
My first round with wild chickweed was the eye-opening Chickweed Chimichurri over Tuna Poke. For that I used a handful common chickweed (Stellaria media) foraged from a neglected rock garden down the block.

The operative word here is neglected. Urban foragers should seek out these forgotten places: abandoned lots, pocket parks, de-facto green spaces. They're abundant with weeds, p-patches in particular, since the soil is usually of good quality.

Mouse-ear chickweed, unlike common chickweed, is covered in tiny hairs. It's recommended to cook it first before eating, so I boiled mine for a few minutes, drained it, and then added it to the food processor with raw garlic, red pepper, a few heaping

Next I slathered a fillet of Alaskan rockfish with it and fired up the grill.

Lunch the following day? Leftover Rockfish Sammy with Chickweed Sauce.

lovely, lovely lovely. the rockfish sammy sounds particularly decent right now I have to say.
ReplyDeleteNo weed patch is safe from Langdon...
Matt - I was just over in Fremont checking out a friend's new digs and loe and behold there's a beautiful patch of chickweed right outside the door of Mishu--and try as I might, I could not convince the clerk there at this quasi-hippie/alternative tchochke place that this "weed" was good and healthy to eat. She basically told me to get lost. Attitudes run deep.
ReplyDeleteI think that half of my yard is edible. I had so much chickweed a couple weeks ago that it went bad before I could use it all. Next year I'm going to have to make sure and share.
ReplyDeleteso that stuff all over my yard is red deadnettle, interesting!
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