Free foods and herbal medicines from the countryside
77Herbs and their uses
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Photos of herbs and edible wild flowers
Foraging for free and healthy natural foods
In the past many wild plants were used as food sources as well as being a medicine cabinet of natural remedies. Over the years wild foods have become too often forgotten and the modern diet usually consists of food that has been processed and packaged, food that can cost a lot of money to buy. But plants you can gather in the countryside are free and usually better for our health than what is so often on offer.
British author Richard Mabey wrote Food For Free that was first published back in 1972 but has become a classic reference work on the subject of foraging for what you can find growing wild that is edible. He also includes many herbs that can be used as natural remedies or in the kitchen, and often for both uses.
If you live in the northern hemisphere, and in many cases if you live elsewhere, because many of the plants I am writing about have spread worldwide, you may be able to find most, if not all of the selection detailed here. But first a word of warning: it is very important to remember when collecting wild plants for consumption to only collect them from places away from the dangers of pollution from road fumes and from anywhere where they may have been sprayed with pesticides.
One very common annual wild flower that grows in most countries now, although only in the rainy season in hot ones, is the Chickweed (Stellaria media). This little plant is found in profusion in gardens, waste ground, cultivated land, along footpaths and even in the cracks in pavements. Chickweed has tiny white flowers and delicate straggling stems and grows best in the winter months.
Although Chickweed is regarded as a weed it is actually an excellent salad plant and a herb with medicinal properties, Chickweed can be eaten fresh in salads and in sandwiches or as a garnish, as well as being added to soups or cooked as greens and served with a knob of butter. It contains A, C and B vitamins and calcium and potassium and is very good as a tonic food for cage birds and poultry, hence its name. Chickweed can be used as an infusion to treat coughs and externally as a wash for rashes and sore skin.
The Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) is too well known to need much of a description but what is perhaps not so well known is that this common weed is a source of food and can be used for its medicinal properties. Dandelion leaves, stems and flowers can be eaten as a salad and the plant can be cultivated and blanched like Endives or Chicory by heaping up soil around the growing leaves to make them more palatable. Dandelion leaves can also be cooked as greens. The flowers are good as the base for making a homemade wine, and the roots can be dug up, dried and roasted, and then ground up to make a coffee substitute. Dandelion coffee is a lot better for you because it doesn't contain caffeine.
The Dandelion has diuretic properties and is good for any condition in which eliminating water from the body is required. As a medicinal herb the plant has been used to treat liver and gallbladder disease and for acne and eczema. The white sap can be applied to warts, corns and verrucas to help destroy these growths.
In the same family as the Dandelion and also found growing as a weed in some places is the Milk Thistle (Silybum marianum), which is unmistakeable with its white-veined prickly foliage and rose-purple flowers. It can grow quite large in good conditions and is an attractive plant that you are unlikely to pass by without noticing. It was once cultivated as a pot-herb and commonly eaten. The leaves of Milk Thistle can be trimmed to remove the prickles and cooked a s greens, the stems can be peeled, soaked in water to remove their bitterness and finally stewed, and the flower heads can have the spiny outer bracts removed and can then be eaten like small Globe Artichokes. The seeds of Milk Thistle are used to make a herb tea that is highly recommended as a liver tonic and as a remedy for treating diseases of this vital organ. Milk Thistle is also used to combat coughs, travel sickness and depression and it is said that it helps protect the body from damage by toxins such as alcohol.
Speaking of herbs that are used as remedies for depression, the St John's Wort has become well known as the natural alternative to Prozac. The Perforate St John's Wort (Hypericum perforatum) is the most commonly found and used species but others like the Canary Island St John's Wort (Hypericum canariense) also contain hypericin, which is the substance that has an antidepressant affect. All of the St John's Worts have golden-yellow flowers with conspicuous stamens and flower in late spring and summer. The Perforate St John's Wort grows in grassy places, in fields, on railway banks, along pathways and on waste ground and forms clumps.This herb is also used as a remedy for nervous disorders, bed-wetting in children, and also for stomach problems like gastritis, and it is made into an infusion of leaves and flowers. St John's Wort should not be taken if you are pregnant, nor should it be consumed along with other antidepressants.
