Eat the Weeds: Find, Identify, and Harvest 195 Wild Foods
By (Author) Deane Jordan
Adventure Publications, Incorporated
Adventure Publications, Incorporated
13th March 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
Organic food / organic cookery
581.632
Paperback
432
Width 190mm, Height 241mm, Spine 28mm
Start foraging with this informative guide to nearly 300 edible plants, presented by expert Green Deane.
Eating wild edibles is in our genes, and it can be healthy fun! Its seasonal, sufficient, varied, and provides plenty of nutrients. It also yields the satisfaction born of food independence and competence. No packaging is involved, no labeling, no advertising, and no genetic tinkering. You get to enjoy wild edibles in all of their natural glory.
But which plants should you eatand when should you eat them Let Green Deane Jordan guide you with Eat the Weeds. Green Deane teaches foraging classes and runs a popular foraging website (also called Eat the Weeds). Now hes sharing his expertise with you. Eat the Weeds presents 295 wild edibles and helps you to find, identify, and harvest them.
Perhaps you recognize a shortage in your diet of a specific vitamin and/or mineral. This guide points you to the plants that could remedy it. The information appeals to everyone from foragers, gardeners, and nature-lovers to raw foodists, vegans, and survivalists. Each entry includes an introduction to the plant and recommended methods for preparing it, as well as its nutritional information. Yes, nearly every featured wild edible includes a full nutrition table! Color photographs and visual descriptions assist you in field identification, and Green Deanes insights are invaluable, whether youre a beginning forager or someone with plenty of experience.
Foraging is like a treasure hunt, and it can often be done year-round if you know what to look for and where to look. So eat healthier, save money, and have fun while enjoying Earths delicious and nutritious bounty.
Green Deane Jordan is a life-long Greek bachelor with a degree in music and graduate studies in communications. In short, hes paid to play and write. He is the author of many articles and two other books: 1001 Facts Somebody Screwed Up and 1001 More Facts Somebody Screwed Up. He doesnt own or watch television, and he is not a vegetarian (a common assumption).
Green Deanes hobbies include gardening, cooking, collecting cast iron cookware, dancing, canoeing, public speaking, kayaking, cast netting, fishing, biking, hiking in Greece whenever possible, and, of course, foraging for wild foods and other unusual edibles. He has planted over 12 dozen different kinds of edible plantscultivated and wildon his small suburban lot in Central Florida, and he maintains a year-round 20' by 20' garden. On his cul-de-sac, he is the only one without a lawn of decapitated grass, much to his neighbors collective horror; he thinks of it as green diversity. Green Deane is also a musician and a writer. He is perhaps best known for his popular foraging website, Eat the Weeds.