Feb foraging

Broch

Life Member
Jan 18, 2009
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There's quite a lot beginning to show really: reedmace (Typha latifolia) is showing some new shoots with me but the tubers can be harvested all year anyway; common sorrel (Rumex acetosa); ground ivy (Glechoma hederacea), cleavers (Galium aparine), cow parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris - but only if you are 100% sure) ...
 
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Suffolkrafter

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Dec 25, 2019
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Here's another. I noticed wood avens poking up through cracks in an alley. I've never tried the leaves, but I did once make a syrup out of the roots.
 

Woody girl

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Mar 31, 2018
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Penny wort, or navel wort, those thick round fleshy leaves in stone walls and banks are at their best right now.
I pop them in a mixed salad, or cheese sandwich.. they have a nice peppery taste. The smaller leaves are nicer.
Celandine are up, and apparently the tubers were once eaten. I haven't tried them myself. So can't comment on the taste of them.
 

Suffolkrafter

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Celandine are up, and apparently the tubers were once eaten.
I'm nurturing a small patch of these in my garden. You've reminded me to go check on them. My understanding is that, being in the buttercup/ ranunculacae family, the tubers contain the toxin ranunculin which is removed during cooking.
Edit: yep, they've appeared.
 

Broch

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Jan 18, 2009
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Careful, Lesser Celandine (Ranunculus ficaria) is related to the buttercup; Greater Celandine (Chelidonium majus) is considered too toxic to eat by most people.

From my Native Plants database:

Sc. NameCommon NameEdibilityMedicalConstituentsNotes
Ranunculus ficariaLesser Celandineroot can be eaten, leaves as salad or cooked as spinachointment for the treatment of haemorrhoids and piles; juice applied to warts; emollientsaponins, protoanemonin, anemonin, tannins, vitamin C
Chelidonium majusGreater Celandinepurgative, mild sedative, used to treat bronchitis, whooping cough and asthma, diuretic for treating the gall bladder and gall stones; latex used for warts, ringworm and skin tumoursisoquinoline alkaloids (allocryptopine, berberine, chelidonine, spareine)toxic, antimitotic and dangerous, latex produces blisters on healthy skin; possibly introduced, not closely related to lesser celandine
 
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Suffolkrafter

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Thanks Broch that's very informative. I'm not overly familiar with greater celandine, though it seems easily distinguishable from lesser celandine.
 

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