A plant that always cheers me up just by seeing its delightful feathery leaves and smelling the delicious aniseed aroma if it is lightly crushed is the Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare), which is often found growing wild on waste ground and grassy places, especially on the coast. Fennel is easy to recognise with its feathery aniseed-perfumed leaves and yellow-green flowers carried in umbels.
Fennel seeds make a great herbal tea, as well as being useful in the kitchen for adding to curries and other spicy dishes, whilst the chopped leaves are excellent with oily fish and in sauces. Besides being a great flavouring, Fennel is good for the digestion as well as being used as a remedy for coughs. Fennel has a long history of being used as an aid to slimming. The tea is antiseptic and is a treatment for flatulence, constipation and to repair damage done to the liver by too much alcohol. Fennel also helps lower blood pressure, improves the memory and is even said to have aphrodisiac properties.
Another useful plant found growing by the sea and on waste ground is the Sea Beet or Wild Spinach (Beta vulgaris) and the closely related B. procumbens. The Wild Spinach is the ancestor of all cultivated beets, chards and spinach varieties and tastes just as good, cooked as greens and served with butter.Make sure to wash it well before cooking though.
From a plant that can be served as greens to another - the Stinging Nettle (Urtica dioica). Although this common plant is known for being able to cause painful inflammation if accidentally touched when it is cooked it is rendered harmless and is actually a very nutritious food containing iron, which would help ward off anaemia. The leaves can be collected whilst wearing gloves and can either be used for cooking purposes or dried to be stored for making Nettle tea. As a herbal remedy the Nettle is used to treat rheumatism, sciatica and to improve the circulation. It is also good for lowering the blood pressure. The leaves and shoots can be used for making Nettle beer as well.
Finally in this short introduction to foraging for wild plants, there is the Goosegrass or Cleavers (Galium aparine), which is found growing at the bottoms of hedges and on banks, in waste places, along paths, in garden borders as a weed, and anywhere it can cling and straggle its climbing stems over. Before the plant gets too tough and goes to seed the leaves and young shoots can also be cooked as a vegetable. The seeds can be toasted and ground up to form another coffee substitute minus caffeine.
There are very many other trees, bushes, wild flowers and fungi that are worth collecting and using too but not enough room to cover them here. If you can get hold of Food For Free, the book mentioned earlier, it is an excellent place to find out a lot more and there are plenty of other very good sources of information on foraging for wild foods. Happy gathering!
Copyright © 2010 Steve Andrews. All Rights Reserved.
Wild Food Summit with Sunny Savage
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Excellent foods for thought! I wish i knew how to spot these plants..I can usualy find blackberrys very easily as they are grown all over london as your aware!
Flower power 2u;)
O.M - acknowledgement appreciated but not needed. What a bloke!
Bard, I was just wondering today about wild onions (or is it garlic) that grow in the yard. Are they eatible? If so, are they as tasty as spring onions?
Great hub!
I eat a few different wild greens and berries that grow in Louisiana, USA.
1. Poke Salad (watch out they say it is poisonous - I'm still here)
2. Dock (Love this one raw chopped up with with red beans and rice)
3. Cleavers (I mix this one raw in a blender with some fruit to make a green smoothie)
4. Chickweed (great lightly steamed or raw in the green smoothie)
5. Horse Lettuce (into the smoothie with other wild greens)
6. Lambquarters (yep, smoothie again)
7. Plantains (in the smoothies)
8. Goldenrod greens - the tender leaves at the tips of the plant.
9. Sorrel (smoothies again - yes I drink a lot of green smoothies!)
10. Dewberries and Blackberries - just pop in mouth for desert
There are some good videos on youtube about green smoothies and how to make them, but most don't show people adding wild greens in them.
I love dandelion tea. Thanks for the info.
We just always called them wild onions, considered a weed. They are common here (NC.) I think I'll give it a try. They are small, and look pretty much like the "spring onions" you can buy in the grocery store.
These days and times, it would be a good idea for anyone to learn the natural herbal remedies of our ancestors. All of these synthetic drugs are good, for the most part, only for the drug companies.
