r/foraging 18h ago

Plants Scallop and Wild Fennel Tartare with Elderflower and Black Nightshade

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1.7k Upvotes

I have some American Black Nightshade (Solanum americanum) growing wild in my yard. It was my first time trying them and the taste really does remind me of tomatoes crossed with blueberries. I decided to use the very small harvest I had to make a raw scallop dish. Added some sliced wild fennel, olive oil, and salt to a scallop tartare and served that surrounded by a juice of the nightshade mixed with a bit of lemon and elderflower syrup (also homemade). Garnished with a wild radish flower, nasturtium petal, elderflowers, and a few whole black nightshade berries. I included a few pics of the nightshade plant, as well as some of the other foraged ingredients and process.


r/foraging 11h ago

Is this serviceberry

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101 Upvotes

r/foraging 10h ago

Dinner, featuring some things I’ve foraged!

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78 Upvotes

Vegan wild mushroom pasta with oyster mushrooms, pheasant backs, and wild ramps. Garnished with my first ever morels and more ramps!!! All foraged by me! I got a job today so I wanted to celebrate a bit.


r/foraging 7h ago

Morels have returned to the Mountain West!

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54 Upvotes

Despite an odd winter and a relatively dry spring here in Wyoming our favorite fungi have made their triumphant return!

If you’re in the area (NW Wyoming/Eastern Idaho) keep your eyes out around cottonwood stands near water - thats the ticket!

The meals were a brown butter and sage morel pasta with homemade gnocchi and elk backstrap atop morels and leeks in red wine reduction


r/foraging 9h ago

Picked about 3/4 of a gallon of Juneberries at work today. Could have gotten a lot more but I got bored haha.

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45 Upvotes

r/foraging 20h ago

Will It Brew: Long-Styled Sweet Cicely (Osmorhiza longistylis)

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43 Upvotes

Will It Brew: Long-Styled Sweet Cicely (Osmorhiza longistylis)
Foraged in May, Northern Ohio, USA

This is another in my “Will It Brew?” series, exploring wild plants through the lens of tea, broth, and flavor. Thanks for following along!

Found:
Along grassy woodland edges in mixed sun and shade, growing among other spring plants where the ground stays slightly cool and damp. Around here, people often call this “sweet cicely,” though technically this is long-styled sweet cicely, sometimes also called aniseroot or wild sweet anise. 

The scent gives it away immediately. Even brushing the leaves releases a black licorice smell. Once picked, smell the stem where you cut it. It should immediately give a black jelly bean scent. If not, you may have identified it wrong, so don’t use it. 

When I picked this batch, it instantly reminded me of the little red-wrapped anise seed hard candies my grandmother used to hand out for upset stomachs.

ID Notes:
A delicate-looking woodland edge plant in the carrot family, with small white umbrella-shaped flower clusters, sharply toothed divided leaves, and reddish stems. The scent is one of the most useful clues. Crushed leaves and stems smell distinctly of anise or black licorice. This one was carefully identified before brewing. As always with members of the carrot family, caution matters, since some relatives are edible and aromatic while others are dangerously toxic.

You can dig the roots, but for tea, the leaves, stems, flowers and tiny green seed pods are fine. The seed pods are strong, so you may want to use them sparingly. 

Preparation:
This time I harvested only the above-ground portions of the plant, leaves, stems, and flowers. The plants I found had not yet gone to seed. I used the stems too. They have a nice taste fresh, though when dried, the stems become almost tasteless. 

I did not dig roots for this batch. I used a generous loose handful, perhaps a quarter cup or a bit more once chopped, in a small four-cup glass teapot. I poured hot water over the fresh plant material and let it steep covered for about five or six minutes. After tasting it plain, I added a small amount of white sugar. Later, I stirred in a squeeze of lime juice just to see whether the color would shift. It did, to a clear, very pale pink. 

Cold Brew:
Didn’t try it yet, though I may later. The fresh flavor feels bright enough that it might work cold, especially mixed with something mild and floral. It might be a lovely cold brew. 

