Ologies with Alie Ward - Foraging Ecology (EATING WILD PLANTS) Encore with @BlackForager, Alexis Nikole Nelson
Episode Date: May 1, 2024Mustard gossip. Knotweed recipes. Cow parsnips. Serviceberry appreciation. Hogweed warnings. Dead man’s fingers. The incredibly knowledgeable and entertaining Alexis Nikole Nelson a.k.a. @BlackForag...er walks us through Foraging Ecology with a ginormous bushel of tips & tricks for finding edibles at all times of the year, from blossoms to fungus. Belly up for this encore detailing invasive snacks, elusive mushrooms, magnolia cookies, mugwort potatoes, violet cocktails, foraging guides, weed trivia and tips to avoid poisonous berries. Also: finding community, history, land stewardship and why foraging is important, empowering and quite tasty.Follow Alexis @BlackForager on Instagram, TikTok, X, and YoutubeA donation went to Backyard BasecampMore episode sources and linksSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesOther episodes you may enjoy: Indigenous Fire Ecology (GOOD FIRE), Indigenous Cuisinology (NATIVE FOODS), Indigenous Pedology (SOIL SCIENCE), Ethnoecology (ETHNOBOTANY/NATIVE PLANTS), Bryology (MOSS), Mycology (MUSHROOMS), Cucurbitology (PUMPKINS), Carobology (NOT-CHOCOLATE TREES), Pomology (APPLES), Black American Magirology (FOOD, RACE & CULTURE)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, hoodies, totes!Follow @Ologies on Instagram and XFollow @AlieWard on Instagram and XEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions, Jacob Chaffee, and Jarrett Sleeper of MindJam MediaManaging Director: Susan HaleScheduling producer: Noel DilworthTranscripts by Aveline Malek Website by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, hi. Okay, it's 2024Allie here jumping in to say this is an absolute fan favorite
episode of Ologies. It's also a me favorite one. It was a while in the making and it's
the perfect time of year to serve it up on a doily for you. And since we recorded this
three years ago, this guest, Alexis Nelson, aka Black Forager and I have gotten to meet
in real life. We become pals. And when she's in LA, we hang out. And she's
just as much of a gem as you think in person. She's also an oligite. And she texted me last week
after our Columbidology episode about pigeons to say that it's nudged her toward considering becoming
a pigeon parent herself. Also, since this episode aired, Alexis has launched a TV show called Crash Course Botany, which you can find on PBS. Also at the end of this
episode I added a new secret which contains the reason why this is an
encore this week and a special perk for patrons coming up in a few days. Okay, wow.
I just love this episode and this guest. Alright right. Oh, hey, it's your friend's cat who just had a $600 hairball.
Allie Ward, back with an outdoorsy, quite frankly,
a scrumptious episode of Ologies.
So thisologist, we're going to get right to it,
studied both science and performance
at Ohio State University.
But the role most know her in is teacher of the, can I eat this?
It grew in my driveway arts and
sciences so she has a million a literal million TikTok watchers who just eat up
her lessons on making violet simple syrup and Magnolia cookies and garlic
mustard pesto and more and I have had so many of y'all begging me to have her on
that when I DM'd her honestly I was shocked to get a response.
This woman is busy.
So we recorded this right as April was turning to May.
And since it's still spring
and things are still blooming and shooting
and crawling from the ground,
it's time to grab a basket and see what's for dinner.
But we also talk about year-round edibles.
We're gonna get into it.
But first, thank you to all the patrons
who sent in their questions.
You can become a patron for a dollar a month.
A dollar a month at patreon.com slash ologies.
Thank you to everyone rating and subscribing to the podcast.
Thanks to everyone who leaves such nice reviews, keeping ologies in the top five science podcasts
globally, which is bananas.
I read all the reviews and each week I pick a fresh one.
And this week it's from For The Earth who wrote, I hope I hear you read it, Allie. Thank you,
Allie and team, for truly some of the best content available. Thank you for the
Earth. Also we got a rare two-star review this week from P. Jester who said
that they do not like my voice and I am a woman. That's a problem for some people
but thank you so much for the feedback.
And there's actually a secret about my voice at the end of the episode, which you might
already know.
But anyway, thank you everyone else for all the loving and very lovely reviews, except
for B. Jester, who's probably not listening.
And that's A-OK.
Thanks everyone for leaving them.
Anyway, foraging ecology.
Foraging comes from a root for hay or straw or fodder, and then it evolved to mean hunting
about for edibles.
And ecology comes from the same root as oikology for the place we live and our relationship
to our environment.
So foraging for the things around us.
Now for breakfast, side note, I just want you to know that I ate some loquats
that I stole from a friend's tree.
She didn't even know she could eat them.
She thought they were ornamental.
So we're doing a good job today.
Anyway, pull up a stump and lean in
for a bounty of information on edible versus poisonous plants,
taproots, blossoms, tinctures, brews and stews
and cookies and cocktails and hikes
and eating
invasive species, some dog pee talk, the best guidebooks, and how gathering what
grows around us is a radical act for internet hero and teacher, autodidact,
wild food maker, and your gathering guide. You know her on TikTok and YouTube and
Instagram as BlackForager Alexis Nicole Nelson.
I'm so excited to be talking to you. Hello. My name is Alexis Nicole Nelson and my pronouns are she, her, hers. And my cat just clawed me in the butt. What a good time we're having
already.
Get them on the mic.
Yeah. Hey, Ozzy, you have words to say? Use your words.
Oh my gosh. People have been asking me for so many words to say? Use your words.
Oh my gosh. People have been asking me for so many months
to get you on this podcast.
When you wrote back, I was thrilled.
I've been wanting to do this topic for a while,
which would be foraging ecology, I believe, right?
Yes, foraging ecology, I think is the ology
that we settled on for this.
Yes, it works.
It totally works. Your TikTok's amazing and informative and you're so prolific
and it's so great. At what point were you like, okay, it's time the world needs to know
what they can eat in their backyards?
I mean, I've honestly felt that way ever since I was really little. I guess I just didn't have the tools
to tell anybody outside of my parents,
family members, friends,
anyone who I could get to listen to me in person.
Do you remember what the first thing you ate
out of the ground and were you safe?
Was it dangerous?
The first thing I remember eating out of the ground,
I must've been about five years old,
and I was helping my mom in the garden
in our old house in Cincinnati,
and she pointed out some grass,
but it looked different from other grass.
And she broke it, and it smelled delicious.
Like, it smelled like onions and garlic,
and she's like, oh, yeah, it's onion grass,
and it's edible, but it's, like, not as good as the onions and the garlic And she's like, oh, yeah, it's onion grass. And it's edible,
but it's like not as good as the onions and the garlic that we get from the store.
And if you tell a five-year-old that something is edible, then they're going to put it in their face
and they're going to get really excited about it. So I did. And it just kind of ignited a
gentle obsession, a lifelong love. Where did you get a lot of your information?
Did you start getting, for your sixth birthday,
did you get an encyclopedia of edible herbs?
How did the information dump start?
Well, my answer to that question is yes,
but for my eighth birthday.
Oh, got it, got it.
Little late bloomer, late bloomer.
I know, oh my gosh, I was so late to the game.
I just, I inhaled all of my mom's books on gardening.
My mom had an entire shelf in our house dedicated to just her gardening books.
And yeah, I'd say by the time I was eight or nine, I had read each of them.
Front to back was trying to memorize every single one of the trees and flowers and herbs
present in them.
And when I was done with those, I bought more.
Every weekend, my parents used to let me go to this independent bookstore
in Cincinnati, Joseph Beth, after we'd go out to dinner.
And they'd be like, OK, you get one book.
And it'd be really hard for me to choose
between, oh, gosh, whatever fantasy novel I was obsessed
with at the time or a plant book.
When it came time to figuring out your life's course, did you want to stick with botany?
Did you decide to go more of a business route?
I know that you have been a social media manager, which explains another reason why you're so
good at TikTok.
You're a professional. But
what did you decide when it came to figuring out careers?
I think I'm still deciding. Every time I have to remember that I'm a real adult, I'm just
like, oh, oh yeah, 28's real. I can't fudge it anymore. Definitely full, full, full blooded adult now. Growing up, I, in the fourth grade,
when we had to draw what we wanted to be when we grew up,
I said that I wanted to be a geneticist by day
and a pop star by night.
