I am posting the results of another Balsamroot (Balsamorhiza sagittata) experiment. My results aren't great, but I figured they might be useful to others so I am sharing them.
Materials: I harvested a few roots from the Methow Valley 2 weeks ago. They were moderately sized (about 1 inch in diameter at the widest point) and from plants that were in flower, or about to flower.
Preparation: I removed the bark and steamed the roots for 2 hours in a pot. I tested the roots and they were still very fibrous. I put them in a pressure cooker and cooked them for another 4 hours.
Results: Tasting the roots was still akin to chewing on a hemp rope soaked in Cottonwood resin. The flavor was nice, I just couldn't bring myself to swallow a mouthful that was 90 percent fiber.
Discussion: I have yet to pit cook Balsamroots for 48 hours like was traditional, but I am loosing optimism that the tough fibers will soften into something edible. The cooking water in the pressure cooker was milky from what appeared to be a carbohydrate like substance Steamed and baked roots would probably not suffer the loss of these carbs. I cooked the Balsamroot with the root of Fern-leaved Desert-parsely (Lomatium dissectum). The Desert-parsely root took on the resinous flavor of Balsamroot, but was still too bitter for me to enjoy. Balsamroot was traditionally cooked with other roots, and I am starting to wonder if it was used primarily as a flavoring, despite the plethora of ethnobotanical evidence that says Balsamroot itself was eaten.
Conclusion: Try collecting 1/2 inch diameter Balsamroots in the spring before they flower and steaming them for 48 hours in my slow-cooker.
I would love to hear from anyone that has successfully eaten Balsamroot.
Wild food experiments and personal foraging accounts from the Pacific Northwest centering on Northwest Washington and Southern Vancouver Island
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Saturday, May 26, 2012
First Fruits! Salmonberries Sweetened by Song
A perfectly ripe Salmonberry (Rubus spectabilis) |
I guess I’m not a very good mushroom
hunter, or maybe I just get distracted too
easily. Early last week heavy rains and
warm temperatures forced the Nooksack River over its banks in a few places and
the last few days of sunshine got me thinking about mushrooms. Katrina and I packed our baskets and headed
out towards Everson to walk the sandy floodplain cottonwood forests in search
of Morels. The woods quickly swallowed
us as we followed an overgrown dirt road that parallels the river. Cottonwood fluff drifted through the bright shafts
of light with such placid uniformity we felt like we were part of a gentle
current underneath a kelp forest. If
mushrooms were there, we probably walked right over them because we had such a
hard time keeping our eyes on the ground.
The calls of Robins, Townsend’s and Orange Crowned Warblers and a few exuberant Pacific Wrens provided further excuses to tune our attention upward. That’s when we started to hear the
unmistakable upward spiraling call of the Swainson’s Thrush.
Cottonwood fluff, like snow, coated our path |
Easily one of my favorite bird calls for
its beauty alone, the music conjures smiles for another reason as well. My mentor, Clan Chief Kwaxsistalla, loved to
tell a story about the Swainson’s Thrush (Salmonberry Bird)
who summoned the hungry and winter weary people of his village together for a feast and used nothing
more than his beautiful call to ripen Salmonberries for his people to eat.
A feast fit for a thrush |
Kwaxsistalla’s telling of the story has a
magic about it that was well recalled amidst the drifting cottonwood fluff, wild rose scented air, singing birds, and… what’s that… ripe Salmonberries! The further we ventured into the musical woods,
the riper the Salmonberries got. We
picked without a care in the world and soon our baskets were filled with the glistening
jewels. Our mushroom hunt couldn’t have
been better!
Salmonberries herald in the season of fruit, and while some may argue that they aren't the tastiest fruits of the year, I say that there is a lot of value in being the first. And what do I have to compare them too? Five long, rainy months have done a lot to sodden my memories of the last fresh fruit I ate, and several more since I ate Salmonberry's "tastier" cousins. So in spite of the naysayers out there, I gladly break my seasonally imposed fruit fast on this colorful berry- sweetened (as I am) by the song of the Swainson's Thrush.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Garry Oak Gardening
Giant Camas in a restored meadow at Padden Lagoon, Bellingham |
The twisted tepals of Giant Camas (left) and disheveled tepals of Common Camas (right) |
Starts of Miner's Lettuce (left), Common Camas (middle) and Giant Camas (right) |
Acorn Bread |
Monday, May 14, 2012
Okanogan Roots: Mountain Potato, Glacier Lily, and more
What my friends planned to be a weekend Morel (Morchella sp.) foray in the Methow
Valley turned into a timely harvest of a variety of root vegetables, many of which I have long
wanted to try. It wasn’t an intentional
bait and switch, the Morels just weren’t out yet, and the roots were.
