Collecting ( funghi, berries)in Europe is done today not for medicinal purposes, but culinary.
In the countries where funghi are collected, they have a huge amount of ways to prepare mixed or solitary funghi species.
The British cuisine has lost this. And is slowly regaining it, or maybe taking on the continental recipes?
I do not think it has much to do with starvation.
Autumn, when funghi is plentiful, other foods are plentiful too. That is the time everything ripens. Spring and early summer was the 'lean times'.
Scandinavia experienced some very bad years in the mid 1800'. Funghi collecting and preserving was not in the culture of either Swedes or Norwegians. Finns collected and preserved..
In addition to lots of people dying in Norway and Sweden, emigration to North America got a huge, huge boost.
Finland - not so much.
Yerba Mate - not much drunk in Scandinavia. Was introduced by the Chileans that came in the late 70's.
A Chilean friend introduced it to me.
In general, we prefer that Arabic drink. Many times a day.
Finns too. The World's largest consumers. Sweden and Norway follow after that.
In the countries where funghi are collected, they have a huge amount of ways to prepare mixed or solitary funghi species.
The British cuisine has lost this. And is slowly regaining it, or maybe taking on the continental recipes?
I do not think it has much to do with starvation.
Autumn, when funghi is plentiful, other foods are plentiful too. That is the time everything ripens. Spring and early summer was the 'lean times'.
Scandinavia experienced some very bad years in the mid 1800'. Funghi collecting and preserving was not in the culture of either Swedes or Norwegians. Finns collected and preserved..
In addition to lots of people dying in Norway and Sweden, emigration to North America got a huge, huge boost.
Finland - not so much.
Yerba Mate - not much drunk in Scandinavia. Was introduced by the Chileans that came in the late 70's.
A Chilean friend introduced it to me.
In general, we prefer that Arabic drink. Many times a day.
Finns too. The World's largest consumers. Sweden and Norway follow after that.
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