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APRMAY04:
Sustainable Building
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Making Springtime Wild Herb Vinegars
by Corinna Wood
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SIDEBAR:
“Chickweed is back! Spring is here!” My three-year-old
delightedly munches the luscious green shoots, and offers me a
handful. Chickweed's return means it's time to make medicines
again, starting with vinegars in April and May.
Many wild plants can be extracted into vinegars, but chickweed,
nettle, and mugwort are my favorites, both for medicinal value
and sheer flavor. You can easily make these vinegars yourself,
with one or all three of these plants.
Chickweed is the most widespread of these three beauties. If you
have garden beds, you probably know that chickweed loves rich
garden soil and thrives in the cool, wet weather of Spring and
Fall. But many gardeners don’t realize that this “weed”
is nutritious and delicious in wild salad or herbal vinegar.
You can tell chickweed by its tiny, white, star-shaped flowers,
which give it its botanical name, Stellaria media. Also look for
opposite leaves. When harvesting chickweed for vinegar, set aside
some for wild salad!
When it comes to wild medicinals, Nettle is one of the easiest
to identify—if you're not sure you have the right plant,
just brush your hand against it! The nettle sting, which is mild
for most people, is felt immediately, and usually wears off within
a few hours. The benign sting is actually used as a treatment
for arthritic joints!
There are two species of nettle in our area: “Barn Nettle,”
Urtica dioica, and “Wood Nettle,” Laportea canadensis.
Long used as an iron and adrenal tonic, Urtica diocia is the species
widely recognized for its medicinal value, but either species
can be eaten (and Wood Nettle stings much less). Nettle can be
gathered with gloves anytime from when it peeks out of the ground
until just before it flowers.
Mugwort is a fragrant, magical herb that is traditionally used
in dream pillows to make dreams more vivid and more memorable.
It can be harvested for vinegar until it is one foot tall. After
that, it becomes bitter and somewhat toxic.
Mugwort can be confused with other plants, so check for its fragrant
smell when crushed as well as the silver sheen to the back of
the leaf. In fact, this silver color, associated with the moon
goddess Artemis, is where Artemisia vulgaris gets its name. Try
some in your pillow tonight!
Herbal vinegars are delicious in salad dressing, on cooked greens,
in marinades, or in sauces. Some people prefer to take a tablespoon
in water as a daily tonic.
Our soils and our bodies in these times are chronically depleted
of minerals, contributing to many health challenges, especially
in the hormonal, nervous, and immune systems. It is much easier
for the body to digest and absorb minerals from a wild plant,
which our ancestors evolved with, than from a tablet! Because
of its acidity, vinegar is the best medium for extracting the
minerals from these nutritious wild plants.
Corinna Wood is director of Red Moon Herbs in Black Mountain,
NC, and has been teaching herbal medicine and women's health for
over ten years. She can be reached at 828-669-1310, or at www.redmoonherbs.com.
SIDEBAR: To use your Springtime
harvest, follow these easy steps:
Tightly pack a jar full of plant material.
If you are using more than one plant, brew them separately so
you can get to know what each of them tastes and feels like. You
can always combine the finished product later.
1. Fill the jar to the top with apple cider vinegar. (raw, organic
vinegars give you beneficial microorganisms much like yogurt does.)
2. Since vinegar rusts metal, a cork or plastic top is preferable.
Placing a piece of waxed paper or plastic between a metal lid
and the jar works too.
3. Label your jar with the plant name and date harvested.
4. The next day, the plant may have absorbed enough liquid to
end up uncovered, so top off the liquid level. Check the liquid
level once or twice over the next week.
5. Six weeks later, strain out the plant material, and you have
your own wild herb vinegar!
Back
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