Glacier Lily (Erythronium grandiflorum) |
We were still descending from Washington Pass
near Mazama when I pulled the car off the road to “see about a plant.” A glimmer of yellow caught my eye on a snowless
north facing slope and I instantly knew it to be Glacier Lily (Erythronium grandiflorum). They have a knack for springing up and
brandishing their relatively large flowers as soon as the snow has melted.
Glacier Lilies were a staple root vegetable
for the Blackfoot, Okanagan-Colville, Shuswap, and Thompson (See Native American Food Plants). The roots (corms), were occasionally eaten
raw, but more commonly steamed, boiled, or sun dried. The raw corms were said by some to be inedible, and by others to not be as sweet as the dried roots.
Unearthed corms of Glacier Lily |
My friends and I harvested a half dozen Glacier
Lily corms by following the long tender flower stalks 3-5 inches into the damp
soil. I learned that they are easier to
gather by starting a deep hole next to a good sized clump and then extending
the hole sideways until the corms are visible. Each corm has a delicate string like
appendage that easily breaks off. According
to Dawn Lowen—who studied the nutritional chemistry, ethnobotany, and ecology
of Glacier Lilies with Thompson elder Mary Thomas—these appendages are capable
of regenerating into new plants and were carefully replanted to ensure future
harvests.
Glacier Lily corm clean and ready to be eaten |
Glacier Lily leaf |
I found the raw corms to be amazingly sweet,
which was corroborated by Lowen’s phytochemical analysis. She measured sugar concentrations that peaked when
the Glacier Lilies are flowering. I also
enjoyed the fresh flowering stalks and leaves, but I felt like the leaves were
slightly acrid (more subtle than the raw leaves of Siberian Miner’s Lettuce or
Curly Dock). Cooking will likely improve
the flavor of both the corms and leaves. I transplanted several corms into my
home-garden to propagate for further experimentation.
Several flowering stems on a large Mountain Potato |
While tromping through recently burned forests
looking for Morels, I came across the small succulent leaves and Miner’s
Lettuce-like flowers of another long anticipated wild food -- Mountain
Potato. Mountain Potato (Claytonia lanceolata) is actually a
close relative of Miner’s Lettuce (C.
perfoliata), but instead of having the spindly roots of an annual, Mountain
Potato has a pea to cherry sized starchy tuber that persists from year to year.
Mountain Potatoes were traditionally eaten by
the same people that ate Glacier Lilies.
They were consumed fresh or boiled and often stored fresh in large
quantities for use during the winter (See Native American Food Plants). For further reading, also read Carla Mellott's superb
Master’s Thesis on the ‘Tsilhqot’in ethnobotany and ecology of Mountain Potato.
A medium sized Mountain Potato (Claytonia lanceolata) |
Unlike many root vegetables in the interior,
Mountain Potatoes are relatively easy to harvest. The tubers are only 1-2 inches below the surface
and they often grow from underneath rocks, which can simply be picked up to
reveal the tubers. Depending on the elevation,
the specimens that I collected were either in full flower, or were just
starting to go to seed (which is when they were traditionally collected). I found the tender leaves to be delicious
with nearly the same flavor as Miner’s Lettuce.
The tubers have a very starchy texture and neutral flavor.
Ballhead Waterleaf (Hydrophyllum capitatum) |
The sea-anemone like flowers of Ballhead
Waterleaf (Hydrophyllum capitatum)
also caught my attention. After my recent
success with Pacific Waterleaf (H.
tenuipes) I decided to give its cousin from the Eastern Cascades a
try. There is little ethnobotanical
literature on Ballhead Waterleaf but George Dawson noted in 1891 that the
Shuswap harvested Ballhead Waterleaf roots in June from Botanie Valley. Nancy Turner, James Teit, and Elsie Steedman also
noted that the roots were commonly cooked and eaten by the Thompson and
Okanagan. The fleshy, spreading roots
are fairly easy to unearth. I sampled
one raw and found it to have a stringy and juicy texture and bland flavor.
The stubby fingerlike roots of Ballhead Waterleaf |
I also harvested some Arrow-leaved Balsamroot
(Balsamorhiza sagittata) and a couple
species of Biscuitroot (Lomatium spp.)
which I hope to cook and provide an update on their palatability in the coming
days.
