fences rather satisfactorily, their broad leaves providing significant cover in the late spring that lasts until early autumn. No one cares about their fruit. Like mulberries, the grapes are commercially valueless. Wild grapes are incredibly tart, and almost all seed and skin. The actual fruit is a teeny bit of juicy grape, almost all tang, which you encounter while trying to maneuver the tough, inedible bits in your mouth into a position where they're easy to spit out. I reached out and snagged another bunch of wild grapes, and popped a couple in my mouth. Then I stopped and spit them out. They weren't grapes. I don't know what they were, but they tasted horrible and bitter. I looked again, and realized that the vine on the fence was not a grape vine, the leaves were obviously not grape leaves, and the vines were bright red.. I felt very stupid. My tongue didn't become numb, and my breathing continued to be easy, so I concluded that I hadn't been extremely stupid, just garden-variety didn't-look-before-I-leaped stupid.

"Those aren't grapes!" I said, personally aggrieved.

"No," agreed David, "what made you think that they were?"

"I don't know. They were growing on a vine. They looked just like grapes. I didn't look at the leaves." David continued to look grave. "You just disapprove of me grabbing fruit from other people's fences. Oh, come on. Every kid is a hunter gatherer at heart. Didn't you eat clover and wild berries when you were a kid?"

"Of course not!"

"'Of course not?' Why not?"

"You don't put strange things in your mouth. They might be poison."

They might be poison? What a bizarre response. It's true that mere moments ago, I had considered the possibility that I might have poisoned myself, but I never worry about it when browsing wild plants. I've casually eaten various odd bits of growing things most of my life. It's a kid thing, a secret lore that we passed on to each other. Foraging offers a feeling of freedom and independence; see, not everything I eat is given to me by my mom. The idea of running away to the forest and living on roots and berries was romantic, and some days almost painfully attractive.

Our lore was not just kid stuff, of course. I think it was my father who first showed me wild strawberries. When we lived in Upstate New York (no, no, really Upstate, think Canada) in a very small town, the library was just across the road. Street, technically, Main Street. There was a slight rise, about four steps worth, to the Library lawn. On that rise various tangles of plants grew, including strawberries. The strawberries were tiny, half the size of a raspberry, perhaps. Diligent searching might yield as many as five or six. I've never tasted anything like them, though, and likely never will again. That variety may well be extinct. It certainly wasn't commercial, and the strawberry plants were eventually eliminated on the grounds that they were a weed. My taste buds will never again be that sharp, either. The taste was incredibly sweet, like a sudden burst of the best of a fresh strawberry with the exact balance of tart to balance the sweet, it was a strawberry with an assertive presence, neither insipid nor aggressive.

Straight away, I showed Christine, my next door neighbor, the wild strawberries. She already knew about them, of course. She was considerably older than I was, 3 or 4 years at least. Christine taught me to draw a stalk of timothy grass carefully from the lower section, revealing the white, sweet inner stalk. This works with any number of types of grasses. My mom used to lecture me endlessly about not doing that. A dog might have peed on it. I couldn't understand the issue. After all, I was only eating the inner bits, not the outer pieces that were actually exposed to dogs. Mom also flipped when she found out that we were eating rhubarb that grew behind the outhouse at Christine's. I don't remember if the outhouse was still in use at that time. If it wasn't in use, then the house had only very recently gotten indoor plumbing. Again, I couldn't understand why Mom was upset. After all, the rhubarb would be ok, even if the soil it grew in was yucky. Besides, wasn't manure a good fertilizer? (There was a pasture on two sides of our house, and every time the manure spreader came, my parents would say this as a way of dealing with the smell.) The rhubarb had an irresistible taste, so incredibly sharp and tangy. Sometimes, to allay my feelings of guilt for ignoring my mom's lectures, we'd wash it off at the well, but mostly, we just ate it.