I love it. I love it.
I mean, I feel like this is closer
than anybody, myself included, thought I was going to get
with kind of melding this aspect of performance, which I've always loved, like right hand in
hand with like my love of plants has been my love of entertaining people.
And when it came time to choose what I was going to major in in college, I was like pretty
gifted in math and science, but I was also like pretty
gifted in theater, but nobody tells you to major in theater. Even when you're really
good at theater, no one tells you to go and major in theater. So everyone was like, Oh
my gosh, you're a woman of color. You're good at math. You're good at science. If you don't become an engineer, what a waste.
And I didn't know if I wanted to be an engineer, but I did know that I didn't want to be a waste.
So I applied to all of my schools as an engineer, got accepted to Ohio State as an environmental
engineering major. On the first day of her schooling as an environmental engineer, the dean
addressed the students just to tell them
that most people will quit the program, about half, which
is about as opposite of a pep talk as you can possibly get.
Like, welcome.
This is going to suck.
You'll hate my program.
Attrition perhaps should not be something to brag about,
but what do I know?
And I've always loved the pursuit of knowledge,
but I've always hated when some sort of like very competitive aspect has been thrown into it. So
needless to say, I had a rough time my first year in engineering school, so rough that I took a
semester off to kind of get my head right and decided that
I did love math and science, but that I also loved writing.
I also loved performing.
So I came back and focused on both environmental science because I didn't take all of that
calculus and physics and chemistry for nothing.
But then I also went and got a theater degree and took like masters classes in playwriting,
put on a one woman show before I graduated, wrote a couple of short plays.
So I feel like everything I'm doing right now makes sense.
And in terms of where I see it going in the future, any opportunity that I get to talk
to large groups of people about the value in the green spaces around them.
That's how I would define the career that I want to see myself in at any given time during the rest of my life.
And if that's as a TikToker, that's great. If that's, oh my God, on a TV show, hey PBS.
That's great too. If it's writing field guides and books, that's great too.
This is what fills my cup and this is the type of thing that even when I'm working really
hard it doesn't feel like work.
That's the best thing.
Did you ever think that you'd have a million people tuning in to watch you make pesto?
No
Never in a million years I I made my foraging account on Instagram originally because I was annoying my friends
With the plants I was eating
They're like we don't want to hear about it. Yeah, they're like no, thank you. So I was like, okay cool
I'll just make a Finsta, but just for the wild things
that I put on my plate.
Now I feel like my personal account is my Finsta.
It's weird.
A switcheroonie that I never in a million years
would have called.
So side note, a Finsta, for those of us not born in the 90s,
is a fake Instagram or an alternative handle that's
not like one that your boss follows or something
your followers would find off-brand.
So perhaps it's the real you, which
makes me want to sit on a rock and ponder,
am I living my most Finsta life in the out in the open?
And why not?
Anyway, Alexis had an underground passion for plants.
And at the start of the pandemic, she posted something to her TikTok about foraging And why not? Anyway, Alexis had an underground passion for plants.
And at the start of the pandemic, she posted something to her TikTok about foraging if
you couldn't get to the store during the first few weeks of the COVID lockdown.
And she posted it, she woke up to tens of thousands of views, and suddenly people were
smitten not only with her plucky delivery, but her extensive botanical knowledge. So millions of views later,
she's really opened up people's eyes and noses and mouths to edibles that we walk right past
all the time, all year round. It's been really cool to see the seasons change and to see different
things that you're harvesting and persimmons and then going into blossoms and stuff. When it comes
to keeping yourself educated, are you looking things up before you're foraging?
Are you already familiar with them?
Does it really depend on the region?
Like, how are you keeping all of this knowledge?
How often do you have to kind of sharpen those tools?
Yeah, I think it's constantly a process of sharpening.
And the more you interact with a certain plant,
just like the more you interact with certain people,
you get to know them better, you know their nuances better, you know when to expect them.
So there's definitely a swath of plants that I've worked with for a really long time. I know when to
expect like apples and all of the other like rose family trees to start blooming. I know when dandelions
are coming up, I know when violets are
coming up. There are definitely plants that I'm a bit newer to that I have to go and do a little bit
of digging, a little bit of reading. Or my favorite, I see that someone else in one of the regional
foraging Facebook groups that I'm in is posting about them. And I'll be like, oh, I did not know
that we were already in cow parsnip season. I not know that we were already in cow parsnip season.
I didn't know we were already in cow parsnip season. That's just the first plant that
came to my head.
Of course she knew. Also more on those densely hairy perennials later.
And that's been wonderful is being able to have that community to always come back to.
But I'm always rereading all of my foraging books,
all of these poor books,
their covers are just bent as I'll get out
because whenever I have some free time
or if it's before bed,
I'll just flip one open,
do a little bit of reading.
I feel like I notice something new
every single time I read one of my foraging books.
So it makes sense to go back over them again.
And it's just like when you're in school, like you have to keep practicing or or you
lose it.
Use it or lose it.
That is the TLDR answer.
Maybe you don't know what TLDR means and that's fine.
It stands for too long.
Didn't read.
I see why am I in case you missed it.
So Alexis is schooling us on internet culture at large
as well as precious overlooked botany.
Okay, question that's on my mind a lot
when I watch your TikToks.
How do you know if something's peed on it?
I do sniff because if it smells like fresh pee,
that's just like not appetizing at all.
The answer to this question,
and I know, Allie,
that it is not the answer that anybody wants,
is if it's out in a green space, odds are at some point in time
and that green space has passed, probably in the last year,
something has peed there.
That's a very good point.
Even tiny little invertebrates, they're making pee all the time and they're doing it on a romaine lettuce that we're buying from the store. Everything's being on everything. There are things in us right now peeing on each other.
Exactly. Exactly. It's the circle of pee. And that's my thing that I always love reminding people is that the farms that we get our groceries from do not exist in a microcosm either.
You don't know how many field mice peed on your kale. You should wash everything you take home, whether you pulled it out of the ground yourself or if someone else did.
Very good point.
I just try and I try to help people kind of put that out of their mind. Now, of course,
there are some areas that I avoid because they get peed on more often than others. And that is what I call the dog pee zone, which I would say is like a solid foot,
foot and a half into anyone's lawn that is on a sidewalk.
Probably best to just leave that be.
I bet there's someone out there,aging a college that's getting their PhD in the concentration
of urea within certain feet of a sidewalk.
There's got to be.
There has to be.
And if there's not, that's a good reason to go back to school as I personally need.
I know my tiny dog, she's got the perimeter of lawns absolutely covered. That's a huge
weight off my mind. I love foraging. I've always thought it's so fascinating. And one
thing I am so curious about, like what is something that you tasted that you weren't
sure if you're going to dig it at all? And it was just delightful.
Oh, that's a fun one. I would say cow parsnips. They are in the
carrot family, which is famous for having some of like the best
wild edibles, but also famous for having some very deadly
lookalikes to those same wild edibles. I've been eating
Queen Anne's Lace for a really long time. I think I figured out
that Queen Anne's Lace was wild carrots,
docus carota, when I was in high school.
And it like blew my mind,
because where my family stays in Massachusetts,
there's Queen Anne's Lace everywhere.
And I'm like, you mean I could have been just digging
with stuff this entire time.
So Calparsnip is also in the APACA family.
It's also called Pushki.
Okay, so quick aside,
these plants are not another internet acronym. APACA family. It's also called pushki. Okay, so quick aside, these plants are not another internet acronym.
APACA is a full word, it's just a long Latin one
for a family of flowering plants.
What are some other APACA plants?
Celery, carrot, parsley, dill, cumin, anise.
So many APACA plants have already made it
into your mouth area,
but some of them are in the not
to be messed with category because they are straight up poison, like hemlock, or are highly
phytophototoxic, which means plant in light makes bad. So think skin blisters that require
medical attention and a lot of well-justified moaning and pouting. But cow parsnip is safe.
However, it doesn't always look like it.
A lot of indigenous peoples ate it, still eat it
for a millennia, but its dangerous look like
is giant hogweed, which has been in the news
off and on in certain areas of the country
because it's super invasive and it's super dangerous.
Third degree burns if you interact with the sap while the sun is out dangerous.
We love a phytotoxin. I mean you gotta give it to the plants. They figured it out.
You do and everyone gets really mad at them and I'm just like well if it makes you feel any better
don't take it personally because we're not who they did that for, the insects are.
