Wild Food Adventures Institute for the Study of Edible Wild Plants and Other Foragables John N. Kallas, Ph.D., Director, Portland, Oregon Wild Food Intensives |
|
|
November 10, 2002 |
|
Volume 7, Number 4 |
![]() Elizabeth eating a cattail spike in anticipation of the wild salad |
Report from the First
Annual GingerRoot Rendezvous
|
|
|
![]() Learning edible wild plants of the forest |
![]() Gathering Elderbow flower clusters |
|
|
|
![]() Saskatoon Berries for Breakfast |
![]() Wild Salads for Dinner |
|
|
|
![]() Cattail stem cores - delicious and tender as any gourmet food |
![]() Cattail spikes - Peeled on left, still sheathed on right. Cook them either way, but don't eat the sheath. |
|
![]() Monday morning wild food breakfast. Both food and conversation are excellent! |
![]() Breakfast almost over, this picture shows the last remaining cattail pancakes (blue plate), elderbow pancakes (white plate), maple syrup (left), wild blackberry jam (right), and saskatoon berries (silver bowl) |