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Morels!

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It’s morel season in Western PA! We are fortunate to have found about 100 morels this year, mostly the half-free (also called “snakehead morel” or “peckerhead morel”) and some black morels.

Morels (Morchella species) are delicious edible mushrooms, though they must be cooked. They are absolutely, always 100% hollow inside, which is one way to make certain you have a morel and not a false morel. Another way is that the cap is attached to the stalk, either at the bottom (black and yellow morels) or mid-way, with a bit of a skirt (half-free.) In false morels such as verpas (which are inedible) the cap is attached to the top.

Half free (left) and black (right) morels

Half free (left) and black (right) morels

Half Free morel

Half Free morel

Look for morels under elm and dying elm trees. Tulip poplar is another tree under which morels can be found. Also ash, sycamore…I heard a saying recently, “You find them where you find them.” But we always look for elm or tulip poplar groves when seeking out morels. If you are not familiar with these trees, you can google images for them.

How many black morels can you spot in this picture?

How many black morels can you spot in this picture?

Black Morel

Black Morel

Here you will see how hollow morels look inside. There is no question that they are 100% hollow! If you are not sure, throw it out!

You can see this black morel is 100% hollow inside. This will be true for all true morels like the yellow and half free. Notice also how the cap is entirely attached to the stalk.

You can see this black morel is 100% hollow inside. This will be true for all true morels like the yellow and half free. Notice also how the cap is entirely attached to the stalk.


The picture below is NOT A MOREL! It is an inedible Gyromitria, or false morel. They typically come out a little before the true morels appear, but they remain out during morel season. They are NOT HOLLOW inside.
NOT A MOREL!!! This is an inedible false morel - Gyromitria

NOT A MOREL!!! This is an inedible false morel - Gyromitria

If you are in Western PA, the Western PA Mushroom Club is hosting Morel Madness this weekend! Check it out, it is a great program with slide shows and ranger-led hikes looking for morels.

We have made some truly delicious dishes this year with morels, pictures and recipes are coming up.

If you haven’t signed up for our free newsletter, please do! The sign up box is on the top right (green box with the feet inside). You’ll receive 5 free ebooks as well!

Happy Hunting!

Melissa Sokulski

**Did you know our new e-workbook is pay-what-you-choose? Author and herbalist Melissa Sokulski has put together a workbook of what she feels are the best ways to learn about wild edible plants. Check it out today!**

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Homemade Pasta with Stinging Nettles

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stinging nettles

stinging nettles

I have chosen nettles as my wild ally this year…have you chosen your ally yet? There are lots of plants popping up out there: dandelion, chickweed, violent, nettles, burdock, garlic mustard.

We relocated some nettles to our backyard last year, and this year an abundant crop has sprung up. Yesterday Ella and I harvested some young nettles, steamed them, blended them with egg and kneaded them into buckwheat flour to make our own gluten-free buckwheat nettle noodles!

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Here is what we did:

  1. Harvest young stinging nettles. You’ll need three cups of chopped fresh nettles (which will steam way down) for the pasta. *When harvesting and chopping fresh nettles, you may want to use gloves to avoid being stung.*
  2. We are gluten free so we like to make our own flour, which we do easily in our Vitamix. Today we ground buckwheat groats into flour and used 2 cups, plus extra for kneading on.
  3. buckwheat groats ground into flour using our vitamix

    buckwheat groats ground into flour using our vitamix

  4. Place steamed nettles and two eggs into a blender and mix.
  5. On a table or in a bowl, make a pile of flour with a well in the middle.
  6. Put the nettle/egg mixture in the well and mix/knead into the flour
  7. If too sticky, add more flour.
  8. Place dough ball under wet cloth and let it “rest” for 15 minutes.
  9. Cut about a fourth of the dough off and roll it out on a floured surfaced as thinly as possible. (If you have a pasta maker by all means use it!) Cover the dough you are not rolling with the wet cloth.
  10. rolling out the pasta

    rolling out the pasta

  11. Cut into strips and set aside as you continue to roll and cut all the pasta.
  12. Place the pasta in boiling water and cook about 3 minutes (fresh pasta does not need much time to cook.)
  13. Drain pasta. I returned it to the pot and added some butter, fresh chopped tomatoes and salt while I sauteed the rest of the veggies, which I then mixed in.
  14. In a separate pan in butter, saute 1/2 large onion, 1 clove garlic, 1/2 cup chopped mushrooms and 1 cup chopped fresh nettles. (You may want to use gloves while chopping the nettles.)
  15. Mix into noodles, add salt to taste and enjoy!