Yeah.
It's not for you.
They're not out to get us.
They're out to get the small crunchy boys.
Don't take it personally if you get burned.
Cow parsnips, giant hogweed.
Leaf shapes are super similar.
The difference is cow parsnips get to be like,
eh, six feet, maybe even like seven or eight feet tall max.
Whereas giant hogweed can end up being like
just a 16 foot tower of doom.
Oh my God, they don't call it giant for nothing.
I believe the species name is like mega giganteum.
It's I believe a derivative of the Latin word for humongous.
And it makes sense.
Cow parsnip was
one of those that I had heard so many good things about it. But it's really hard, even when you are
so confident in your ability to ID plans, to get over the hump of the 0.001% chance of mortal danger.
one percent chance of like, mortal danger. Yeah.
Is there an identification trick for some of the more dangerous plants, like between
giant hogweed and wild carrots?
Is there something you can look for, like a purplish ring at the top or something discerning
like that?
I'm glad you called out purple because I love how often purple is the color of danger in
nature.
Yeah.
When it comes to differentiating Queen Anne's Lace and Poison Hemlock, purple is actually
one of the identifiers of purple splotches that you will see on Poison Hemlock, but you
will not see on Queen Anne's Lace, Wild Carrots.
For Cow Parsnips versus giant hogweed,
cow parsnips have this like very fine kind of fuzz
all over them and these really cute papery sheets
over their leaves before the leaves go ahead and shoot out.
Also, their leaves are very even in their serration,
whereas giant hogweeds leaves similar shape, irregular serration,
which I feel like makes sense. Chaos means bad, organized means good.
Um, and there are a couple other tells too, like the hollowness of the stem on cow parsnips,
but the moral of the story is I babysat a stand of palparsnips for a full calendar year to watch it go through its entire life cycle before I finally ate some last year.
Oh my gosh, that is an investment of time. Did it pay off?
It did. Oh my gosh. Absolutely delicious. The fried flour buns right before the flowers open especially are just a taste to behold.
Behold is for sight.
Still a taste to behold.
And the leaves are this, they're beautiful and aromatic this time of year, a little bit
reminiscent of celery, which makes sense.
Another ABACA family member.
Also a little reminiscent of almost like coriander and a little bit of burnt oranginess,
which becomes much more prominent in their seeds
later on in the season.
So absolutely worth it.
I just made a flatbread with some cow parts
that Leanne's diced into the dough just yesterday.
A plus.
Oh, A plus?
Nice.
A plus, 10 out of 10 would recommend to a friend.
My caveat is if you are going to harvest it, I don't know, maybe babysit it for a year to make sure that you're not going to get a burn and be
very sad. And also only harvest from healthy stands of it. The stand that I harvest from has
doubled in size year over year, two years in a row. It's the only reason why I feel comfy harvesting
from it. Do you ever take people with you and give up your spots or how
protective of certain plants are foragers?
Oh, my gosh, it really does depend on the plant. There's a handful of
people who I've taken to some of my like my secret spots, some of my,
you know, this time of year, there's ramps and cut leaf toothwort as far
as the eye can see kind of
spots.
Sidenote, what are ramps despite sounding like a disease you get from a dirty hot tub?
Ramps are just an oniony, leaky type of scallion, oniony type of plant.
Only they're free if you find them.
And also trendy.
And cut-leaf toothwort, which sounds like another affliction,
it's a wasabi, horseradish-y tasting plant
that has ganja looking leaves and little pinkish flowers.
Also, did you know that wort means root?
So toothwort plants have roots
that look like discarded teeth.
So never let anyone tell you that science isn't goth.
I'm not crazy possessive over any of the spaces
because none of them belong to me.
Yeah.
And it's just, it's not worth getting all riled up about
because someday someone's gonna find out about it.
The only experience I've had with something
that I tried to keep secret and then the beans got spilled
but not by me is the persimmon tree near my house. A sweet curious
soul using iNaturalist last summer probably looked up and
said, Oh my god, this tree is full of these adorable cute
little green fruits. I'm going to figure out what it is.
iNaturalist being the great app that it is immediately was like, oh, Dios Fieros, Virginia.
Congratulations, friend.
You found the persimmon tree.
And so they tagged it.
And now I am not the only person who visits that tree during the fall and winter.
And that's okay.
Oh, do you ever see anyone else rolling up with a basket and are you like, Oh, hello.
Oh, hello.
Hello.
I've just missed people before.
I've seen people like taking their plastic bag and like hopping into their car and driving
away right as I'm walking up with my bag.
Uh huh.
And I was like, Oh no friend come back.
So foragers make friends, just respect the supply and no one will have to grapple.
Sweat soaked on a lawn for a handful of persimmons.
So the first rule of Forager Club is not,
don't talk about Forager Club.
Let's say that you're a baby forager and you're just starting.
You're inspired by someone with amazing energy and knowledge
on TikTok and you decide, I'm going to start eating my neighborhood.
Where do you think is a good place to start?
Are like dandelions an entry level?
What do we got?
Oh, I would say dandelions are an excellent entry level edible, not just because they
are almost universally recognizable, but because every single part of the plant is useful.
You can eat the flowers.
You can pick all the flower stems.
You can eat the greens.
Ooh, you can ferment the greens, making like a sauerkraut with dandelion.
Yum, yum, yum.
Very tasty.
The taproot, you can go ahead and like dig it up and either eat it like a root
veggie, though it's a little, it's a little bit bitter. So a lot of people will roast it and grind it
into a coffee substitute or dice it, roast it, and then throw it into some alcohol to
macerate to make bitters.
Oh, that is useful. So I feel like that's a great gateway plant, because if you have fun with that,
odds are you will have fun with more of them.
In terms of other really easily recognizable ones,
and I think this accidentally ended up being
a gateway foraging plant for a lot of folks,
are magnolias.
So many of us have magnolias planted as ornamentals
in our neighborhoods.
They're one of those plants that, for whatever reason, a lot of us know magnolias planted as ornamentals in our neighborhoods. They're one of those plants that,
for whatever reason, a lot of us know the names of. And those white and pink flowers, if we're
talking about like saucer magnolias, are so recognizable, so hard to confuse with anything
else because, I mean, magnolias as a genus are very unique flowers.
That's what happens when you decide to push pause
on evolution a couple million years ago.
That's fine, it's casual.
And so that one's been a really great one too.
And to see so many people going out and gathering them
and making magnolia syrups
and making the magnolia snap cookies was so exciting. We all know that Magnolias smell amazing
but did you know that their petals kind of taste like ginger? So we're gonna do a play on a ginger
snap cookie. It's a Magnolia Snap Cookie. Flower cookie! Flower cookie! Also side note, if you're
not on TikTok, don't freak out. Don't worry about it. Check out Black Forager on YouTube where
Alexis has posted a ton of recipes, including one for
Agnolia cookies uploaded about a month or two ago.
And I was just over on this video's page to grab that sound bite.
And then I read the description and I had to include this.
So in the description, Alexis writes, I'm super proud of these cookies and not just
because they passed the taste test with my partner's family, but because a year ago,
I don't think I would have felt confident creating a cookie recipe on my own. And as I found myself sitting on the couch this
afternoon smelling like nothing but magnolia flowers and warm sugar, I realized I am quite
happy with who I am right now. But yes, her TikTok, Instagram, YouTube all have great recipes and the
same handle at Black Forager. And she has recipes, including ones for dandelions and magnolias,
easy gateway foraging plants. So those would be my two recommendations off the top of my head.
If you are in the Midwest or along the East Coast like I am, pawpaws are another great one,
asamina chaloba, but it is not pawpaw season yet. What is a pawpaw? Ooh, so pawpaws are the largest native fruit
to North America if you're not counting squash.
Squash are really cool too.
Okay, but back to pawpaws,
which look like if green potatoes grew on trees.
But what do they taste like?
They taste as if a mango and a
banana had a baby. If you get a good one. I'm going to give that caveat because
last week a friend of mine pulled me aside and said I don't know if I did
something wrong but I tried a pawpaw last year and I didn't like it. Oh, cute.
And pawpaws are a great adventure.
They don't breed true.
It's very hard to assume how a pawpaw from a certain tree
is gonna taste until you're tasting it.
But when you find good ones, oh buddy, they are fantastic.