When my family moved to Pittsburgh, my best friend Anne was an even more avid gatherer than I was. We were gangly pre-adolescents, and wild early teens. We saw each other once a week at church, with a very occasional sleep-over. I think it was Anne that taught me that Queen Ann's Lace had a root which tasted a lot like a carrot. Actually, more like a parsnip, as I recall. We'd pull them up from the brush behind the church and eat them after we'd rubbed as much dirt off them as we could. (Wash them? We'd have to go into the church, and one of two horrible things would happen. Either we'd be forbidden to eat that dirty stuff, or one of our parents would be reminded that it was time to leave. Best to stay out of sight.) One season, there were blackberries and raspberries next to the creek, which was just down the hill from the church. True, it required finding one's way past pricker bushes and tromping through thick brush with poison ivy (well, at least, we believed it was poison ivy) and shying away from poison sumac to get there. It was a steep hill, and we were doing this in dresses with dress shoes and nylons. It was important not to get dirt on our hands or dresses. The dress shoes were a serious problem because they had slick soles. Sometimes, we'd resort to taking off our shoes and nylons, but that meant risking the poison ivy and parental disapproval. Usually, I ended up with at least one run in my nylons. I'd put polish on the run to keep it from getting worse, sometimes I could even keep it from being noticed.

Children's knowledge of wild edibles is part ancient lore and part superstition. I remember Christine lecturing me very solemnly on the dangers of toadstools. All toadstools, even the ones that were mushrooms. My mother did the same, but it was Christine that told me that just touching them with my tongue would cause me to drop dead on the spot. If I picked them, and then later stuck a finger in my mouth, I might die. We'd kick toadstools and fairy rings when we found them. The sensation of the toadstool tearing up out of the ground was neat. It wasn't a satisfying sort of thwunk, but there was a definite give, a terminal tear as the fungus lost its mooring. We felt virtuous; another danger destroyed.

Ann told me that the orange red berries of the mountain ash, or rowan tree if you wax more poetic, were poisonous. I'd pick them, and roll them around in my pockets, but I didn't eat them. They were a nice shape and size, and not soft and gooey, so you could carry them around in your pocket and run them through your fingers without worrying about staining your hands or the pockets. There were all sorts of other hard, inedible berries in the wastes in between yards in my neighborhood in Pittsburgh. Almost every yard was separated by a tangle of brush and trees that couldn't be tamed. It was usually at some ridiculous incline, and well protected with pricker bushes, retaining walls, hedges, and trees.

The brush belonged to us kids. We wouldn't dare trespass on someone else's lawn, and there was some dispute amongst us about where, exactly, someone's lawn began, but there was never any question that crawling around in the bracken was entirely within the rules. I didn't really have any friends in the neighborhood, so unless Anne was there for a sleep over (a rare occurrence), I tended to wander alone. Days when Mom kicked me out of the house rather than letting me stay in my room and read, I'd trek through the bush on my own, usually in a reverie, thinking about the book I was reading. I climbed trees. Well, really only one tree, because it was on our property so I didn't have to trespass to get to it. It was a grand tree, though, with places to sit for as long as my butt would hold out. (People who say that they love sitting in a tree because it's so comfortable are usually lying.) My usual method for getting through impassable tangles of pricker bushes was to simply push my way through. My arms and legs had scratches on them all summer long.

I think it was those self-same pricker bushes that had such satisfactory little berries. Hard and round, about an eighth of an inch in diameter, they pulled cleanly off the bush, and didn't have to be separated from their stems. I was still at the stage where I automatically pulled off leaves from any random plant as I walked. I gathered the berries in much the same way. I usually came home with my pockets full of them. I had no earthly use for them. They weren't edible, they weren't even pretty. I just liked having a bunch in my pocket to mess with while I walked. I did gnaw now and again on the occasional pine needle because I liked the taste. I still think that if you could make a perfume that smells like fresh pine in the summer, it would sell quite well. The hedge in front of our house was yew, and had fascinating berries. They were rare, and brilliantly red. They had a translucent opalescence to them. The berry was soft, and the center was drilled out. Almost the first thing Dad said when we moved in was that the yew berry was really hemlock, and we must stay well away from the berries. "Hemlock, like Socrates?" I asked. He said yes. I dutifully passed on the information to Anne and my sisters and anyone else that would let me. It felt very cool to know something that important. We picked the berries, of course, and looked at them, mashed them into things, dissected them, and so on, but no one tried to eat one. Any time a parent saw us with one of the yew berries, they'd lecture us about the poisonous nature of the fruit. We'd roll our eyes and say, "We know, we know. We're being careful." Now, why wasn't that a comfort for my parents, I ask you.

