Quantcast
Channel: food for free | The urban guide to becoming selfsufficientish
Browsing latest articles
Browse All 18 View Live

Nettle Beer – Andy Hamilton

Nettle Beer This is an easy recipe to follow and creates a delightful, if not usual tasting beer. It is very cheap to make and follows a traditionally english recipe. Before hops were widely used in...

View Article



April foraging – Early Spring Wild food by Andy Hamilton

Winter is becoming like last night’s dream and any hazy reminders of its presence are starting to seem out of place. On seemingly dead wood once a tightly packed parcels have now opened to reveal their...

View Article

Himalayan Balsam – Impatiens glandulifera – food for free – Dave Hamilton

After finding out that Japanese Knotweed was edible (use the young shoots as you would rhubarb) I began a quest to find out what other invasive weeds could end up on the dinner plate. I came across a...

View Article

Acorn Flour – Andy Hamilton

Go to your nearest park or forest with oak trees in them and collect a bag full of acorns (or as much as you need) Dry them in the oven using the pilot light (‘s’ [...] The post Acorn Flour – Andy...

View Article

Sorrel and sorrel pesto

Sorrel is one of those plants that once you find seems to be everywhere! I can’t resist nibbling on the odd leaf while passing. The main wild sorrel you will find is sheep’s sorrel, in [...] The post...

View Article


Japanese Knotweed as a food – By Andy Hamilton

Japanese Knotweed Fallopia japonica is a plant that can divide forages from allotmenteers. Many foragers love the stuff whilst allotmenteers dread seeing it. Why, you may well ask? Well it is because...

View Article

Wild food in May – Late Spring Foraging – Food for free in May – Andy Hamilton

“Now every field is clothed with grass, and every tree with leaves; now the woods put forth their blossoms, and the year assumes its gay attire.” –   Virgil May certainly feels like the time when [...]...

View Article

Winter foraging

Winter foraging may seem a bit of a waste of time, surely nothing grows during the dark, wet days of winter.  It’s true that there is a lot less than at other times of the [...] The post Winter...

View Article

Browsing latest articles
Browse All 18 View Live




Latest Images