Wintergreen (Gaultheria procumbens) is a lovely little perennial, ground hugging plant in our area. The leaves are leathery, but can be chewed while hiking for a refreshing wintergreen flavor. The red berries, also tasting of wintergreen, are abundant in the fall, and can over-winter into spring for gathering. We had a wild foods potluck to attend in June, so we went out to find some of last fall's berries, still clinging to the low foliage. I chopped them finely in the food processor. The berries are not juicy, they are rather dry inside with many seeds, which is why they can last under snowfall all winter. Once chopped, they made a paste, which I folded into the meringue recipe before piping into rosettes and baking. Quite popular at the potluck, I also had a hard time keeping Gillian's little fingers out of the cookie basket before they were served. There should not be too much color or browning on the meringues, if there is you need a lower oven temperature. Try not to bake these on a humid or rainy day, or they will just stay sticky and not really dry out. If you can't find berries right now, wait until late autumn to seek out wintergreen berries in abundance, most often under white pines.
This recipe is availble in our book, available Spring 2016.
http://www.skyhorsepublishing.com/book/?GCOI=60239108626260&
2 comments:
Hello you 3!
I found your blog and I am really impressed. Well mushrooms are not (yet) my thing, but I love your use of plants. I am thankful for the botanical name, because the English names are very hard for me.
Keep going!
Greetings from Germany!
Steph
Thank you, Steph. I love the binomial names because they are universal for everyone, while the common names can change from region to region, and around the world!
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