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  1. #31
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Pasadena, Ca - Oregon Bound!
    Posts
    612

    Default Wild Edible Plants of the Midwest

    Wild Edible Plants of the Midwest
    By Deborah Lee Ph.D.

    1. Maple - inner bark, seeds
    2. Wild Onion, Garlic, Leek - bulb, leaves
    3. Amaranth - seeds, shoots, leaves
    4. Groundnut - tubers (see glossary below for tubers, corm, etc)
    5. Jack in the Pulpit* - corm (well dried)*
    6. Horseradish - young leaves, root
    7. Wild Ginger - rootstock
    8. Milkweed - sprouts, leaves, flowers, buds, young fruits
    9. Pawpaw - fruits
    10. Burdock - root
    11. Winter Cress - young leaves,* flower*
    12. Birch - sap, inner bark, twigs
    13. Wild Mustards - young leaves,*flowerbuds,* seeds
    14. Shepard’s Purse - young leaves, seedpods
    15. Hickory and Pecan - nuts
    16. Chinquapin - nuts
    17. Hackberry - fruits
    18. Redbud - flowers, young pods
    19. Lamb’s Quarters - young leaves and tops
    20. Chicory - young leaves, root
    21. Thistle - young leaves, inner stem (pith), 1st year root
    22. Ox-Eye Daisy - young leaves
    23. Spring Beauty - corm**
    24. Day Flower - young leaves and stem
    25. Hazelnuts - nuts
    26. Hawthorn - fruits
    27. Chufa, Nut Grass - tuber
    28. Wild Carrot - root**
    29. Persimmon - fruits
    30. Fireweed - young shoots and leaves
    31. Wild Strawberry - fruit, leaves*
    32. Beech - nuts
    33. Ash - fruits
    34. Cleavers, Bedstraw - young shoots/leaves
    35. Honey Locust - fruits
    36. Jerusalem artichoke - tuber
    37. Day Lily - young shoots, flower, flower buds, tuber
    38. Cow-Parsnip - young stems/ leafstalks, seeds, root**
    39. Black Walnut - nuts
    40. Wild Lettuce - young leaves
    41. Henbit - tips
    42. Peppergrass - young leaves, seedpods
    43. Bugleweed - tubers
    44. Common Mallow, Cheeses, young leaves, green fruit
    45. Pineapple-Weed - flowers
    46. Indian Cucumber-Root - tuber
    47. Wild mint - leaves
    48. Partridgeberry - fruits
    49. Mulberry - fruit
    50. Watercress - young leaves and stems
    51. American Lotus - young leaves, seeds, tubers
    52. Yellow Pond Lily, Splatterdock, Cow-Lily - rootstocks, seeds
    53. Water Lily - young leaves, flowerbuds, seeds, tubers
    54. Evening Primrose - 1st year taproot
    55. Prickly-Pear - young leaf pads,* fruit, seeds
    56. Yellow Wood-Sorrels - leaves, fruit
    57. Wild Parsnip - taproot
    58. Reed, Phragmites - young stem, seeds, rootstock
    59. Ground-cherry - fruits
    60. Pokeweed - young leaves**
    61. Plantain - leaves
    62. May-apple, Mandrake - only mature fruit**
    63. Japanese Knotweed - new bamboo-like tips
    64. Pickerel Weed - shoots, seeds
    65. Purslane - stems and leaves, seeds
    66. Wild Plum - fruits
    67. Wild Cherry (Choke, Black) - fruits
    68. Bracken fern - fiddlehead
    69. Ostrich Fern - fiddlehead
    70. Crap Apple - fruits
    71. Chokeberry, Chokecherry - fruits
    72. Oak - acorns*
    73. Meadow Beauty - tender leaves, tubers
    74. Gooseberries, Currents - fruits
    75. Black Locust - flowers (only)
    76. Wild Rose - petals, fruits (hips)
    77. Brambles (Blackberry, Raspberry, Dewberry, etc.) - fruits, leaves
    78. Staghorn Sumac (and others) - fruit**
    79. Sheep (or Common) Sorrel - tender leaves and stems
    80. Dock, Curled and Yellow - young leaves
    81. Arrowhead - tubers
    82. Willow - leaves, inner bark
    83. Elderberry - flower clusters, ripe fruit**
    84. Sassafras - leaves, root (for tea)
    85. Bulrush - shoot, pollen, seeds, rootstock
    86. Catbrier, Greenbrier - young shoots and leaves, rootstock
    87. Sweet Goldenrod - leaves and flowers
    88. Chickweed - tender leaves and stems
    89. Dandelion - leaves and root
    90. Basswood - leaf buds and flowers
    91. Spiderwort - shoot
    92. Salsify, Oyster-Plant -young leaves and root
    93. Red Clover -young leaves and flowers
    94. Clover -young leaves, flowerheads
    95. Cattails - young shoots and stocks (inner core), immature flower spikes, pollen, root
    96. Stinging Nettle - young shoots and leaves*
    97. Blueberry, Huckleberry - fruits
    98. Corn-Salad - young leaves
    99. Violet - leaves and flowers
    100. Grapes - tender leaves and fruit**

    * There is something about this plant that needs study before you either collect or eat it.

    ** Caution this plant either has a poisonous look-alike, or parts of it are toxic. Research.
    Last edited by FirstGarden; 05-27-2007 at 05:41 PM.