Ann was the one who knew about the special clover which, as an adult, I found out to be yellow wood sorrel, or oxalis. The leaves and stems have a sharp, sour lemon taste. It also grows seed pods, sometimes an inch long. If you catch them before they burst, they have a nice crunch, as well as that refreshing lemony taste. Best of all, it grew in my backyard. I remember carefully picking an entire bowl of seed pods, once, with Ann. There was also a neglected grape arbor in the backyard. Alas, it was pruned just past an inch of its life, and the red and white grape vines died. The concord grape vines survived, though. There were also two apple trees in the backyard. The grapes and the apples, though, belonged to the grown ups and we weren't allowed to pick and eat them. The apples in particular were sprayed with insecticides. We stole one or two, now and again, and shined them up against our jeans before eating them. I wonder how many poisons I've ingested during my adolescence. Very few of the solemn warnings I was given had any real effect on me.

Walking down the street just yesterday, there was an apple tree heavily burdened with little green apples. Last year, they didn't really ripen, nor were there so many. Without even stopping to think about it, I picked one off the tree as I passed, and nibbled it on the way home. Then I had some mulberries for dessert. Free food, it has a definite allure. And I do so love mulberries.

Date: 2003-07-16 11:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rysmiel.livejournal.com
This is lovely. Thank you.

Date: 2003-07-16 11:31 am (UTC)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
From: [personal profile] redbird
I didn't find out about wood sorrel until I was an adolescent, at summer camp or some such. Ditto mulberries, but I've made up for lost time on both.

Date: 2003-07-16 11:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalmn.livejournal.com
demeter (http://www.fashion-planet.com/shopping/demeter/scents.html) has christmas tree and fraser fir; might be worth smelling some time.

(they also have lobster scent. that might be worth *not* smelling some time...)

Date: 2003-07-16 11:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com
I also foraged a lot as a child, though on a different range of stuff, as you'd expect.

I was also told that rowan berries were poisonous, but I found out a couple of years ago, to my great surprise, that they weren't. I think I saw a recipe featuring them, and asked on rasseff, and discovered people make jam out of them and everything.

I could have been eating them all these years.

Sorbus acuperia, americana or something else?

Date: 2003-07-16 12:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elisem.livejournal.com
Was your rowan a
Sorbus acuperia, the European mountain ash? Or was it Sorbus americana, the "American Mountain Ash Rowan Tree," as this site calls it? Here's some info on telling those two types of Mountain Ash apart.(Beyond the Mountain Ash members of the Sorbus genus there are a lot of other Sorbuses. Sorbusii? One Sorbus, another Sorbus, many Sorbus?)

The American Mountain Ash link above has a recipe for rowan jam, plus more links to rowan wine and jelly recipes. Makes sense, as the site name is ediblewild.com. They also have a set of images of wild plants.

From the description, the tree we had in our front yard in the rented place we lived when I was between 2 and 5 was indeed a Sorbus acuperia. Sorbus acuperia was the first proper Latin plant name I ever learned. I was probably two-and-a-half years old when my dad taught it to me. It pleased me very much. Almost as much as the wonderful berries on the tree.
From: [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com
Well as they grow wild all over the place in South Wales, and wild only slightly less all over the place in Lancashire and Cumbria, and as they are well known for being a terrific protection against witches, I think they must have been European. They grow on the mountains wherever there is even a little bit more soil, over waterfalls, with their roots really clinging. I love them. I was born in a village named after them.

However, they don't look like the one in your picture, they have red berries.

(BTW, they are such good protection against witches that they can't even walk past them -- do you know the folk song with the chorus "Rowan tree, red thread, holds the witches all in dread"? I often sing it to particularly splendid mountain ashes I see.)

Bless Google, here are some like exactly the ones I mean:

http://www.skye.co.uk/ guide.asp?pagetype=guide&location=scosky...

http://www.treesforlife.org.uk/ tfl.rowan.html

From: [identity profile] elisem.livejournal.com
Yes, I know that song! Now it's stuck in my head, but I don't mind awfully. One can do worse than have a folk song stuck in one's head.

