Fifteen of us walked out from the
Daylesford Neighbourhood Centre today for one of my four hour foraging workshops, bracing winter's cold ground joy.
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Foraging workshop. Photo: Dave Cauldwell |
We came across about thirty to forty autonomous foods including mallow (
Malva) and wild radish (
Raphanus raphanistrum).
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Mallow (left), wild radish (right). Photo: Dave Cauldwell. |
The young leaves of acanthus (
Acantha) can be eaten. The flowers and fruits (cheeses) can be cooked as a vegetable.
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Acanthus. Photo: Dave Cauldwell. |
Buckshorn plantain (
Plantago coronopus) can be eaten raw in salads or cooked.
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Buckshorn plantain. Photo: Dave Cauldwell. |
Spear thistle root (
Cirsium vulgare) is my favourite vegetable at the moment. Washing the clay from one in Lake Daylesford made a perfect end to the walk.
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Washing spear thistle root in Lake Daylesford. Photo: Dave Cauldwell. |
Especially after chopping up the root, giving it a splash with local (Captain's Creek) red wine vinegar and serving it out to the lovely crew who came on the walk today.
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Patrick Jones' foraging workshop, Lake Daylesford. Photo: Dave Cauldwell. |
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