  2. #32
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Pasadena, Ca - Oregon Bound!
    Posts
    612

    Default A Brief Glossary

    A BRIEF GLOSSARY:

    TUBER - Tubers are different types of modified plant structures that are enlarged to storenutrients, they are used by plants to overwinter and regrow the next year and toreproduce. Three different groups of tubers are: potato tubers, stem tubers and root tubers.

    CORM - A corm is a short, vertical, swollen underground plant stem (usually one of the monocots) that serves as a storage organ used by some plants to survive winter or other adverse conditions such as summer drought and heat. A corm consists of one or more internodes with at least one growing point, with protective leaves modified into skins or tunics. The thin tunic leaves are dry papery dead petiole sheaths formed from the leaves produced the year before and act as a covering that protects the corm from insects and water loss. Corms are not bulbs.

    PITH - Pith is a light substance that is found in vascular plants. It consists of soft, spongyparenchyma cells, and is located in the center of the stem. It is encircled by a ring of xylem (woody tissue), and outside that, a ring of phloem (bark tissue). In most plants the pith is solid, but some plants, e.g. grasses and umbellifers, the pith has a hollow centre forming a hollow tube except at the points where leaves are produced, where there is a solid plate across the stem. A few plants, e.g. walnut, have distinctive chambered pith with numerous short cavities in the pith.

    FIDDLEHEAD - Fiddlehead is a name referring either to a young fern or to the top part of immature fronds that appear curled. The fiddlehead, or circinate vernation, unrolls as the fern matures and grows due to more growth in the inside of the curl.

    The fiddlehead resembles the curled ornamentation (called a scroll) on the end of a stringed instrument, such as a fiddle. It is also called a crozier, after the curved staff used by shepherds and bishops.

    HIPS - the fruit of a rose plant
    Last edited by FirstGarden; 05-27-2007 at 06:03 PM.

  3. #33
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Pasadena, Ca - Oregon Bound!
    Posts
    612

    Default Tips & References

    Tips & References

    1. Know what you are picking. Be absolutely sure it is the plant you seek. Learn how to key plants according to their features. Many edible plants have a poisonous look-alike.

    2. As a further precaution once the edible plant has been identified, take a tiny nibble, then wait for 30 minutes to observe for any adverse reactions.

    3. Be extremely careful when collecting mushrooms. Mistakes can be fatal.

    4. Know what part to pick. One plant part may be safe to eat and another toxic. For example, elderberry blossoms and fruits are edible, but the leaves are an emetic and make you vomit.

    5. Just because animals or birds eat a plant, does not always mean it is safe for humans.

    6. Avoid collecting plants in commercially fertilized areas or where toxic herbicides or other chemicals may have been sprayed. Avoid collecting under power lines, in unfamiliar weed lots or lawns, beside commercial crop fields, or close to roadsides. Error on the side of caution!

    6. Be grateful. Before picking or digging, pause for a moment and give thanks to the plant that is giving itself to you. Collect with consciousness. Make the area look as though you were not there. Take what you need, leaving plenty for wildlife and future years.

    7. Once the food is collected, clean and sort it ‘in the field’. It is much easier there. No one wants a sink full of muddy roots mingled with grass blades and half an anthill.

    8. Before you prepare a food, read. Many plants can be mildly toxic and may require cooking or parboiling (and then discarding) the first and second ‘waters’ before ingesting.

    9. Practice moderation and avoid gorging yourself on unfamiliar wild edibles. They are powerful foods and you may need to adjust.

    10. Learn to blend wild produce into a meal in subtle ways. Often the flavors are quite strong.

    Suggested Books

    Edible Wild Plants, Peterson Field Guide Series, by Lee Allen Peterson, Houghton Mifflin Company. Great Identification book. Color pictures.

    Wild Edibles of Missouri, by Jan Phillips, The Missouri Department of Conservation. Well written reference material. Black and white sketches of plants.

    Wild Foods Field Guide and Cookbook, by Billy Joe Tatum, Workman Publishing Company. Contains plant descriptions and 350 recipes.

    http://www.swsbm.com/ManualsOther/Us...ul_Plants.html
    Last edited by FirstGarden; 05-28-2007 at 10:22 AM.

  4. #34
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Pasadena, Ca - Oregon Bound!
    Posts
    612

    Default A Free Downloadable E-Book

    Useful Wild Plants Of The United States And Canada by Charles Francis Saunders (1920)

    Illustrated By Photographs, And By Numerous Line Drawings by Lucy Hamilton Aring

    http://www.swsbm.com/ManualsOther/Us...ul_Plants.html

    Although little known these days, Saunders (1859-1941) cast a large shadow in the first several decades of the 20th Century, writing many widely read books on western wildflowers, the Anasazi, edible plants, and the Indian, Spanish and Anglo folklore and culture of California, the Sierras and the Southwest. He was also a major and influential contributer to Sunset Magazine in its salad years.

    Original edition from 1920.

    Wild Plants With Edible Tubers, Bulbs Or Roots

    Wild Seeds of Food Value

    The Acorn and Some Other Wild Nuts

    Little Regarded Wild Fruits and Berries

    Wild Plants with Edible Stems and Leaves

    Beverage Plants

    Vegetable Substitutes for Soap

    Some Medicinal Wildings

    Miscellaneous Uses of Wild Plants

    Certain Poisonous Plants

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