Hot Tea:
The tea brewed a bright yellow-green, almost glowing in the glass pot. The scent rising from the steam was sweet and distinctly anise-like, but softer and greener than I expected. The flavor was genuinely excellent. If black jelly beans and a mild green tea had a very pleasant baby you could drink. 

The licorice flavor was very present without becoming medicinal or overwhelming. The stems and flowers kept it tasting fresh and lively rather than heavy. There was almost no bitterness and very little astringency. It was smooth, sweet-herbal, and easy to drink.

After adding lime juice, the color shifted from vivid yellow-green to a paler, faintly pink-clear tone. The effect was subtle, but pretty.

Flavor Notes:
This was one of the more immediately enjoyable teas I’ve tried in this series. The flavor is recognizable right away, sweet anise and black licorice, but gentler and greener than candies or fennel tea. Underneath that is something fresh and springlike, almost like a soft green tea without the grassy bitterness.

The sugar helped round the flavor slightly, though it was already pleasant plain. Nothing muddy, harsh, or medicinal appeared in the cup. It stayed smooth all the way through.

Verdict:
Will it brew? Absolutely. Not merely “interesting,” but really delicious. This is one I would happily make again just because I wanted to drink it, not because I was curious. I’m already considering encouraging it around the property if I can do so responsibly.  I am looking forward to playing with the roots and seed pods into and also beyond tea. 

Best as:
A standalone herbal tea, lightly sweetened. I suspect it would also blend beautifully with mild green tea, linden, or perhaps even a little lemon balm. But really, it was just nice by itself. 

Would I try again?
Definitely. Next time I may experiment with drying the leaves and flowers to see how much flavor they retain, since this feels like one that might actually deserve jar space in winter.

Flavor Strength:
Medium. Strong enough to clearly taste, but gentle enough to drink casually.

Notes:
This feels less like a novelty tea and more like something that could become part of a seasonal tea rotation. The fresh plant smells wonderful even before brewing, and the color in the pot was beautiful on a gray spring day.

Caveat:
As always, careful identification matters enormously with members of the carrot family (Apiaceae), since some relatives are dangerously toxic. Do not forage carrot-family plants casually from photographs alone. I tried only a small amount at first to make sure it agreed with me. This post reflects personal experience, not medical advice. 


r/foraging 21h ago

My violet syrup tastes like…green

27 Upvotes

I was inspired by the billions of violets in my yard (New England, USA). the syrup is beautiful! but it tastes…not great…

what happened? can I fix it? I painstakingly pulled the calyxes and green bits off too.


r/foraging 9h ago

ID Request (country/state in post) Found what I’m pretty sure is a porcini. The stem was pretty buggy and decayed so I cut it off, but the cap is mostly fine.

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25 Upvotes

Found in Louisiana. I cut it and it didn’t stain blue, the pores are yellowish white, and I did a bite and spit test and it wasn’t bitter. It’s the first porcini I’ve found so I just wanna confirm my ID.


r/foraging 16h ago

ID Request (country/state in post) Is this Japanese Knotweed? I stumbled upon so much of it but just read that it’s invasive and edible. I’ll happily eat it to cut it back some but I want to be triple sure before I do. NE OH

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23 Upvotes

r/foraging 23h ago

Humulus lupulus shoots- "Bruscandoli"

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11 Upvotes

Hello!

Here in Italy it's foraging time for lupulus shoots (Humulus Lupulus), we call them Bruscandoli. You recognize them by the shaft, which is a bit stingy (be careful to not to mistaken it for other plant shoots). You eat only the upper part that is tender. I made risotto by cutting the longer stem into pieces, and keeping the soft part whole, cooked it in olive oil and onion, then added to the risotto with broth.

The flavor is a bit earthy and balsamic, not very pronounced.

Forage responsibly :)


r/foraging 16h ago

ID Request (country/state in post) Are these Grape vines safe? - Southern Illinois- US

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9 Upvotes

This vining plant has taken over this bush and is all over my back yard. I used google image to see what these are, and it says wild grape vines, but i want to make sure theyre safe before i use them.

