Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Ramps Recipe - Ramps Twists


Here is a great use for the ramps pesto we make using the green leaves of our native edible wild leeks (Allium tricoccum). Another spring ephemeral, the leaves of the ramps start to poke up from the warming earth in April. They can be gathered for about a month and a half before they send up their flower stalk and the leaves begin to yellow and die back until next spring. We rarely dig the entire ramp, as this kills the plant and we don't use the bulb very often. The leaves are full of the funky-garlicky goodness we like, and we harvest the leaves by cutting one leaf from each cluster of 2 or 3 that each plant produces from its bulb. By taking only a few leaves from any area, we ensure the health of the ramps patch. They reproduce very slowly by splitting their underground bulbs, and digging them up as many short-sighted commercial harvesters do will destroy future sources of this delicious wild edible. Most of the recipes we come up with use the leaves, and the pesto recipe freezes well to use all year.

Find this recipe in our book.
Ramps patch



This recipe is available in our book, available Spring 2016.
http://www.skyhorsepublishing.com/book/?GCOI=60239108626260&

7 comments:

  1. Looks so good! And I love that you advocate sustainable harvesting practices!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I bet those are delicious. Ramps make me miss West Virginia. The town I lived in had a ramp festival every spring.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nice! What a great Idea for Ramps!

    ReplyDelete
  4. great recipe and great site - I recommended you in this post! I will be trying pesto next with my bag of wild garlic - brilliant idea. This is my stir fry recipe using wild garlic - I hope you like. http://chipbuttiesandnoodlesoup.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/wild-garlic-with-tofu-aubergine-and.html

    ReplyDelete
  5. I made this recipe and brought it with me to a Grassroots Growers Association meeting. The main talk was about canning & preserving. I brought my pickled leeks and this recipe as an example of how to prolong foraged goodies! It went over like crazy! First plate that went empty. here's the link to the association:
    http://te-grassrootsgrowers.weebly.com/

    ReplyDelete
  6. These do travel to potlucks well, they taste best at room temperature, too. Thanks for the compliments, Lisa.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I made them again! This time as a treat at my very first wild food walk at my home...
    http://smallpursebiggarden.blogspot.ca/2014/08/a-walk-on-wild-side.html

    ReplyDelete