Because the Weeds are in Full Force

Repost of Annie 

and the greens I picked for her.

My friend Annie makes weed salad.

She gathers the weeds in a field.

Weeds.

She eats them.

And tells me, "..they are good for you, high in vitamins."

Weeds that I walk on without giving them a thought.

Bitter weeds.

 

 

Pissanli, fennel, salade de chasseur

Weeds with names such as:

Salade de Chasseur, or Hunter's Greens in English.

Fenouil, or Fennel's first shots. Not to be confused with older, later-in-the-season, more substantial growth.

Pissanli (I won't tell you what that sounds like in French… oh dang, I have to say to you… It sounds like Peeing in the Bed!) is better known as Dandelion! Bitter is what it is!

And the fourth cutie weed… Much to my shame, I forgot its name.

 

 

Annie's Weed Salad

I went over to Annie's yesterday to cut her hair.

Entering her kitchen, I noticed an overwhelming garlicky aroma.

Annie told me she had made her Weed Salad. Without seasoning, I had tasted her weeds before, and it was not my favorite. Annie reassured me, "I know you don't like my wild salad… but"

"You mean weed salad?"

"Yes, but you should taste it with my vinaigrette!"

"Is garlic the main ingredient?"

She laughed, "Can you smell it?"

Annie collects the weeds, then trims, washes, and seasons them:

Olive oil, salt, apple vinegar, and a fist full of crushed garlic.

I love garlic. I have heard that escargot tastes good because of the butter and garlic. Weed salad falls in the same category. The garlic won me over.

Annie was happy that I am now a fan of her weed salad. I'll never walk on a weed again without my tastebuds watering well if garlic dressing is close behind.



Comments

3 responses to “Because the Weeds are in Full Force”

  1. Margaret

    My grandma’s sister used to call dandelions pee-the-beds too (probably when grandma, who was more proper, was not in earshot.). She had no children but was a lot of fun as an aunty. That was over 50 years ago when we were all quite young…

  2. Annie was such a treasure.
    Oh how I wish we had wild garlic here for salad and pesto too.

  3. This called up a memory of walking with my mother down the gravel driveway of our new home decades ago when I saw a look of recognition on her face as she leaned over and pulled a stem and offered it to me. She told of how when she was growing up in New Orleans the school children would pick the same weed on their walks home from school and chew on the seed pods. how the seeds would pop with heat between their teeth. It was pepper weed, and I cannot walk past it without thinking of her. I believe it is used in Gumbo z’Herbes. Thanks for the memory and the new inspiration.

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