And I figured your trees must have been the European ones, but I managed to mangle my post while cutting and pasting enough to make myself sound like a complete idiot who expected you to have American trees. (I'm not that kind of idiot, although other flavors might be in stock from time to time.) Sorry about that.

The one I knew had red berries too, and looked quite a bit like the one I saw when I figured out how to make your second link go into my browser all the way:
[Error: Irreparable invalid markup ('<a [...] tfl.rowan.html>') in entry. Owner must fix manually. Raw contents below.]

Yes, I know that song! Now it's stuck in my head, but I don't mind awfully. One can do worse than have a folk song stuck in one's head.

And I figured your trees must have been the European ones, but I managed to mangle my post while cutting and pasting enough to make myself sound like a complete idiot who expected you to have American trees. (I'm not that kind of idiot, although other flavors might be in stock from time to time.) Sorry about that.

The one I knew had red berries too, and looked quite a bit like the one I saw when I figured out how to make your second link go into my browser all the way:
<a href=http://www.treesforlife.org.uk/ tfl.rowan.html>
http://www.treesforlife.org.uk/ tfl.rowan.html</a>, in case anyone else has trouble with it. Couldn't get the first link to work, though; it just took me to the homepage for skye.co.uk.

Rowan wine sounds interesting. Hm. (Note to self: must remember to ask Terry Garey about this.)

who was that masked botanist?

Date: 2003-07-16 09:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jinian.livejournal.com
Our Washington native mountain-ash is Sorbus sitchensis, though S. aucuparia is mostly what we have growing wild in Seattle (including a poorly placed sapling in our front yard). Pojar/MacKinnon (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1551050404/) says, "The Nuxalk rubbed the berries on the scalp to combat lice and dandruff," but they never say whether it worked.

Date: 2003-07-16 09:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lydy.livejournal.com
I was also told that rowan berries were poisonous, but I found out a couple of years ago, to my great surprise, that they weren't. I think I saw a recipe featuring them, and asked on rasseff, and discovered people make jam out of them and everything.

I could have been eating them all these years.


Have you tried them? What do they taste like?

Date: 2003-07-17 07:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com
Actually I haven't been able to bring myself to try them, thirty-five years of knowing they're poison gets between my hand and my mouth.

The good news is that I've recently discovered that my absolutely favourite wild tree berries, elder, grow here. At least, the tree looks identical and the unripe berry clusters look identical. We'll see when they get ripe.

Date: 2003-07-16 12:37 pm (UTC)
arkuat: masked up (Default)
From: [personal profile] arkuat
I was a forager too, and mulberries were among my favorites, along with tart sorrel, baby grapevine (also nice and tart), wild grapes (and here I also had the pleasure of what must have been a domesticate variety gone feral, because these were plump and sweet).

The big event for my family, though, was camping in the Indiana Dunes, which are full of blueberries. My parents would bring a box of Bisquick, and send me and my sister into the woods to gather blueberries, and we would have blueberry pancakes for breakfast most mornings.

But I always thought of blueberries as a wilderness fruit. Mulberries could be picked and eaten right outside of almost every house (and all were citified) that I ever lived in as a child. And I ate plenty of those mulberries.

Date: 2003-07-16 12:38 pm (UTC)
arkuat: masked up (Default)
From: [personal profile] arkuat
P. S. Sorry I robbed you of your mulberries when I pruned the mulberry branches that were weighing on the main electric supply cable to the house.

Date: 2003-07-16 02:26 pm (UTC)
ext_5149: (Default)
From: [identity profile] mishalak.livejournal.com
I never foraged much for food as a kid. I would eat the occasional bit of grass, but I grew up here in Colorado. There isn't much in the way of edible wild plants 'round here because this is the high desert. We could eat pine nuts from the ponderosa pines, but they are small and not really worth the effort. There are chokecherries, but they taste much like you would image from the name. Few people can eat more than a dozen of these tiny and bitter fruits. Occasionally a kid would try to replicate the making of Indian flour by grinding up acorns from a scrub oak, but nothing much came of that.