I hope you enjoy this recipe! This vegetarian recipe can easily be made vegan by substituting olive oil or earth’s best margarine for the butter. I’ll be sharing lots more things I do this year with my wild ally, nettles. If you haven’t gotten a chance to check out The Wild Ally Workbook, please do!

You’ll also find a video review of vitamix blenders here, along with a coupon code for free shipping!

Have a great day!

Melissa Sokulski
Food Under Foot

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Another Morel Dish to Share: Morel Potato Kugel

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Yellow (large) morels with Black (smaller) morels from our last outing.

Yellow (large) morels with Black (smaller) morels from our last outing.

On our last morel hike, we found four small black morels, and some larger yellow morels. This time we added them to a potato kugel. The flavor of the morels was somewhat lost in this dish, so it wasn’t the best way to showcase the morels. But it was delicious, so I wanted to share it with you!

A Kugel is a Jewish dish made traditionally with pasta or potatoes and eggs. It is often sweet but can be savory like this one.

Morel Potato Kugel with Cheese

Morel Potato Kugel with Cheese

Morel Potato Kugel.

  • Morels, chopped
  • 1/2 onion, chopped
  • 1 1/2 cups chopped spinach
  • 2 Tbsp butter or olive oil
  • salt
  • pepper
  • 4 potatoes, cubed and steamed
  • 4 eggs, beaten
  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1 cup grated cheese, such as cheddar (optional)

Preheat the oven to 350.

Peel and cube 4 potatoes and steam them.

Saute chopped morels, onions and spinach in butter for about 15 minutes, until onions are translucent and morels are wilted.

Mix four eggs with 1/2 cup milk, yogurt or cream, salt and pepper.

Mix eggs, potatoes and vegetables together and pour into a 9 by 13 baking pan.

Sprinkle a cup of shredded cheese on top.

Bake about 45 minutes.

A piece of mushroom kugel.

A piece of mushroom kugel.

I hope you enjoy the kugel!

Have you found morels this year? What do you like to do with them? What else are you eating this spring? We’d love to hear from you!

~ Melissa Sokulski

Food Under Foot and Birch Center for Health

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Green Smoothie with Nettles

General Posts, Raw, Recipes
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Yes, fresh nettles (Urtica dioica) sting. The sting I got the other day felt like a bee sting. The sting is from a chemical made by the plant, not from a pricker, so if you cook it, blend it or dry it you’re safe.

Young stinging nettles

Young stinging nettles


I gathered some nettles the other day, and put some into a delicious green smoothie (recipe below) and the rest I dried to use as tea.

In my first pot of nettle tea (delicious!) the nettle looked so good and bright green when it reconstituted, that I chopped it up and made a miso soup with it! It was sooo good. Next time I’ll have to remember to take pictures of that.

Here is the green smoothie, which is actually purple due to blueberries:

Green smoothie with nettles...it's actually purple because of the blueberries

Green smoothie with nettles...it's actually purple because of the blueberries


Green Smoothie with Nettles

    2 bananas
    1 cup frozen mangoes
    1/2 cup frozen blueberries
    handful (a careful handful…don’t get stung!) fresh nettles
    2 cups water

Blend until smooth and enjoy!

We use the vitamix for our green smoothies…if you don’t know about this blender, please check out our video about it…and you’ll also find a coupon for free shipping on this page.

Thanks, and enjoy the spring!

~ Melissa Sokulski
Food Under Foot
Birch Center for Health

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Garlic Mustard Horseradish

General Posts, Herb, Medicinal, Raw, Recipes
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Garlic Mustard Greens emerging from the ground.

Garlic Mustard Greens emerging from the ground.

Today I harvested garlic mustard for the spicy white roots to make a horseradish-like condiment.

Garlic Mustard (Alliaria petiolata) is an invasive plant, brought to America in the 1860’s as a culinary herb. It spreads like wildfire and often will displace native mustards and cresses. Many parks hold days where people can come volunteer to pull out garlic mustard so it doesn’t take over other native plants. This is one weed no one will mind you pulling!