And they do look like little mangoes
hanging out in the trees.
The trees have these humongous, glossy, dark green leaves
that make them very easy to recognize from a distance.
Once you've seen one, you start seeing them everywhere
if you live in a region that they're native to.
And they are a fruit that did not develop for us.
They developed for megafauna.
They developed for giant slots to eat
the fruits whole and poop out the seeds. But now we get to enjoy them, which is cool.
That actually brings up the point of native and invasive species. Are we doing the earth
a mitzvah by eating invasive species? And how do you find out in your region, what's
got to go and what's got to flourish?
Oh, I absolutely think we're doing Mother Nature a solid by eating invasives because
eating them is much better for the environment than spraying them, which is what I see a
lot of cities, towns, municipalities turning to when it comes to eradication of certain
species.
Two that come to mind for all of us kicking it on the eastern half of the United States are garlic
mustard, which is very much in season in Oh, gosh, pretty much
early through late spring, here in Ohio right now, while we are
recording this, it is flowering. So I'm just going through and
picking the flower heads off of all of them that I see and
bringing them home to have them for dinner, but mostly just because I don't want them to set seed
because they are very prolific spreaders.
They are a non-native brassica
and brassicas are just so good at their job
and their job is being spicy and spreading seeds.
And what is a brassica?
You ask, that's why I'm here.
Brassica are things such as broccoli and cabbage and kale and rutabaga and kohlrabi and Brussels
sprouts and mustards.
And the oil of the brassica seeds is where canola oil comes from.
There is no such thing as a canola.
The word just means Canadian oil, low acid, because it was invented in Canada.
Jared, did you like when I told you all about that earlier?
I loved it. I love learning about Canadian oil, low acid.
There's no such thing as a canola. Okay, but back to yellow mustard flowers, which bloom in early
springtime in California and everyone gets so hyped up about nature not knowing that it's
wildly invasive and may have been introduced by Spanish missionaries
tossing it out like confetti on their path
up the California coast.
Mustard.
It's so good for Instagram pictures,
but native plant enthusiasts are hate it, hate it.
Yup, yup.
Oh my gosh, if you are in California,
go find all of the mustard, pull it up, eat it,
blanch it, put it into pesto, put it in the soup, pickle the
stems, eat all of it.
Get rid of it, eat it.
Please. And I know here we also have Japanese knotweed, which is
a prolific spreader and it is kind of becoming a scourge in a
lot of areas in the northeast. You'll just see towns just spray
the worst kind of chemicals onto them
because it's a very hardy species.
It's very good at the game of survival.
So you kind of got to drown it in a lot of things
that are not good for the rest of the environment
if you want to get rid of them.
But what a joy it would be if instead,
in the spring when they start putting
all of their chunky little shoots up,
people were just going through, cutting them off,
or pulling them up and collecting them
for people to eat.
Eat that knotweed, Northeast United States.
And actually, every state, except North Dakota, Nevada,
Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Florida, and Hawaii,
who aren't yet overrun with it.
If you're like, what is the knotweed?
OK, so it's been in the US since the 1860s,
when it was given to a nursery owner in New York, and now it's everywhere. Japanese knotweed.
Its root systems can span 70 feet. It grows up to one and a half stories tall, eight inches a day,
and it has these large green leaves and a bunch of little white flowers. And the stems look a little like bamboo, which is why it's called American bamboo. It's not
bamboo. And in spring, sprouts look like reddish asparagus. And it has a sour flavor or kind
of lemony like rhubarb, which is where it got the nickname donkey rhubarb. Now, if you
want to name your EDM EP donkey Rhubarb, think again, people.
British electronica outfit, Apex Twin already beat you to it.
Why?
Why does Apex Twin care about Donkey Rhubarb?
Because in England, if you have this invasive knotweed on your property, banks might refuse
to give you a mortgage because it's so robust and so hard to eradicate and it ruins foundations
of buildings. And in prepping for the
2012 Olympics, London spent the equivalent of $100 million to get rid of Japanese knotweed on
10 acres. A hundred million dollars. Ten million dollars an acre. Connecticut weed scientist
Jitinder Aulok has said ominously, there is no insect, pest, or disease in the United States.
They can keep it in check.
So what do you do?
One, make sure it hasn't been doused in herbicides.
And two, eat it.
It grows through the cracks in Alexis's deck.
Because for a species that is very quickly changing the landscape on the outskirts of
a lot of cities, it is delicious.
It's very rhubarb-esque,
but slightly more vegetal than rhubarb. That being said, it does lend itself both sweet and savory
so well. I made sorbet with it last year that I was obsessed with. I need to make it again this year.
For a class over the weekend, I did like a fun little sauteed greens and threw a couple of the shoots
in and they just add a lot of lemony brightness to any dish and when the shoots are young and you
cook them just right, they get kind of like melt in your mouth when you cook them. For my friends
who do eat the eggs, I hear that they're a wonderful addition to an omelet. They're delicious and
that they're a wonderful addition to an omelet. They're delicious. And what a joy it would be if we just suddenly had cities with armfuls, truckfuls of free lemony Japanese knotweed
shoots this time of year instead of just going and dousing them in herbicides.
On the topic of herbicides, that's something I didn't even think of, but when you're foraging,
does that something that you have to be more careful of than pee and how do you figure
out?
Oh yeah.
I'm way more worried about herbicides than I'm worried about pee.
There are a couple of things that I tell people to look out for when they're foraging in
urban spaces.
I think some people don't realize how visually apparent
it is when an area has been treated recently with herbicides.
You will see like rings of discoloration
around the very obviously sprayed weeds.
So if you're looking at someone's lawn
and it is otherwise like it's 98, 99% beautiful grass
throughout the rest of the lawn
and you look around the fringes, and you see some weeds
doing their thing because they're hardy AF and stubborn AF.
You should probably stay away from those,
because the way that people get perfectly manicured monoculture
lawns is help from herbicides.
So those guys I typically leave alone.
If you see any odd discoloration either on the plant
or in a like little perimeter ring around the plant,
leave it alone.
Absolutely any irregular wilting
that you wouldn't expect to see this time of year,
absolutely leave it alone.
And just for the sake of things like runoff and whatnot to an
exhaust I give a pretty wide margin to streets that are wider than two lanes
and an even wider margin to railroads. Oh really because of a diesel engines? Yeah.
Oh I wasn't sure if it was that or just that you know getting lost in a
playlist headphones on and just choo choo choo, yikes.
And that's how we lost the forager, wow.
So sad.
When it comes to where you forage,
how do you do it differently in the city
versus if you're out on a hike?
And what kinds of stuff do you find in each place?
Yeah, so in the city, it's going to be
a lot more of the kind of classic quintessential
weeds, the plants that like taking advantage of disturbed ground, where they don't have
to outcompete any of our other native species.
So right now in the cities, I'm seeing a lot of Queen Anne's Lace already putting up their
new sets of leaves for the year.
Ton of dandelions, a lot of clover, white clover, red clover, and now sweet clover is starting to
show up to hang out a ton of mugwort. I passed a couple very healthy stands of mugwort while I was
on a walk around the neighborhood today that I will be visiting this weekend because I'm in the mood for mugwort roasted
potatoes. So what does mugwort look like? Okay, I had to look it up. It's a member of the daisy family,
so its leaves look like daisy leaves and it has clusters of these drooped bell buds at the tip
of a stalk. And mugwort can grow meters and meters high. And while scientists call it Artemisia vulgaris,
close friends call it Riverside wormwood,
felon herb, old Uncle Henry, and Naughty Man.
And I feel like I have to buy mugwort a beer
to hear how it got those nicknames.
But mugwort just means marsh root.
And it's best to pick the leaves and buds
between July to September.
And you can season some meat with it, you can make a mochi dessert, or look into its medicinal purposes.
And indigenous people in North America used mugwort for a wide variety of ills, like pit stank to colds and flus,
rousing folks from comas, and even inducing labor. So, ethno-pharmacology episode,
anyone? Yes. But yes, when this was recorded a few weeks ago, Alexis was planning to gather
some mugwort and roast potatoes with it. So just a lot of the friends who you see enjoying
spaces that maybe have been modified for something else, we have a couple empty lots in our neighborhood
in which the ground was turned over before the winter. And now that ground is just covered with weeds.
Oh, wow.