What I learned as a child is that if you want anything you have to grow it yourself because edible things need irrigation. And even that is chancy since so often we get early frosts, late snows, or attacks by nature. Lessons of the west.

Though sometimes my mom would pick mushrooms and we would cook them up. We were very careful about that, and I didn't die of anything.

Date: 2003-07-16 02:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marykaykare.livejournal.com
I can remember eating mulberries and my mother shrieking at me horrified because they might have worms in them. No, it didn't make sense then either. I can't remember doing much foraging as a child, but both my father and grandfather had large gardens. I can remember the pleasures of strawberries, blackberries, dewberries, and tomatoes fresh from the plant that minute. And sweet corn. Sigh.

MKK

Date: 2003-07-16 02:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cakmpls.livejournal.com
We had volunteer mulberry trees at our previous house, and we have them here. I've tried the berries every year, but never found any with any flavor at all.

I didn't "forage" at all as a kid, though we kids roamed far and wide. Southern California doesn't grow many temptingly edible native plants, so everything that might have been interesting was in someone's carefully tended yard.

Date: 2003-07-16 03:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elisem.livejournal.com
And Lydy, this really is a beautiful piece of writing. It works. I've been in a cascade of foraging memories since reading it.

Yellow wood sorrel (that tart Oxalis stuff you describe) was also a favorite of mine. We didn't have mulberries around, though I cannot think why not. We had lots of crab apples, though. They were extremely good for throwing. They were good for jelly as well, but for throwing they were tops. Siblings and passing cars were the usual live targets of choice, on the occasions we were not throwing at a tin can or a stick or something else immobile. And oh, I remember how pine needles taste.

When we went out at recess, at the little school in the country where I went, we would tear off down the slope to "the woods," which was just a woodlot of pine and some other things, adjoining two small dimples in the earth we called The Pits.

[...] My own house of stone and light was a tiny hill, almost a little hillock, slightly off-center in the Big Pit. [I wrote about it a little, but a little became a lot, so I am going to edit it out and put it over in my own LJ, as it passed the size limit. Eep!]

The other house, though, was the one I was going to tell you about, because it was built of pine needles. In the woodlot adjoining the Pits, the pines had been planted too close together, and they were shading each other out. Deep thick mats of fallen needles were everywhere. These were mostly white pines, with some others mixed in, so the needles were long and still a little springy even in their red-brown dryness. I made another round house in there, heaping up the dead needles until it was almost a proper bird's nest of a house. The boys ran through it, though, and kicked it to a pine needle confetti storm, so I built a secret hideout in a curious juniper and lilac corner of the woodlot.

The best thing about it was the entrance, or rather the entrance one could make in a hurry: if you were running away from the boys, you ran downhill past the pine trees until you drew up along the row of lilacs and other larger-leafed trees, and then you cut sharply to the left, to try to escape down the narrow aisle between those leafy green trees where the boys couldn't see you or catch you as easily. Only that ws just a feint, when I did it. I would catch a particular branch, use it to turn -- momentum was my friend! -- and then, instead of hurtling forward down the aisle of leaves, I would hang on enough to be swung around into the space amidst the lowest branches of the very tree I had grabbed. This provided excellent concealment, especially after it was improved a bit, and as long as I lay perfectly still, the chasing boy or girl or whoever would figure I had made it through the first veil of leaves, and they'd go pelting down the alley of branches in pursuit, crashing and howling as they ran the gauntlet of trees. Me, I'd hear them as I lay all tucked-up in the sheltering arms and roots of my trusty friend tree.

They stopped letting us play in the Pit (the first one was plowed under and seeded with grass earlier) when I was in third grade, I think. I remember it. Thank you for sparking these memories, Lydy, by sharing yours. And yours are beautiful, and beautifully told.

Date: 2003-07-16 03:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinker.livejournal.com
I've been told that rhubarb leaves are toxic, although the stalks are edible.

