most popular:
PETA to Buy Sea World



most popular:
No Hybrid Fit in U.S.


th comments
TrollPatrol said: "They are novelty fruit, people will pay extra for them just so they can tell friends/family, etc they ate a square watermelon ( or ate a square wat..." [read]

Anthony said: ""It's really good to see that solar power plants are finally being scaled to the size of fossil fuel-based power plants. " Absolutely...." [read]

rob said: "I bought Ford stock because I was impressed with the first-generation Focus, and I thought that was the direction the company was taken. Five years..." [read]

Andrew Leinonen said: "I'm not sure about citations, but this study seems to indicate that: "...they traced 83 percent of the average household's food-related fo..." [read]

john said: "this is the future of construction - so i would get used to it!..." [read]

Food Foraging: Gourmet Food Hunting

by Bonnie Alter, London on 10. 3.06
Food & Health (food)

food%20foraging.jpg Food foraging is the ultimate return to the land and our hunter-gatherer roots. More and more people are going out to the woods (or at least writing about it) and looking for wild, edible foodstuffs which are local to their area. Found in forests, farmer’s fields and sea marshes; these seasonal and local foods are neglected, nutritious and novel tasting. It started with “professional” foragers who went out into forests and sea beds to find long-ignored foods for their meals. Local chefs, interested in expanding their menus and offering interesting new foods direct from the land began to hire them as suppliers. They placed orders for such exotica as alexanders, sea beets and wood sorrel. Customers began to get interested in finding these foods themselves. The trend began. Now you can go on organised gourmet food hunts with a leader who will take you directly to the sources. Then the food that has been found is taken back to the chef’s restaurant and cooked especially for you and your friends.

four%20seasons.jpg And you can do it abroad, and in the United States whilst staying in lovely hotels. Tours are being offered in the Spanish Pyrenees, California, Wisconsin and the Caribbean island of Nevis (where you go diving for lobsters and lasso them by the tail). There are debates about where all of this is leading. Some foragers are disenchanted because it is becoming a middle-class leisure pursuit. Others argue that this new widespread interest takes us back to our primeval relationship with the land and will enhance conservation efforts. Or is it the perfect marriage of conservation and commerce? Lots to think about—and to eat. :: Sunday Times

Comments (1)

wow..it's very interesting.. never heard about this gourmet food.roots of trees are more useful for gourmet food .

jump to top mike says:

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

th ads
th top picks
th ads