Whereas if I'm in the forests right now
or out in the woods,
oh gosh, it's almost a completely different biome.
We're still in the middle of spring ephemeral seasons.
I'm seeing trout lilies, trilliums, ramps,
cut leaf tooth or Virginia bluebells.
I'm starting to see pheasant back mushrooms,
oyster mushrooms, morels of course.
And then you have a lot of the trees
whose early leaves are edible,
starting to leave out like your maples.
You have pines, spruces and furs
putting out their new growth
and their needles are very soft
right now and great to incorporate into meals too. So it's a fun game kind of having to
change the mindset of what you're looking for depending on where you are. And I'm lucky
that where I live here in Ohio, while I very much live in the city, Columbus proper, I
do not have to go very far to not feel like I'm in the city anymore.
By the way, congratulations on your mushroom find.
Thank you.
Pretty big deal.
Oh my gosh.
I know.
I feel like morels are just like a badge of honor in the foraging community.
I feel like I haven't been an official forager until now.
I know.
I saw that.
There are so many questions from patrons and
so many of them start off congratulations on the morale like so many.
That's nice. A lot of people are so thrilled for you. I was wondering what percent of your diet
do you think is foraged versus market? Oh I love question. Because it varies a lot throughout the year.
And we just finished the time of year
where it's like maybe 10% or like 15% in the winter
through early spring.
And now I think we're kicking it up probably
to closer around 25% just because there's not
a whole lot of the high caloric value, high nutrition value plants out to play.
But oh my gosh, once we get to late summer
and into the fall where it's like acorn season,
pawpaw season, hazelnut season, persimmon season,
that's the time of year where I can have entire days
where everything that I'm cooking,
with the exception of maybe a little bit of flour
being thrown in or, you know, an olive oil being added into a pan is something that I
foraged. So it very much fluctuates as we progress through the year.
I have so many questions from listeners. I have 35 pages of questions from listeners.
What? Oh my gosh. 35 pages of questions. Single-spaced. So a lot of questions.
So many people who just love you. I mean, I can't, I should just forward you all these
questions. So if you're ever having any kind of bad day, oh wow. People love you so much.
Can I ask you some of their questions? Oh my gosh, yes! Do we have time to go through
all of them? Ah, I wish we did. 35 pages of questions. Okay, but before we start answering
them, first we're going to take a pit stop to donate some money to a charity of theologist
choosing, and this week Lexis chose Backyard Base Camp, which aims to inspire Black, Indigenous,
and all people of color across Baltimore City to find nature where
they are and empowers them to explore further. And Backyard Base Camp also offers garden
consultations, educator training, habitat discovery programs, and more. And they're awesome. We've
donated to them a few times in the past, so check them out and consider donating too.
That is backyardbasecamp.org. And that was made possible by sponsors of the show who you may hear about now.
Okay, let's rifle through a basket of your questions and then feast on her answers.
Okay, two great questions I really loved. One from Lyd Hodnet who says,
it seems to me that it's important to keep in mind that there are respectful ways to forage, at least there should be.
Are there guidelines for this and And do these guidelines draw knowledge
or inspiration from the indigenous people of the region you're foraging? Lynn also says,
I feel like native people are routinely harassed for performing traditional actions like foraging.
Well, white people get away with taking more than they need. And Segwani Dana says that
she learned about plants and their medicinal values, among other things, from my parents.
She and her dad are a Penobscot. And that knowledge has been passed down. But she is wondering kind of how you've gained
the knowledge to know you're not going to poison yourself because she trusts learning
from elders more than books, because she would rather learn in the field hands on. So yeah,
any thoughts on kind of what you've learned from indigenous cultures and foraging?
Oh, my gosh. I mean, that's the indigenous peoples of the Americas.
That's like the crux of everything
that foraging is here right now.
Their knowledge is the foundation of the knowledge
that everyone else has had the opportunity to interact with
and build upon.
I know Michael Twitty talks about this a little bit
in his book, The Cooking Gene,
because a lot of enslaved black folks in the South foraged,
but obviously the people who they got that information
and that knowledge from were the indigenous people.
So coming from my dad's side of the family,
my dad's mom hails from the Seneca up in the New York area,
but she passed away when my dad was in high school.
So he got bits and pieces and little inklings
about certain plants and certain foods,
but not in the way that he wished he had.
And honestly, he also knew a whole lot about plants.
I'm very lucky that as a person of color,
both of my parents are very outdoorsy.
Also got a lot from his dad's side of the family
down in Mississippi from bits of information
that they had been passing through the generations
since they had been enslaved there.
So yeah, of course, I feel like in some way or another,
every single one of us who's talking about foraging
in North America is only
doing so because of the generosity with knowledge of the Indigenous people who now, yeah, do not
get to continue some of those practices and some of that land stewardship. That is the whole reason
why this nation looked the way that it did, period. I honestly feel like we need more Indigenous voices front and center when it comes to foraging
here in the United States. Because while I like to think that I know a whole lot about
foraging in a way that preserves for not just me next year, but me in 10 years and children in 20 years and their children
in 50 years, 60 years. I know that I don't know everything.
Alexis notes that we could do an entire series of episodes on the role of Indigenous land stewardship
before colonization. And this field does have anology, environmental anthropology,
further proof that I will make this podcast until I die because there are so many goodologies. ship before colonization. And this field does have an ology, environmental anthropology.
Further proof that I will make this podcast until I die because there are so many good
ologies. So please just get used to me, friends. Oh, and 2024 me again. So we actually have
done some really great episodes since we recorded this. We have an indigenous wildfire ecology
episode with Dr. Amy Christensen about land stewardship and an
indigenous colonology episode with Mariah Gladstone who's awesome of
Indigikitchen and a really great indigenous phytology episode about
ethnobotany with Dr. Lee Joseph of Squall and Botanicals. We also have an
indigenous pedology episode about soil science with Dr. Lydia Jennings, and of course the
biology episode about moss with the legend Dr. Robin Wall Kimmerer, author of
Braiding Sweetgrass. And yeah, we will link all of those in the show notes, my
friends. Speaking of friends, first-time question asker Alexander Holland wrote
in to say, quote, I love Alexis so much I'm going to die of excitement. And
Alexander wants to know how do you use foraging
to connect to other people and to yourself?
And Konstantin Gatnichenko asks,
are there any clubs that I can join?
So yes, do foragers hang out together?
How does one get invited to those gathering gatherings?
Oh, absolutely.
We have a whole little community.
I love it.
I love it so much. We have Facebook groups divided by region and divided by
country and divided by continent and just like global foraging groups too that really let us
bond with one another past all of our borders. So it's great. You get to know the people very
closely who are near to you. I'm in like a Midwest foraging group. I'm in an Ohio foraging group.
I'm in a central Ohio foraging group.
So we definitely have a community and we exchange recipes and we exchange ideas
and we build each other up and we buy each other's books.
It's really nice.
I'm so thankful that the internet makes it possible
to digitally get to know all of these people
and spend time with them, especially in the age of COVID
because it's not like any of us were able to go out
and actually see each other in person.
Such an interesting thing about the last year for you is,
we know when so many people felt so isolated, they gained a new appreciation for being outside
and then also had like a really cool new friend to show them, you know, which is so great.
We have so many questions that use the word newbie. By the by, so many people, literally
almost 50 folks asked this question. So I'm just going to
shout out for this one, the first time question askers, including Caitlin James, Alex Nelson,
Curtis Roderick, Dane Schuchman, Katie Kyle, and Bennett Gerber wants to know what are some go to
foraging tips, the mushy, what are your favorite tools for different kinds of foraging? So just
one huge question. How do you start? My, the Black Forager guide to getting started foraging. So just one huge question. How do you start? My Black Forager guide to getting started foraging is threefold. Number one is get a
foraging guide that is as specific as you can find for your area. For some places, that's
just going to be a regional foraging guide like the book
Midwest Foraging. For some places, like where some of my family lives in Massachusetts on Martha's
Vineyard, there is literally a Martha's Vineyard guide to wild edibles that their conservation
society puts together each year. So find a guide as hyper specific as you can find is number one.
Number two is to join a regional foraging group on Reddit or on Facebook.
Wherever you find groups of people hanging out digitally because one it
will introduce you to people who are like-minded, but maybe have a bit more experience than you.
And two, what a perfect way to see what is in season.