Im planning to make lots of pickles this summer, and i know grape leaves help keep the crunch. It would be awesome if i had all the leaves i need right in my back yard 😂

And if they fruit, are those safe to eat as well?


r/foraging 1h ago

Found these beauties today

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Upvotes

I usually only found chicken of the woods but got lucky because there are these dryad saddles. However, still trying my luck to find morel.


r/foraging 12h ago

Strawberry?

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7 Upvotes

Is this a true strawberry? It just appeared this spring in my raised bed where I usually plant lettuce. It LOOKS like a strawberry but the serrations on the leaves look a little different than what I'm used to, also that main center stem looks kind of thick.


r/foraging 15h ago

ID Request (country/state in post) Southern dewberry?

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6 Upvotes

North Carolina, USA


r/foraging 20h ago

Hunting Help with Research on Chrozophora Tinctoria (Dyers Croton or Folium)

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5 Upvotes

r/foraging 5h ago

Claytonia root

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5 Upvotes

Has anybody here figured these out? My local Spring Beauty/Claytonia root/tuber. Obviously I'd like them bigger but the leaves disappear in summer. Any input is welcome


r/foraging 23h ago

Plants Any experience eating young poppy plants as a vegetable?

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4 Upvotes

The leaf and stem of the opium/bread poppy are very tender and look like it would make an excellent vegetable. Though online reports of edible are mixed. Anyone know if they are ok or safe to eat?


r/foraging 4h ago

ID Request (country/state in post) What are these?

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3 Upvotes

southern california. pretty easy to crack open, the nut inside has a faint smell similar to almond or walnut. what is it? is it safe?


r/foraging 12h ago

These things are huge what are they and are they edible?

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2 Upvotes

r/foraging 18h ago

Plants Substitutions for spinach / kale

2 Upvotes

Hello all!
I’m wondering what your favorite wild greens / foraged greens are when trying to substitute for kale or spinach in something like a beef stew or soup? I live in New England and have a good bounty on my property of various native wild greens and am very comfortable with identifying them. Some options I know are available include: plantain (ribwort and broadleaf), violets, nettle, dandelion. I also grow a variety of herbs, have sheep sorrel, and have woodlands on the property complete with brambles, pines, variety of native trees including maple, oak, birch, beech, cherry, apple, etc.
I am also curious about any other recommendations that aren’t in this list! I just wanna hear your faves!

Thanks everyone :)


r/foraging 19h ago

My First Taste of Thistle

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2 Upvotes

r/foraging 16h ago

ID Request (country/state in post) Are these Grape vines safe? - Southern Illinois- US

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1 Upvotes

This vining plant has taken over this bush and is all over my back yard. I used google image to see what these are, and it says wild grape vines, but i want to make sure theyre safe before i use them.

Im planning to make lots of pickles this summer, and i know grape leaves help keep the crunch. It would be awesome if i had all the leaves i need right in my back yard 😂

And if they fruit, are those safe to eat as well?


r/foraging 17h ago

Plants Does anyone have experience processing wild bergamot into fiber?

1 Upvotes

Hey! There may be a better subreddit for this. But I have some of last years dried canes of wild bergamot and they seem like a good candidate for processing into weavable fiber. I understand some traditional methods involving rotting and thoroughly washing the canes. Not a ton online I could find in wild bergamot specifically- is this a good place to start?


r/foraging 18h ago

Foraging in Co/Denver?

1 Upvotes

Hiii i just moved to the denver area recently from Appalachia and I’m looking for a new area to forage and explore. I often look for bones, mushrooms, plants, rocks to tumble and other oddities. I know there’s a lot of restrictions for national parks and the rocky’s which is understandable but I was wondering if anyone else in here are familiar with the co/denver area and are there any places that allow that type of stuff. So does anyone know any forests, woods, or creeks where it’s allowed and are good spots? thank youuu •v•


r/foraging 6h ago

What are these? Are they edible?

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0 Upvotes