Contents Introduction ix
Pa rt On e
Gearing Up Foraging and You Using This Book in the Kitchen
3 17
Pa rt Two
The Fruits, and How to Use Them Apples 33 Apricots 47 Aronia/Chokeberries 55 Autumn Olives 59 Barberries 65 Blackberries 69 Blueberries 77 Cherries 85 Crab Apples 97 Cranberries 105 Currants 115 Elderberries 119 Figs 129 Gooseberries 139 Grapes 147
Ground Cherries 161 Hackberries 165 Huckleberries 171 Juniper 177 Lemons 183 Limes 195 Loquats 201 Mahonia / Oregon Grape 207 Mayhaws 213 Mulberries 221 Oranges 231 Passion Fruit / Maypops 235 Pawpaws 241 Peaches 253 Pears 263 Persimmons 277 Plums 287 Pomegranates 295 Prickly Pears 301 Quince 307 Raspberries 315 Rose Hips 323 Serviceberries 329 Spicebush 333 Strawberries 339 Sumac 345 Additional Recipes 352 Acknowledgments 361 Recommended Resources 363 Image Credits 365 Index 367
Huckleberries Vaccinium spp. Ericaceae family Throughout Canada; northern and western US
Huckleberries are wild through and through, and a certain type of
person with a fierce independent streak and a love of self-sufficiency sees huckleberries as an emblem of a western way of life. Northwestern Montana is known for its huckleberries, as are Washington and Oregon. It’s the state fruit of Idaho. Species grow all the way up the Pacific Coast to Alaska. Everyone has heard of huckleberries, but relatively few actually get to taste them. They are true foragers’ delights, and it is unwise to describe them as similar to blueberries around a huckleberry hound, because you will get an earful. Huckleberries have a more prominent “belly button” on their blossom ends than blueberries do. While blueberries can grow in clusters of several berries, huckleberries stud branches one by one, asking your fingers to be more nimble. And most important, huckleberries taste like huckleberries: intense, juicy, addictive. The huckleberry hunt can get competitive, but there is a precedent for working things out. Huckleberries were at the heart of a treaty between the Yakima Nation and the US National Forest Service. The contested huckleberries were in Gifford Pinchot National Forest, about 100 miles (160 km) south of Seattle. The Yakima have foraged for huckleberries on the land for generations—to them, the annual picking and preserving of berries is a culturally, socially, and
spiritually significant event—but during the Great Depression, outsiders began showing up and stripping the berries, too. In 1932 forest supervisor J. R. Burkhardt met with council members and eventually set aside 2,800 acres (1,135 ha) for tribal use during huckleberry season. The agreement was bound with a handshake and eventually written into the forest’s management plan. It is still in effect today, though reputedly some non–Native Americans choose not to heed the signs posted and harvest huckleberries freely. Speaking of national forests, huckleberries and hiking go hand in hand. While out on unrelated mountain or meadow adventures, you can scout out promising spots to return to. Serious pickers think nothing of going to higher elevations to get the best ones. The deeper the season, the higher you go. Huckleberries are not big, and to pick many is a legitimate outing. Because huckleberries thrive on slopes, harvesters must be intrepid. There is brush to get through and footing to maintain. A fall could mean spilling your container, a small tragedy. Transfer your open container to a lidded container or zip-top bag every now and then, so if you do slip, your loss will be minimized. The bushes can be low, or grow up to 6 or 7 feet (1.8 to 2.1 m) tall. Some people spot huckleberries on the side of a road, a sign that there are probably more huckleberries up higher. Pull over and check it out! If it’s been cleared of berries already, there may be other bushes farther off the road to investigate.
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Pan Swaps Does a recipe call for a 2-quart casserole and you have no idea how much your casserole holds? Or is your only 13 × 9-inch baking dish in the refrigerator with leftover enchiladas and you don’t feel like washing it? Not all hope is lost! The easiest way to measure the capacity of a baking vessel is to fill it with water, and then measure the water. Meanwhile, if you don’t have a baking dish of the correct dimensions, you may be able to use a dish with the same capacity. Be prepared for different
results: longer or shorter baking times, gooey centers and overdone edges, or a cake that’s thin and doesn’t have as tender of a crumb but offers more surface area for smearing with delicious frosting. Sometimes a pan swap can create a result you like better, and sometimes it’s a flop. Also, if you do that math, a 9 × 9-inch pan and an 8 × 8-inch pan have very different capacities, even though they seem like they’d be pretty close. Your calculator can be useful for educated risk taking.