Because, you know, 10, 15 times a day,
other people are posting what they're seeing
and they don't live too far away from you.
So get a book, join a group, and then what's the last step?
And then three, make friends with one of the folks
in that group and go out with them
because you can't replicate seeing the plants
in real time in all three dimensions.
For me, that's where the real learning comes
and that's where the real memorization comes from,
just for me personally.
I can see a plant or a mushroom in a book
until the cows come home
and the way that it'll stick in my mind and the way that I will be able to like point from across
the field and be like look it's yellow rocket is being able to see it in person for the first time
and get a good gander at it. So hit the trails with someone who's been at it for a bit longer
than you. There is no replacement for it.
Well, also, I guess you can't smell a book, can you? But smell must come into it, right?
You can't. And so when people are like pheasant back mushrooms, they smell like cucumbers.
Well, yeah, there's no scratch and sniff that I know of at least. Foraging books, yet.
I don't know.
That could be a million dollar idea for somebody out there.
Scratch and sniff foraging book.
I'd buy it.
Okay, so I looked it up and I found one title, the Scratch and Sniff Book of Weeds.
But alas, on second glance it just said weed.
Not weeds. So the Scratch and Sniff Book of Weed. The blurb on the front boasts, this book is dope.
Also, I looked up when is a plant a weed? And essentially a weed is just any plant that is
unwanted in a human-controlled setting. And so weed as a name for marijuana perhaps is ironic
as they come. Because for the most part it seems pretty wanted.
P.S. is weed and reefer and trees and laughing grass cabbage that's smoochy-woochy-poochy
is that even native to North America?
Nope.
It originated in Central Asia before making its way to Africa and then the Caribbean and
South America.
And then after Prohibition ended, the agency that became the DEA was like, quick, what should we ban next? And they turn their attention to this
smokable plant that humans have used for eons, that sticky icky skunk weed, which
brings us back to smells.
The devil's lettuce.
But that must be good to know when you're out foraging that you're using a lot of
your senses at once, too.
Yeah. And that's one thing. I think so many people get very worried about lookalikes which you should
that little like liquor of anxiety is something that keeps you safe but I can't even fully
communicate how you are truly using all of your senses for IDing. Yes I made a video on how to
tell the
difference between Queen Anne's Lace and Poison Hemlock when they are still wee
babies, just wee little rosettes, when honestly the best way to tell the
difference is that Poison Hemlock smells like rat pee and Queen Anne's Lace
doesn't. Poison Hemlock does not smell like something you want to put in your face and for good
reason.
If you don't like rat pee.
If you don't like rat pee, if you do like rat pee, I don't know what to tell you.
But what if something smells like fungus genitals and you like it and want to put it in your
mouth?
Well, all mushrooms share that characteristic. Maybe not if you wanted to put it in your mouth. Well, all mushrooms share that characteristic.
Maybe not if you wanted to put it in your mouth, but they're all fungus generals.
And so many patrons, including Ned Lansing, Dory, Brenna Anderson, Eden Sunshine, Morell
Hunters, Madeline Duke, and Curtis Roderick, Rebecca Weinsaddle, Hailey Everson, Rachel
Stearns, Kate Bell, Madeline Winter, New Listener Nicholas, Maritime Archaeologist Chanel Zapp,
Kristi Kazakov, Sebastian Papenou,
Anya Marion, R.J.
Deutsch, Katherine Jamieson, Annie C., Zoe Hull all asked about this, in Thimblewim's
words,
I love foraging for garlic grass, fiddleheads and dandelions.
I never forage for mushrooms because I don't know enough and I'm way too addicted to
not dying.
And Rachel Kasha wrote in, all mushrooms are edible.
Some mushrooms are only edible once.
Where do we even start learning proper identification?
I have a lot of questions about mushrooms
because, okay, set me straight here.
I feel like mushrooms is like you level up to mushrooms.
Is that correct?
So I feel like you level up to mushrooms
because I grew up being very plant specific in
my study of what's growing around me. So I think it kind of depends on what you feel more comfortable
learning first. For me, I guess I've just, I've been learning about plants for long enough and
interacting with them for long enough that I can go into a new space in a region that I'm somewhat familiar
with and be like, I have a good idea of what I'm going to find here flora wise.
Do not ask me what I think I'm going to find fungi wise because I will not have a good
answer for you.
Every time I find a mushroom, it is a pleasant surprise.
Yeah. Someone about your morals asks, Zoe Hull says, oh my goodness, it is a pleasant surprise. Yeah.
Someone about your morals asks, Zoe Hull says, oh my goodness, I love Alexa so much.
Yay.
She just found her first morale.
So I got to know what is the secret to this elusive cerebral delight.
So unfortunately, the only secret that I know that seems to be worth its salt is the one
that I did have in that video. And it is,
if you are in an area that is known for having morel mushrooms and the ground
temperature has been consistently between like 40 and 60 degrees and it has
rained within the last week.
Look for trees that are dead and have bark starting to peel off of them.
The cool thing about morels is they begin their life in between the cells of those trees,
and then when those trees die, that is when morels then kind of convert to breaking down that dead matter
and put up those fruiting bodies. So you're you're going to be finding them near dead trees, but not trees
that have been dead for a very long time just because they
would then be devoid of the nutrients that the morels need
to grow and to fruit. And honestly, I've like had that
knowledge up in my noggin for a while and I still only found my
first morale last week.
So exciting. How did you cook it?
I brought four home and everyone was just because I've only found my first morel last week. Oh, so exciting. How did you cook it?
I brought four home and everyone was just, because I've only had them dried before, which
are still delightful, but there's something about not having to reconstitute them that
everybody says is just miraculous.
So I went super simple.
I melted a little bit of vegan butter.
I added in a splash of white wine.
And I added in a little bit of diced field garlic,
some allium binauli, just to get some aromatics going.
And then I halved the morels and tossed them in the sauce,
cooked them until the wine had cooked off,
and had caramelized them just a wee bit, and then just ate them that way.
And Ali, they were so good. I cried a little.
Oh my gosh! That's so exciting! Is this the season for it, or are they a seasonal mushy?
So they are a seasonal mushy. Here on the eastern side of the United States, we are like right in the middle of Morrell season right now.
In the Midwest specifically,
things are a little up in the air right now.
We've got some very chaotic weather.
It has been both 80 degrees
and we have had an inch of snow all within the last seven days.
Oh, wow.
So we have no idea if that means good things for the rest
of morel season or if it means bad things for the rest of morel season. But
on the west coast where you also have things like burn morels, those are going
to be dependent on wildfires, whether or not you're going to be able to find them. And morel season is much more like late winter.
Morel mushrooms, they're kind of creepy, but at least they taste good.
Kendra St. Clair wants to know if you write your songs ahead of time
or if they are musical improv.
Oh, my gosh. What a great question.
It is a little bit of both.
If I'm just riffing in a video,
that is almost always just musical improv.
I was in an improv group called Affirmative Distraction
here in Columbus for a couple of years.
An all black improv group here in the city.
And I love, I love musical improv.
It used to scare the crap out of me. And now it's one of my fun little side hobbies.
That's a really, it's a thing that I really enjoy doing.
But things that involve instruments,
absolutely written ahead of time.
I am not one of those people
who can just pick up an instrument and be like,
and now here's a song fresh out of my brain hole.
I mean, I can do that. It just won't be good.
Understood. Great question from Katherine Jamison wants to know why are so many foraged plants
so mucilaginous?
I think the answer is a lot of plants are mucilaginous and we just don't cultivate a lot of them.
So then when it's time to go out and forage things, you just get constantly surprised
by the plants and the fungi that do a slimy when you cook with them.
To a slimy.
Well, you know, you compared it to okra as a kind of a thickening agent, right?
Yeah.
And that's exactly what I was going to mention. I was going to say for folks who grew up eating okra, that is not a crazy surprising thing. But
for people who didn't, like giving them something made with like mallow for the first time might be
a bit of a squicky experience for them if they're not prepared. Just a little slippery, just a little bit.
Just a little slippy.
Just a little slippy.
And from slime to something more serious, a lot of patrons had cultural questions about
foraging like Riley McInnis, Emily Richardson, and Claudia Dana, and first time question
asker Vicki Preston, who wrote in to say, so I'm an indigenous person living in my
rural homelands.
And for us foraging or gathering is still a common and necessary practice, much as it's always been.