Now is a great time to use garlic mustard: the leaves are tasty and not too bitter, as the weather warms the leaves get more bitter and lose their spicy garlic mustard flavor.

washing the garlic mustard in a colander

washing the garlic mustard in a colander

To make the condiment, harvest the entire plant, and wash the roots well. The roots are white and have a horseradish-like smell. They will taste spicy.

Garlic mustard roots

Garlic mustard roots

I chopped the roots:

Chopped Garlic Mustard Roots

Chopped Garlic Mustard Roots

I blended the roots in a food processor with a bit of salt, a couple teaspoons of water and about 1 tsp apple cider vinegar and blended until it looked like horseradish: (It stung my eyes! Pretty spicy…)

Blended in a food processor with a little water, salt and apple cider vinegar

Blended in a food processor with a little water, salt and apple cider vinegar

Here it is, in a jar:

Garlic Mustard "Horseradish!"

According to Chinese Medicine, the spicy or pungent taste of horseradish and garlic mustard enters the Lung meridian, and is known to clear the sinuses and help the body get rid of respiratory infections. (For more on Traditional Chinese Medicine and health, visit our sister website Birch Center for Health.)

Here in Pittsburgh, wild edibles are just emerging from the ground. Today we also found nettles! What is popping up where you live? We’d love to hear from you!

Thanks!
Melissa Sokulski, acupuncturist, herbalist
Food Under Foot

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Springing out of Winter: Garlic Mustard

General Posts, Identification, Recipes
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Walking around some Pittsburgh parks today after a beautiful stretch of warm days…and we indeed see signs of spring!

We saw some garlic mustard rosettes bursting from the ground:

Garlic Mustard

Garlic Mustard

Garlic Mustard is an invasive plant, brought to America as a culinary herb in the 1860’s. In Pittsburgh, many parks have volunteer days spent pulling this invasive herb out. By all means pull it up from your garden…but don’t be so quick to throw it in the compost! This is a delicious plant and early spring is when its flavor is at its best.

The leaves become bitter as the weather gets hot, so they are best collected in early spring and summer. Leaves can be collected either from the ground rosettes (pictured above) or from the stalk. Garlic Mustard leaves become more triangular when the plant bolts, and the leaves come up the flower stalk of this small four-petaled flower (unlike dandelion, whose leaves stay on the ground as the flower stalk is sent up).

Here's how garlic mustard looks later in the season, once it "bolts", or sends up its flower stalk.

Flowers and chopped leaves can be added to salads for a nice pungent garlic flavor.

Now is the time to collect the roots, when no flower stalks are present. These are very spicy and taste like horseradish. The root can be chopped and steeped in apple cider vinegar for a spicy condiment.

garlic mustard roots: spicy like horseradish

garlic mustard roots: spicy like horseradish

In the fall the seeds, which have a mustard flavor, can be collected and eaten.

I love to make pesto using the garlic mustard leaves:

Raw Garlic Mustard Pesto

1 1/2 cups garlic mustard leaves
1 1/2 cups spinach leaves
juice of 1/2 - 1 lemon (to taste)
1 clove garlic (or more to taste)
1/2 cup pine nuts or walnuts
1/4 cup olive oil
salt or tamari to taste

Blend above ingredients in food processor or blender and enjoy.

Here is a copy of my article on Garlic Mustard, published last year in Natural News.

Enjoy the spring!!

Melissa Sokulski, herbalist, acupuncturist
Food Under Foot
Birch Center

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Fermented Vegetables with Burdock

General Posts, Identification, Recipes
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Another way I like to prepare burdock is to add it to delicious homemade sauerkraut! Fermented vegetables are an incredibly healthful way to prepare and keep your fall harvest into the winter. Because the vegetables are kept raw, all the vitamins, minerals and enzymes are kept intact. The live cultures that naturally live on cabbage and other vegetables breakdown the vegetables, making them easy to digest and also stocking them with probiotics which are beneficial to the body, especially the gut and immune system! (For more information about the health benefits of fermented vegetables, and health in general, check out our sister blog over at Birch Center for Health.)

