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Fresh oysters and wood ear fungi |
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Paprika and garlic rubbed oysters |
New England had been having an unusually warm autumn, as well as a late start to the winter weather. The warmth let us hike and hunt mushrooms up until Christmas day, with the polypores making a great showing, along with many, many logs covered with edible oyster mushrooms (
Pleurotus ostreatus). Oysters found this late in the season are great because they tend to be bug-free and can be found in great quantities. Wood ear fungi (
Auricularia auricula) were also found and brought home to dehydrate for soups.
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Pan fried oysters over a bittercress salad and polenta |
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Dandelion root |
There were even lots of greens we collected into the end of December, most were bi-ennials starting to grow and some were plants that had seeded themselves then started to sprout. Leaves of garlic mustard (
Alliaria petiolata) were growing from the first season's basal rosette, and large enough to use as a wrap! Yard onions (
Allium vineale) leaves came back up and can still be plucked even as the ground starts to freeze. Rosettes of hairy bittercress (
Cardamine hirsuta) popped up, and there were even tiny, white blossoms on some of them. Dandelion greens (
Taraxacum officinale) that are picked now tend to be on the mild side, and roots can still be dug and roasted for a coffee substitute.
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Fresh dandelion greens |
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Garlic mustard leaves and some bittercress |
2 comments:
We also found oysters and wood ears on Christmas Eve. I live in WV so we experienced similar weather. Your food photos look delicious! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for sharing this blog. Very helpful. I was searching for this kin of a blog. Its worth sharing.
Garden of life primal defense
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