But Vicki wanted to know alongside listeners Alexis Jarvis and Amani Alkidwa, how and why can
it be empowering as a black indigenous or person of color forager? My Instagram handle is black forager. And that was 100% on purpose
because one I didn't see a lot of people who looked like me in the space and I
still don't see a lot of people who look like me in the space. It's, I
honestly think of it kind of like an act of restorative justice to be a person of color
who is foraging because historically, culturally, and legally a lot of barriers were put in
place to prohibit us historically from being able to do so.
I talk about it a little bit in a video that I made for Black History
Month, but in the South, immediately after the Civil War, a lot of laws were put in place
to purposefully curb recently freed Black folks from being able to forage and trap to
provide for themselves, essentially kind of holding them at economic bondage to the plantations.
So they, you know, they weren't enslaved anymore,
but now they pretty much have to be sharecroppers because there's not much else you can do because
trespass went from being a civil offense to being a criminal offense, which suddenly makes it a way
more expensive problem for you if you are on somebody else's land and they don't want you to
be there. But also if you're recently freed, you
don't have land of your own to be foraging on, to be growing things on, to be trapping on, to be
hunting on. And both physically in some places, but mostly metaphorically, fences were put up around
public property. And in a lot of spaces, it became illegal to forage and trap there too.
and in a lot of spaces it became illegal to forage and trap there too.
A lot of that also has some history
in the very beginnings of the national park movement
in the late 1800s, you know, the 1880s and the 1890s,
when a lot of white men wanted to preserve
the pristine conditions of the green spaces
they saw around them, while completely
ignoring the fact that the way that those green spaces became the way that they were,
were because of a lot of these symbiotic relationships between the people who were living off of them
and the land itself.
So when a lot of laws are put in place to purposefully disenfranchise people from being
able to do something, it has usually a lot of generational
and cultural spillover there's a pretty big cultural barrier
to hop over to be a person of color even just existing
in the outdoors when a lot of us have grandparents or even in
my case parents who grew up
in a time
where there was like a very real fear
of being a black person, in the case of my family,
by yourself out in the middle of the woods.
Like that wasn't a situation that you would ever want
to find yourself in for fear of like extreme acts of violence.
and for fear of extreme acts of violence.
So for me to be a black woman foraging,
yeah, it feels like justice to me. It's an act that I feel like we should begin reclaiming.
We have just as much a right to do it as anybody else.
But because we have all of these historical and external
factors working against us, there's just not
a lot of us out here.
Thankfully, I do see that beginning to change,
and I hope to see it change even more rapidly as we move
forward.
Alexis notes that if your great grandparents aren't foraging,
well, they're not going to teach your grandparents how to forage.
And they aren't going to teach your parents who
aren't going to teach you.
And not to mention, so, so much oral tradition and teaching
has been lost over the years.
And I think one of the things that's so powerful about Alexis's
lessons are that she has been captivated by foraging
since she was five and has been studying it for years and years.
And part of her work feels like carrying on a certain kind of oral tradition of her own
and telling stories and showing us exactly what to look for, how to prepare it in a manner
that has been missing through generations of trauma.
And her work is igniting a new interest in folks
who have been kept from this knowledge and resources.
Gathered around the glow of our phones,
folks listen intently to her lessons.
I think it's so great that you're bringing so many people
together who feel similarly.
We actually have one question.
Jessica Duncan says, first time question
asker and fellow Black girl who loves plants here
and is from the Pacific Northwest.
I'm interested in getting into foraging for mushies.
However, I'm also concerned about trail erosion
and the negative effects of trampling through forests.
Do you have any tips for Jessica on how to ethically
and sustainably forage?
Yes, well, since she said that she is specifically
interested in mushroom collecting,
I would say if you have
like a little pocket knife and you go ahead and just cut off the fruiting bodies instead of,
you know, maybe disrupting the mycelium that are doing their thing. A lot of foraging is honestly
evaluating space by space where you are at any given time. If you are in a place that is having issues with erosion of soil, and you look around
and you see signs of erosion of soil,
you see a top layer with poor soil quality,
the wind blows and you see a whole lot
of the kind of nutritionally depleted topsoil blowing around,
like that's probably not an area
that you want to be taking any biodiversity out of.
You wanna kind of give it as much of a chance to thrive that you want to be taking any biodiversity out of you.
You want to kind of give it as much of a chance to thrive
as it could possibly have.
So a lot of it is just reading the space
that you're in visually, reading up on a space
that you're going to be in ahead of time.
And that doesn't even just go for things like erosion.
I know when I'm on the East Coast,
if I'm foraging seaweed, I'm checking the water quality.
Those are levels that are usually posted for commercial fishermen, but anybody who is out
there fishing, clamming, in my case, dragging seaweed directly out of the ocean to put into
their gullet, you also want to be knowing about the water temperature, algal blooms, any spills that
have happened in the area. So a little bit of it is just doing the research that you can if you are
able for a space that you hope to be foraging from. Are those the dead man's fingers? Yes. Oh,
my God. I love dead man's fingers so much. They're so creepy. Dead man's fingers, a healthy book hay of them.
OK, so we're not talking about the mushroom called dead man's fingers,
which truly are a ghastly, grayish, fingery looking sight on the forest floor.
Rather, these dead man's fingers are also called green sea fingers,
stag seaweed, green fleece and oyster thief, also known as Codium fragile.
If you're feeling specific. Now, Alexis says that she tries to use the binomial nomenclature or genus and species
format because so many forageable foods have tons of local names. And she says that if a thing is
important enough to have different names in a bunch of different places, it's because it's really tasty or it's really, really gross or lethal.
Now, how do you make sure that you keep eating
dead man's fingers without having dead man's fingers?
You know, Hope says,
and maybe this is of some flim flam you could bust.
Hope says, I'd been told that you can test
for berries being poisonous by rubbing them on your hand
and seeing if it tingles or numbs.
And then if it doesn't, doing the same with your cheek. And if nothing there either, you might be able to eat it. Is that
true at all? Is it flim flam? Is it reliable?
For a lot of us, especially who grew up being very outdoorsy, that was kind of the way that
we were told to deal with the situation if we like found ourselves stranded in the middle
of the woods. The way that I always heard it was, you know,
you'd rub it on the inside of your ankle. You'd pretty much just travel to more sensitive pieces
of skin and wait a few hours to see if it reacts. Because I am a cautious being, and because not every hazardous plant behaves the same way or possesses the same toxins.
I'm just going to go ahead and say that unless you are dying,
probably not the best rule of thumb to go by.
Even if you are dying, probably not the best rule of thumb to go by.
Also, if you are looking for berries,
I can say with confidence if you are looking for berries, I can say with confidence, if you are in North America,
we don't have any poisonous compound berries.
So if it looks like a raspberry, you're good to go.
Okay, so compound or aggregate berries
include the dewberry, the blackberry, the raspberry.
So that should help Rebecca, Rachel Sorter, Mandy Smith,
Donnell O'Neill, and Megan Burnett-Tarascovitz. Oh, on that topic, this is a very, very good question. Emma Kiley
is a first time question asker and their greatest love is for service berries. Is a service
berry like a raspberry? Oh my god, service berries. I'm so glad someone brought service
berries up because I always want to shoehorn them into the conversation. But I never know if people are going to know what I'm talking about.
So service berries, which are the Amalanchia genus,
there are a couple of different species that fall under it,
but we call them all service berries or June berries or
Saskatoon berries in Southern Ohio.
Sometimes they just call them Sarvis or Sarvis berries.
They actually look a lot more like blueberries.
They are crowned berries.
So, you know, they have the little points
sticking out of them, the little last signs of their flowers.
They, oh man, they might be my favorite.
I love pawpaws just from like a purely
ethnobotanical history standpoint,
but surface berries might be my favorite thing to forage.
They taste like apples and blueberries mixed together.
Oh man.
They're so nice.
Can you make a cobbler?
Can you get enough to make like a cobbler out of them?
Or is it like, if you get three of them,
you've had the best day of your life.
Oh no.
So last year, just from the sole tree closest to my house,
I gathered enough berries while still leaving
all the ones that I couldn't reach,
which was most of them for the birds.
I gathered enough to make like 10 hand pies.
Ah!