Date: 2003-07-16 04:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elynne.livejournal.com
(wanderer directed here by [livejournal.com profile] elisem)

I think I missed a lot of nifty stuff about growing up by living in a suburb. There wasn't much in the way of wild edible plants in Sunnyvale; there were blackberries, and "sour grass" (which may well have another name or six), but that was about it, other than the leftover fruit trees from the days when orchards had covered the valley. I suppose that counts, though... some careful late-night backyard foraging could provide an adventurous kid with apples, plums, and peaches.

By the time I got to Humboldt County, I had pretty much gone past the age at which I was willing to unthinkingly put plants in my mouth. Also, there was the fact that the blackberries on the sides of roads tended to be sprayed with insecticide. My grandmother took me on blackberry picking expeditions several times, though, in backroad lots where the sprayers didn't go, to fill coleanders and buckets with all the ripe blackberries that didn't go into me. She made pies and tarts with them, which were good, but I preferred the blackberries.

We have some in our back yard now, in fact. And they're starting to droop with clusters of berries. Hmm...

Date: 2003-07-16 05:38 pm (UTC)
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)
From: [personal profile] vass
Yes.

Thank you.

My parents have a mulberry tree in their back yard. We got such a small yield from it each year, between birds and fallen berries, that we might as well have been foraging. But what it was really good for was climbing. The trunk was split right from the ground, and one side of it went right up at a ninety degree angle, but with strong, rough bark made for hand-holds, and a branch near enough the ground that, with care, I could jump down. The other side went up to the (second story) roof, and the incline must have been forty-five degrees - so gentle that whe our cat ran up to the roof, our dog would follow him halfway.

And I also love mulberries.

foraging

Date: 2003-07-16 06:04 pm (UTC)
ext_481: origami crane (Default)
From: [identity profile] pir-anha.livejournal.com
The idea of running away to the forest and living on roots and berries was romantic, and some days almost painfully attractive.

oh, yes.

reading this brought back a lot of memories of foraging as a kid -- thank you! we didn't have mulberries but we had lots of edible berries, grasses, nuts, roots. i don't remember warnings against foraging per se, just warnings about the poisonous nature of some things, which was one of the few useful things my parents impressed on me. knowlewdge of herbal lore ran in the family, and i soaked up a lot of that.

i still forage. one of my favourite things when moving to a new location is to find out what all grows there that's new to me.

the local "weed" is one of the best i've ever had -- himalayan blackberries. they are everywhere. they truly are weeds in the worst sense; they take over and crowd out everything else. but oh, are they ever tasty. and sorrel for my salads grows right outside the door (and i make sure it doesn't all get mowed). this (vancouver island, canada) is one of the best areas i've ever lived in for foraging. that reminds me; i was going to check out whether the wild ginger came back this year because then i am gonna divide it and start a new patch.

all of this makes me the official taste tester when the paramour and i go for walks. if i don't keel over, zie'll try the unfamiliar food, *heh*.

Date: 2003-07-16 06:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pantryslut.livejournal.com
"You don't put strange things in your mouth. They might be poison."

Well, the brightest berries growing on our property when I was growing up were deadly nightshade. And my brother did take a taste of them. Rowan grew right next to it in profusion. So I understand the sentiment.

However, I did eat violets and dandelions from the yard (we didn't spray), after a neighbor lady told me I could. We made a salad together. And I used to suck the nectar from the base of periwinkle blossoms almost obsessively.

Oxalis ran rampant across my back yard last year. You would have been welcome to it :) I didn't see any edible weed greens that I recognized, like lamb's quarters, or I would've harvested them for myself.

Wild strawberries, plus raspberries and blackberries, always so obvious as to not quite count as foraging.

Thank you...

Date: 2003-07-16 08:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowriderhope.livejournal.com
*Hope stumbles in via a link from [livejournal.com profile] elisem's journal...*

Thank you for sharing this - it's bringing back waves of memories for me as well.

Queen Ann's Lace, I loved the roots, even nibbling on the tender leafy bits.

We had yew-berries out front, too, and I loved to mash them up. They were such an enticing shade, and texture!

Oh, and dandelions... oh my, the dandelions. I loved to eat the leaves raw, with a little mustard and salt, or make an impromptu 'soup' by getting hot-as-I-could-make-it-come-out-the-tap water and crumbling some spaghetti in, with a little salt and pepper, and some dandelion leaves.

