In
my grandmother’s and even in my mother’s day, the winter diet consisted of
meat, grains, root vegetables, and canned goods, either commercial or preserved
from the summer’s garden. Fresh greens were simply not available for many
winters until finally the A&P began to offer iceberg lettuce in its produce
department.
By
winter’s end, a powerful hunger for fresh greens had developed. In March an
early garden was planted with lettuce and spinach, but any harvest was weeks
away. Then, in April, when the dandelions were growing new foliage, Grandma
would say, “Let’s go get us a mess of greens.”
Armed
with paring knives and brown paper bags, we piled into the car and headed for
the country roads. There we filled the bags with tender new leaves of
dandelion, curly dock, lamb’s quarter, and pokeweed.
That
evening our supper consisted of those greens, cooked in bacon fat and water,
and a big pan of cornbread along with slices of home-cured ham. Vegetables
never tasted so good as these greens did to our winter-starved palates.
Now
that fresh greens are available all year round, gathering wild greens has
probably fallen out of practice, but my brother and I still carry on Grandma’s
tradition, not only out of nostalgia, but also because wild greens’ nutrients
are far superior to any cultivated ones’.
I’m
less inclined to harvest wild greens in the spring, though, because so many
spring garden tasks require attention. Instead, I like to harvest wild greens
when the autumn rains stimulate fresh new growth of dandelions and curly dock. I
don’t have to drive anywhere to find them, because they thrive in abundance
around our compost heaps among the volunteer tomato plants.
Um-um.
Supper’s going to taste mighty good tonight.
Copyright 2016 by Shirley Domer
3 comments:
I know what dandelion looks like but don't know curly dock or lamb's quarters. Linda
Curly dock has slightly wavy leaf margins. its cousin, slick dock, has smooth leaf edges and should not be eaten unless one is very constipated.
In the photo, curly dock is in the middle, between two dandelions.
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