Last year, for whatever reason,
I gathered like one big jar of service berries and was
like, you know what, I'm tired. And by the time I wasn't tired anymore, service berries
season was over. So this year I'm going to stock up all of my energy and my strength
and we're going to go ham on service berries. My neighborhood
loves planting them as ornamentals so they are everywhere. Oh man, that's gotta be in like
apartment listings. What is around you that you could eat? Yeah. I honestly think that people need
to start listing it because if someone told me that a house that I was maybe gonna move into has a serviceberry tree out front, I'd be like, oh, I'm done. Sold. You know, you don't
have a washer or a dryer, but you have a serviceberry tree. Who cares? I'll wash my clothes in the
sink. That's fine. It's better for the environment anyway.
Now a certain film came up a few times and Lena Zekes and Julia McDonald wanted to know how to avoid the same fate. Julia
asked, please tell us how to not Chris McCandless ourselves. Does Alexis get this question a lot?
Are there any movies about foraging or survivalism that are inspiring to you or that you fucking hate
at all? Oh my gosh. I mean, people do bring up Into the Wild all the time.
That's like everyone's literary experience with foraging.
And I feel like for a lot of people,
their literary experience with foraging
is like people being in mortal peril.
It's always either Into the Wild,
or it's that like freaking scene in The Hunger Games,
where it's just like, that's Night Walk, Peta,
it'll kill you.
That's the way that everybody thinks about it.
I'm trying to think if I know of any movies
in which their portrayal of foraging
doesn't make me big sad.
Oh no.
Oh no.
None are coming to mind.
Quick, someone write a heartfelt children's film
with foraging in it.
You can consult me.
I'll do it for free.
Yes.
First, PBS show and then consulting also, please.
Yes, please.
Last questions I always ask.
What sucks the most about either foraging or having a million people watching your foraging?
What is one thing that you would change about it?
Oh man. I don't think there's anything that I would change about foraging. Processing what you
bring home is sometimes tough. I feel like that's what I don't get as many questions about, but I
feel like I need to warn people about is if you're getting into foraging. Like 80% of the fun is going out and finding
the thing, but you do have to bring it home and do things with it. Or like either cook
it immediately or do something usually a little labor intensive to it so you can preserve
it for cooking with it in the future. I don't get to just bring the acorns home and crack them open
and have a snack. Unfortunately, oh God, acorns especially, that's like a week's long process
every fall. But that being said, I also find processing my fines to be very like meditative.
It's like a great thing to do after a busy week. I'm a freak. I will process plants
for two hours in complete silence in my kitchen and be just the happiest version of myself after.
I bet. Especially after you've had each thing that you're processing has a narrative too of
when you found it, how you decided to pick that one over the one next to it. I mean, there's
so much context for every single leaf, you know? Exactly. There's so much to consider. And I find that taking the time
to really pause and to really think about how thankful I am for everything that I brought home
for each and one of those plants and for for all of the people, places and books where
I've gotten my knowledge about that plant from, it just, it fills my heart up, makes
my heart feel warm and fuzzy. And then at the end you get a snack. Who doesn't like
that? So since I would change nothing about foraging, because foraging is amazing and wonderful. I will say, being a person who a lot of people
are watching on the internet, nine times out of 10,
super cool, very surreal experience,
but a lot of people talk to you,
or at least leave comments on your things,
as if you are like not a real human person
who then has to process what it is that they have said.
And that stinks.
Additionally, being a woman and a woman of color
in the space comes with a lot of added pressure
to be so incredibly perfect.
And I mean, yes, this is a line of study, a line of work in which you want to be perfect
and you want to be accurate because you care about all of the people who follow you and you
want them to be safe and you want them to feel like they are prepared knowledge wise to go out
and find something or at least prepared to ask the right questions when they go and find more information about it.
But being a person of color, I do find that I tend to incur skepticism a lot more than some of my delightful white peers. God, that sucks. Yeah, it sucks. Thank you.
It sucks. Yeah. Alexa's recounted that online, her knowledge gets doubted more than others,
even though she's been studying this for years. And it's impossible to ignore that sexism
and racism. But it's also partly why she knows the work and being in this space is important.
And also she's just entertaining as hell.
I think what's so compelling about it is it's outdoorsy and it's funny and it's
personable and it's science and it's food and it's history.
It's like a septuple whammy.
Just a one stop shop for all different kinds of content. It really is. And I
just love the way that it gets people to notice their surroundings more and not take for granted
all of the things that are growing around us. Yeah, I think a lot of people have found solace
in nature and a lot of folks who maybe wouldn't have otherwise. And for me,
and a lot of folks who maybe wouldn't have otherwise. And for me, my MO has always been
when you see more value in a space,
you take better care of it.
And foraging is absolutely a way to see more value
in the space around you.
And that being said, I always end on your favorite thing
about it, but I don't even know,
how do you even pick a favorite thing about it? I also feel like your microbiome must be so good. You must have
such a healthy microbiome. I don't know. I eat normal things too. Like right now, I do have a glass
of like a redbud and dandelion like fermented beverage that I just bottled earlier this week. And I'm like, yay, good gut bacteria.
We love to see an active fermenting drink.
But I also ate two Oreos for breakfast this morning.
So Jerry's out on that one.
I guess I don't get sick a lot.
What about your favorite thing about it? What
just gives you butterflies?
Getting to see either in real time or to have people like
relate to me. Like a breakthrough that they have had
or like a special moment that they have now had in their
surroundings. Because of my content.
One of my best best best friends has never been super outdoorsy but she she loves food.
An amazing chef and so her kind of foray into the outdoors has been through foraging and watching
kind of like the light bulb go off for her now when we go out on
hikes together and you know watching her being able to like recognize things so confidently
on her own. I'm just like, yeah, that's what I do. And those moments supersede the negatives by so many degrees and make me feel like I'm doing something beneficial,
I guess. I hope. So ask smart people simple questions because chances are they do what they
do because they really love what they do. And you never know, you might get hit by a bus, so you might as well ask questions.
Also, follow Alexis. It turns out she's a fellow Ologite and she'd listened to the show before I
ever reached out, which was so cool to learn. And she is at Black Forager on TikTok, on Twitter,
and on Instagram. So do follow her. We are at Ologies on Twitter and Instagram. I'm at
Allie Ward. Just one L on both. Thank you to all the patrons at patreon. are at Ologies on Twitter and Instagram. I'm at Allie Ward. Just one L on both.
Thank you to all the patrons at patreon.com slash Ologies, where you can join for just one tiny
dollar a month and submit questions. Thank you, Erin Talbert for adminning the Ologies podcast
Facebook page. Thank you, Emily White of The Wardery, who makes our transcripts. Thank you
to Caleb Patton, who bleeps them. Bleept episodes and transcripts are available for free at the link in the show notes.
Ologies merch is available at Ologiesmerch.com.
Thank you Shannon Feltes and Bonnie Dutch of the Comedy Podcast, you are that, for managing
that.
Thank you to Susan Hale and Noel Dilworth who help with social media and scheduling.
Thank you to Mane Squeeze and huge editing hero Jarrett Sleeper of MindGenMedia.
And longtime editor, newly unmustached, Stephen Ray Morris
of the podcasts, The Percast and C. Jurassic Wright. Oh my stash, they both shaved this
week. Stephen and Jaret. People are vaxxed. Stashes are waxed. Wow. Springtime in America.
Oh, Nick Thorburn of the band Islands did the music.
Okay, here's a new secret for 2024.
And it's that I just returned from Mexico City a few days ago where I went to talk to
some axolotl experts.
But on day two, I completely lost my voice.
I like to a rasp, like I couldn't make sounds with my throat or mouth.
So we're going to be working on a workaround for that. Also that's one of the reasons this is an encore episode this week
because I couldn't talk for a bit. We're also working on a real chunk of an
episode for next week and I wanted to keep doing some tweaks on it. I wanted it
to be as good as possible and here's the thing patrons if you're a patron I'm
releasing next week's episode early. I've never done this before
Probably on Thursday or Friday
So in a few days to get some ideas and some feedback on it before it comes out to the public next Tuesday
So if you're not already a patron and you want to know what next week's episode is and you want to give me some feedback
On it, that'll be happening a little bit later this week. And yeah, my voice still hurts and it sucks. So I'll rest that right now. Okay, go eat your backyard.
Do it safely. All right, bye bye. Fepidology, Nephology, Seriology, Stelatology.
That's nightlock, PETA! You'll be dead in a minute!