Grapes growing in a bramble by the schoolyard. How I loved the brambles!

Up north (Northern Michigan), there were a lot of wild strawberries, and wild blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries, too! We used to spend hours gathering the wild strawberries, and have the most incredible strawberry shortcake... you were spot-on with your description. The most intense little strawberry ever imagined.

Another of my favorites was sassafras - I used to chew on the leaves and wish I could make root beer!

And so many more. Thank you...

Date: 2003-07-17 12:43 pm (UTC)
laurel: Picture of Laurel Krahn wearing navy & red buffalo plaid Twins baseball cap (blonde)
From: [personal profile] laurel
One great thing about living where I am now is the huge mulberry tree out in the front of the house, at the curve in the U-shaped gravel driveway. The tree isn't huge like it used to be, a good half of it died or had to be chopped down for some reason. Still big, though. Mulberry bush? I don't recall ever noticing a mulberry bush; the only mulberries I've known in my life grow on a really big sprawling tree. Big branches still hang over the driveway, so depending on where I park my van, I get all sorts of colorful splotches on it thanks to the berries and the birds.

As a kid, I loved visiting Grandma & Grandpa when the mulberries were ripe because I loved the berries and loved the harvesting of them. Sometimes we'd content ourselves with picking them from the tree, but eventually the tree got too tall for any of us. So we'd gather the family outside occasionally. Four of us would hold a corner each of a big plastic sheet and another person or two would take a very long stick and whack at the tree branches above us hard enough so the ripe berries would fall into the sheet.

Sometimes we could fill entire empty ice cream gallon buckets full of ripe berries, other times smaller pints. We'd eat fresh berries over ice cream, we'd give some berries away to neighbors or relatives, Grandma would freeze some berries for later.

I've only picked a few myself since I moved here, maybe I should try to pick enough to fill a smallish container to take to my Grandma as she loved the berries so-- would be a taste of home. She's been having trouble eating of late, I think she's depressed. She's never had trouble eating in her entire life. Maybe mulberries would be just the thing.


The berries I remember my Mom showing us kids that they were okay to eat in our own backyard were nightshade berries. Or at least that's what my Mom told us. People look at me like I'm crazy when I tell them that, though. I should really ask her what those were and see if any are around anymore.

Lots of other berries around the property here, but I don't know what they are and don't want to try any without a better idea of what they are. So I'll stick to mulberries.

Date: 2003-07-17 03:54 pm (UTC)
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From: [identity profile] akirlu.livejournal.com
I learned foraging from my family; in Sweden you might say it's the national passtime. Not only wild strawberries -- which, properly speaking, should be very carefully threaded onto the stripped stalk of whatever tall grass grows convenient to the place where you find the first ones, so that you can carry them home to be eaten with cream without crushing them, though personally I was seldom that patient -- but wild raspberries, huckleberries, lingonberries, beautiful marmelade-colored cloudberries which only grow out on squelchy peat bogs, and all the strange and astringent blue-shaded berries I don't even have words for in English. Also browsing my grandmother's and great-grandmother's gardens, which meant gooseberries, both red and green, and the not-quite-pleasant tang of currants, red, white, and black, sour yellow cherries, and yes, rhubarb straight from the earth. I also got quite good at hunting mushrooms -- morels and chantrelles, mostly -- though I didn't much like to eat them. All that sort of thing, and picking wildflowers in the ditches by the roadside or meadow, is the stuff I associate with endless, perfect, childhood summer. One of the calls of Seattle was living in a place where wildflowers and berries still can be found again, growing in the uncivilized bits.

Date: 2003-07-18 08:24 am (UTC)
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From: [identity profile] akirlu.livejournal.com
And this morning's peppermint tea reminds me of a family camping vacation in Lava Beds National Monument years ago -- my mother found a sagey smelling wild mint growing abundantly around the park and we illicitly smuggled some home to dry. It made a fantastic addition to ordinary black Red Rose tea for months to come, always smelling of sere, hot summer, among the pines and surreal lava-sculptured stones.
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