Talking to Plants Plants are animate objects, and even if they can’t hear what we tell them, I fully encourage you to talk to them. It’s a sign of a happy and confident person who has no problem looking like a loon. Usually I talk to plants just in passing, like when I’m running on my favorite trails in the woods and I glimpse mushrooms, or spot the first spring leaves of trees I’ve been missing all winter. “Hey, cutie!” or “Hi, friend!” I’ll call as I go by. Someday, another person will be on the trail and wonder why I am greeting them so warmly. But I can’t help it. It’s a kneejerk thing, just an impromptu prayer of thanks. There’s something about externalizing and vocalizing your appreciation
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that I think gets better absorbed on a cosmic level. I also kiss plants, if I’m feeling more subdued. Not make out with them, just grace their fruit or blossoms with my lips, or kiss my hand and then touch a tree trunk, like a pope of the forest. (Obviously don’t kiss unfamiliar plants. You don’t want any weird rashes.) Language sets us apart as humans, and we are so gung ho about it we speak aggressively to nonhumans all the time: pets, traffic signals, television screens with sporting events playing on them. None of those things are going to talk back, but plants have a lot to tell us if you pay close attention over a span of seasons.
Forest fires are part of what make huckleberries grow, though it’s a slow cycle. Since huckleberries like full sun, they eventually establish themselves in open areas left after a burn. There’s a push-pull of vegetation as the forest begins to encroach on its old territory, and Native Americans would sometimes burn trees and brush to preserve huckleberry fields. Most species of huckleberries are dark purple-blue-black when ripe, but red huckleberries (V. parvifolium) are red when ripe, and rumored to be more tart than black ones. After one taste, you’ll know!
Harvesting and Storage Ripe berries are plump, sweet, and dark purple. They are soft, so pick them one at a time. Pick out any debris once you get home, but don’t rinse the berries until you use them. Some huckleberry fans don’t rinse them at all, because it will wash off precious juice. Zip-top bags don’t provide much cushioning, but they do contain any leaking juices. If you want intact berries, bring a rigid container. Freeze huckleberries within a day of harvesting them. They get softer as they sit, and if frozen they form a block and thaw into mush after releasing more liquid—still usable for some recipes, but not always the desired effect. Par-freeze the berries on a rimmed baking sheet before bagging them so you can pull out individual frozen berries and drop them directly onto rounds of griddling pancake batter.
Culinary Possibilities Huckleberries release their juice easily, so use them in ways that take advantage of this. Gooey jams and gushy baked desserts are obvious here. Anyone who’s browsed in a Rocky Mountain or Pacific Northwest gift shop has doubtlessly seen plastic bears filled with huckleberry-infused honey. Quick-cooked ketchups and sauces for game bring it to the savory side.
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Buckwheat Huckleberry Buckle Serves 8–10
We reserve buckwheat for pancakes and blinis, which is a shame. Buckwheat flour has a strong but sophisticated flavor—a little nutty, a little fruity. It goes well with berries in this buckle—a rustic fruit dessert so named because the berries make the cake buckle in its center. Think of it as a giant muffin. I love this at breakfast, or as a midday snack. For the streusel ½ cup (50 g) rolled oats ¼ cup (45 g) buckwheat flour ½ cup (110 g) packed light brown sugar ¼ teaspoon salt Pinch freshly grated nutmeg ¼ cup (½ stick) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces and at room temperature For the cake 1¼ cups (160 g) unbleached all-purpose flour ½ cup (90 g) buckwheat flour 1 teaspoon baking powder ¼ teaspoon baking soda ¼ teaspoon table salt 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature ¾ cup (150 g) granulated sugar 2 large eggs ⅔ cup (160 ml) buttermilk 3 cups (435 g) huckleberries
Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C) and set the rack in the middle. Grease a 9 × 9-inch (23 × 23 cm) pan. Make the streusel: Combine the oats, buckwheat, brown sugar, salt, nutmeg, and butter in a medium bowl. With your fingertips, work the mixture until it’s crumbly. Set aside. Make the cake: In a medium bowl, whisk together the ingredients from flour through the salt. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the butter and granulated sugar on medium-high speed until lightened, about 2 minutes. Add the eggs one at a time, scraping down the bowl after each, and beat until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Mix in the flour mixture in three additions, alternating with the buttermilk. Fold in half of the huckleberries. Spread the batter in the prepared pan. Scatter the remaining berries over the top, then the streusel. Bake until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, about 40 minutes. Cool on a rack for at least 10 minutes before serving. Covered with plastic wrap, the buckle will keep for up to 2 days. ALSO TRY WITH: Blueberries, mulberries, blackberries, raspberries.
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