Great article Steve, but you forgot to mention the fabulous and also delicious Wild Garlic or Jack-by-the-hedge, which is in profuse flower in the UK (and I daresay other parts of europe) at the moment. Usually the leaves are harvested before the flowers come and used like spring onion or chives or cooked like spinach, but I like the flowers for their intense flavour explosions. My favorite is Nettle, wild Garlic and spinach soup (of some of which I made yesterday) which you puree and add a very large handful of wild garlic flowers to before serving. I especially like to eat the flowers in salds with daisy heads and rocket or in a cheese sandwich. Amother free food which I also enjoy, which will soon be in season is the elder flower, which you can dip into a sweet batter and deep fry. Drizzled with honey, these make a perfect end to a nice lunch of soup and salad!
It was the woodland variety (allium) that I used in my soup, as It is in profuse and energetic rampage in he woods I walk the new puppy in! an I should get my backside in gear and start writing again, as I have been busy for the last few months with other things. Thanks Steve! Its probably the push I need, as I have so much info in my noddle that I should really share with everybody. And I will email you the recipe for my soup as I am sure you will enjoy it! Take care x x x x x
Very interesting and informative hub! My grandmother made me dandelion wine when I was a senior in high school, to take along on my class trip LOL,,,,,ok, well, she didn't know what I planned to do with it, but it sure was good! :)
Patty
Hi again, and you're welcome,
I'm going to have to check out the book you recommended, as I was too young to care about how anything was made. Wish I paid more attention though lol. The thing I can't get past however, is picturing the dandelion flower as 'dirty' with specks of 'stuff' in it. My guess is washing would take care of that? Also, the fact that ants and cats or birds or some creature has 'relieved' themselves on these prolific flowers, not sure if any amount of washing would take care of that, not to mention the mental image I have lol,,
PS: Does the book include recipes?
Patty
Ok, thanks. I'll just have to try it out :)
Patty
Have just published my first hub, and became a fan of yours my dearest Bard. i share my passion for wild garlic with you and the rest of cyberspace here!
Thanks for sharing. "The edible wild" has been one of my passions for a long time. Here in my area the wild asparagus is the number one on my list for collection in the early spring. Fiddleheads most of the summer along with mushrooms.
awesome hub regards Zsuzsy
I've been studying edible and medicinal wild foods for a long time, but one I couldn't bring myself to eat was the milk thistle. I tend to shy away from things that hurt me!
Impressive work. Hub is having very interesting and useful information.
Find my hub on Herbal Remedies useful too
Love this topic! You could spend a whole lifetime delightfully exploring what food and medicine that nature has to offer.
Bard, I enjoyed this informative Hub. I have harvested dandelion and plantain for personal use for several years.
My experience with dandelion tea is that while I absolutely LOVE the flavor, it is HIGHLY cleansing, which can be less than a comfortable experience initially. If your readers decide to drink it daily, I would advise also drinking a couple of ounces of apple juice daily to open the gall ducts, so that they don't end up with pain and GI symptoms as a result of increased bile production - with no way for it to flow freely.
Staci
Once read a beautiful book called self-sufficiency or something like that, which reminds me a bit of your topic about free food. You've done a great job with this hub, and mentioning quite a large variety of different wild and free plant foods. Well done.
Lets not forget that our Bard here is author of a very good book on the subject Herbs of the Northern Shaman Available from Waterstones and Amazon. http://www.waterstones.com/waterstonesweb/products
More that 40 years ago, Euell Gibbons published in 1962 "Stalking the Wild Asparagus." I lived in Connecticut then in a rural area and had much fun finding some wild edibles. One must be careful not to collect plants for food from contaminated soil, especially near roads and railroad tracks. Also, watch amounts consumed of St. John's Wort, as hypericin has many effects on the body, some of them not good.
Hi! Thanks for this overview. Have been doing some research on wild foods and am glad I found your work.
Would like to link this hub to mine on spiderwort, if you have no objection. Thanks!























mroconnell 4 years ago
This is an awesome topic. I am probably going to make a sister hub with my personal experiences foraging. Thanks for the information and inspiration.
To the hippies of hubpages!!