The hunters and hunted (in total!). Too early for Methow Morels |
Monday, May 7, 2012
Kelp and other seaweed snacks
Bountiful Sugar Wrack |
One of the things that attracted me to
the room we are renting was how enthusiastic our landlord (Casey) is about
seaweed. This weekend was our first opportunity
to collect seaweed with Casey and the conditions were perfect. When we arrived at Rosario Beach (near the spectacular
tidal rapids at Deception Pass), the sun was shining brightly and the tide was
negative and still falling. We scooted
past the barren pebble beach and on to the colorful jungle of tangled seaweeds
that covered a near-by rocky point. Pillow
sized boulders on the upper beach were coated with Rockweed (Fucus gardneri) and plastered with half
dried Nori (Porphyra sp). Blades of Sugar Wrack (Saccharina latissima), Winged Kelp (Alaria marginata), Triple-rib Kelp (Cymathere triplicata), and Seersucker
Kelp (Costaria costata) were just drying up. Bull Kelp (Nereocystis luetkeana) was floating just off the shore and the Splendid Iridescent Seaweed (Mazzaella
splendens) shimmered in the shallow pools.
As we rounded the corner, other fun species showed up like Sea Cabbage (Hedophllum sessile), Dead Man Fingers (Codium fragile) and some exotic looking coralline encrusting algae. See WSU Beachwatchers for great pictures of Common
Pacific Northwest Seaweeds.
Sun drying Nori on the Central Coast of BC |
Casey focuses his collecting efforts on
Rockweed bladders, which he likes to dry into a popcorn like snack. Katrina collected two species of Nori and Sea
Lettuce (Ulva sp.), and I went
after Sugar Wrack, Bull Kelp and Sea Cabbage.
The Nori was different from the species that I am used to harvesting on
the Central Coast of Canada with my mentor, Clan Chief Kwaxsistalla.
Kelp fronds drying on a line |
Dried Rockweed |
Dried Bullkelp fronds |
Seaweed is filled with so much goodness,
I hardly know where to begin. Last month
Katrina and I listened to seaweed guru Dr. Ryan Drum lecture on the virtues of
eating seaweed. He was full of shocking
statistics, but one that really stuck with me was that 90 percent of North
Americans are deficient in potassium. We
crave salt because our body can’t differentiate between sodium and potassium,
but eating seaweeds is a great way of getting potassium. You can read more about the health benefits
of seaweeds on his website.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Biscuits and Balsam, edible roots of the eastside
Biscuitroot flowering in the Blue Mountains |
Yellow Fritillaria |
While returning from Denver via the Blue
Mountains, some Balsamroot (Balsamorhiza
sagittata) caught my eye so Katrina and I stopped to explore the flora around
the John Day River in Eastern Oregon. The Balsamroot were just starting to leaf out in a rocky seep with several
other interesting plants. Blue
Mountain Onion (Allium fibrillum) was about to flower, two
species of Biscuitroot (Lomatium triternatum and L. donnellii)
were just starting to flower, and Yellow
Fritillaria (Fritillaria pudica) were already in bloom. All of these have edible roots, and I tried three of them.
Blue Mountain Onion |
Using my trusty digging stick, I pried a
few Balsamroots from the earth to experiment with.
While at the Ethnobiology Conference I had a conversation with Kimberly
Chambers about my attempt last fall to eat the fibrous roots of Balsamroot. Kim studied Balsamroot for her Master’s
Degree and recommended harvesting smaller roots, earlier in the season. The roots in front of me fit the bill since
they were just leafing out and were no more than ½ inch in diameter. I steamed them for half an hour and found
that they were tender enough to chew and swallow. They have a very resinous flavor, but I
imagine that prolonged cooking (as was traditional) would leach out some of the
resin and further soften the roots.
Nineleaf Biscuitroot just starting to flower |
The Biscuitroots were even more exciting
because I had never tasted them before.
I unearthed a few specimens of both Nineleaf Biscuitroot (Lomatium triternatum) and what I believe
to be Donnellii’s Biscuitroot (L.
donnellii). Nineleaf Biscuitroot has
relatively long, thin leaf segments and a long taproot that frequently has a
tuberous enlargement several inches below the soil surface. The roots that I dug up ranged from about 5-8
inches long, but the rocky nature of the soil made it difficult to get the
entire root, and I always left an undermined length of root behind in the soil
(perhaps part of the plants evolutionary adaption to being edible?).
Nineleaf Biscuitroot (Lomatium triternatum) roots |
Possibly Donnelli's Biscuitroot |
I am very eager to continue experimenting and learning about the many wonderful root foods found east of the Cascades and I feel like I got off to a good start with Biscuitroot.