A little food for thought.

in Freewriters2 years ago


flax-seed-1274944_1280.jpg

There are several native seeds that I grow. Some are intentional. Others are not.


passion-flower-3466146_1280.jpg

Passion fruit. Down south, we call these maypops because when the fruit is over ripe and starts to ferment, it may pop when you go to pick it. That's how it spreads its seed.


lambs-quarters-1549481_1280.jpg

Lamb's quarters are considered a weed on most farms and in the garden. They get quite large and can shade other plants.

For me, though, they are tasty. The leaves are a little thick like that of collard greens and have that kind of consistency when you eat them. I've never tried to cook them, but I'm sure they'd be good with a slab of bacon or ham.


amaranth-2677023_1280.jpg

Pig weed or amaranth is another weed. Some have spines on their stalks, so you have to be careful when pulling them up.

This is a very good plant to forage.

It is great raw and could be eaten as a salad perhaps with dandelion, plantain and a little wood sorrel thrown in. (Wood sorrel is high in oxalic acid so it should be eaten in small amounts.)

Muscadines and scuppernongs are both varieties of wild grape native to the southeast.

Now that I'm thinking about it, there are lots of plants to forage in the south.

Do some research, find out what they are, and get adventurous!


hr.jpeg

Sort:  

Interesting but I don't think I ever saw it.
You don't eat it like spinach or use the seeds?

The amaranth you can eat raw or cook it. It's definitely good raw. You can collect the seeds and mill them for flour. I've never done that.

The Lamb's quarters are much better cooked like spinach, turnips or mustard.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.19
TRX 0.12
JST 0.030
BTC 60756.34
ETH 3373.61
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.51