First, I find the burdock plant that looks like this:

Burdock to Harvest

Burdock to Harvest

Notice it is still green and leafy and alive! Burdock is a two year plant, so this is a first year. The second year plants turn brown in the fall as they die, and you’ll notice they are covered with burrs, which is where their seeds are. (They stick to you as a way of spreading their seeds far and wide!)

Dig up the long tap roots (get as much as you can, they are difficult to eradicate!) Here is one that is already washed, but not yet peeled:

Burdock Root

Burdock Root

Once peeled with a regular vegetable peeler, I grate the burdock along with cabbage, cucumbers and apples. I also added sea salt and small pieces of wakame, which is a sea vegetable. (You can grate the veggies by hand, but I used my food processor.) I added them all to a bowl and massaged the salt into them. Add plenty of salt, taste it once it’s mixed and make sure you like how it tastes.

Shredded Vegetables: Cabbage, Burdock, Cucumbers

Shredded Vegetables: Cabbage, Burdock, Cucumbers

Finally, stuff the mixture (and all the juices it released when you were mixing it!) into a canning jar. You can top with larger pieces of cabbage leaf, rolled and pressed down to keep the kraut below the juices so it can ferment properly and not mold. You can also use burdock leaves or grape leaves for this purpose.

Sauerkraut in the Jar

Sauerkraut in the Jar

Cap the jar and label with your ingredients and the date. Leave your vegetables to ferment at room temperature. Uncap daily to make sure the veggies are pressed under the juice, and taste everyday. After 4 to 7 days, they kraut should reach a taste you like. (You can even keep them out longer if you like more sour flavored sauerkraut.) Put it in the fridge to stop (or slow greatly) the fermentation. It will keep practically indefinitely!

One book we love about making your own natural cultured veggies is called Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods, by Sandor Ellix Katz.  (You can browse our recommended books Here at Amazon).

Also, in Book 1 of our 5 eBook series (which you can get for free by signing up in the green box to the right!), has a recipe for fermented veggies with Burdock which you don’t want to miss, so make sure you sign up today! The book also has great pictures and information about identifying and harvesting burdock, I’m sure you’ll enjoy it.

Thanks so much!

~ Melissa Sokulski, L.Ac.

Food Under Foot

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Paw Paw Slushie

Look-Alikes, Raw, Recipes, video
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As promised, here is the recipe for the delicious paw paw slushie I made with the amazing stash of paw paws harvested from the trees I found in our neighborhood (with the owner’s permission, I should add!)

Collection of Ripe Paw Paws

Collection of Ripe Paw Paws

First, I peeled about four or five paw paws with a regular vegetable peeler, and put them in a colander (yes, one of them does have a bite out of it! I couldn’t resist.):

peeled paw paws

peeled paw paws

These paw paws were so ripe and soft, I just began to mash them by hand (the ultimate aim is to separate the seeds (which you should not eat - they may be toxic) from the fruit:

mashing up the paw paws in colander

mashing up the paw paws in colander

Here’s how they look all mashed up:

mashed paw paws with seeds

mashed paw paws with seeds

I had the colander in a larger bowl (both the colander and bowl are actually part of a salad spinner…I did not use the top to spin it, just mashed the fruit through the holes by hand):

separating the seeds from fruit with colander and bowl (of a salad spinner)

separating the seeds from fruit with colander and bowl (of a salad spinner)

I put the mashed paw paw fruit in a blender (I used our vitamix) with a bit of water and a lot of ice. It was actually very rich, like an icy pudding, so I added more water to my taste…I was in the mood for something to drink. You can experiment and see what you like:

Paw Paw Slushie

Paw Paw Slushie

It made a lot…I saved the extra in a glass jar in the fridge, and then added it to my smoothie the next morning…I had a green smoothie with bananas, paw paws, frozen mangoes, collard greens, spirulina, water and ice. You can watch here as I make a similar green smoothie using wild lamb’s quarters from our garden.

I hope you enjoy! Please let us know your experience with paw paws by commenting to this post!

Also, if you enjoy these type of posts, please make sure you sign up for our free newsletter (you’ll find the sign up box in the right margin, it’s a green box with blue feet.) You’ll get five free ebooks, detailing five different wild edible plants, with great pictures and information on how to identify, harvest and use some very common plants, complete with recipes! Please sign up now…thank you!!

~ Melissa

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