Foraging shoot with Alex Richards on the Isle of Wight
Credits
Foraging – Alex – www.IslandWildFood.co.uk @IslandWildFood
Photography – www.DorsetFoodandDrinkPhotographer.co.uk @RichardBudd
Recipe and Styling – Rachel Janes
Thanks to
Kelly Kettles – www.kellykettle.com @Kelly_Kettle
Crockery – www.chefstableware.co.uk @ChefsTableware
Ferry and Transportation – www.wightlink.co.uk @WightLinkFerry
Chef Knives – www.IOShen.co.uk @IOShenKnives
Blue Sparkling Cuvee – www.adgestonevineyard.co.uk @AdgestoneVines
Manda McGrory – Textile Toys – www.treefalldesign.bigcartel.com @TreeFallDesign
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Alternative Christmas Dinner – Winter Picnic
– using and showcasing foraged foods.
Recipes
1 Festive foraged chestnut, cacao, wild hogweed and Rum cocktail
Ingredients
Couple of generous pinches of ground hogweed seeds
A shake or two of cacao powder
Around 10 sweet chestnuts (watch the spiky cases)
A measure or two of your favourite dark rum
A few whole hogweed seeds
Method
Before you feast – Roast the chestnuts over a fire or in the oven, peel, crush and soak in some almond or other milk of your choice overnight.
On the day – put the ground hogweed seeds, cacao powder, rum and milky chestnut mixture into a cocktail shaker (or a jam jar with a lid). Shake however you fancy, and strain into a glass. Serve with three hogweed seeds ‘con la mosca’, a sprinkle of cacao and some extra freshly roasted chestnuts
2 Rosehip tea
Ingredients
Couple of handfuls of rosehips – dried or fresh if they are still hanging in the hedgerows.
Water
Method
This simple vitamin C rich tea is a brilliant winter warmer. Either boil up a brew in a matter of minutes whilst you are out and about using a Kelly Kettle, or take a flask of hot water with you. Slightly crush the rosehips if they are whole to release the summer sunshine memories, add boiling water and leave to infuse for a minute or two before drinking.
3 Sloe gin with pine needles infusion
Ingredients
Loads of sloes picked after frosts have started preferably (so you don’t need to freeze or prick them)
Some Gin
Simple sugar syrup – add to taste.
2 or 3 handfuls of pine needles
Method
Before you feast – Soak the sloes in the gin for a minimum of 10 weeks and then strain into a clean bottle. It should be a lovely rich reddish purple colour at this stage.
A day or two before, chop the pine needles finely and warm in a small amount of water and throw in some sugar. Turn off the heat, and allow this syrup to infuse with the Christmassy pine flavour.
On the day – strain the syrup and mix some with the sloe gin and pop it into a hip flask to take out with you.
4 Sea beet and sea purslane bhajis with hawberry jam
Ingredients
Hawberry jam (hawthorn berries and sugar)
Onions
Chickpea flour
Ground cumin
Ground turmeric
Fresh red chilli
Foraged sea beet & sea purslane
English rapeseed oil
Method
Very thinly slice the onions, place in a bowl and shake over a big pinecone sized amount of chickpea flour, add cumin, chilli and turmeric however you like it, add some chopped sea beet and purslane, and then add a dash of water so you can bring the mixture together. Form tangerine sized bhajis and then fry in rapeseed oil until golden. This can be done on the beach or prior to the picnic and just kept warm in a coolbag (ironically).
5 Jelly ear soup
Ingredients
Dried jelly ear fungus – these are very distinctive and can be found from August onwards, but as with all wild mushrooms – always check with an expert before eating
Chopped fresh Chillies
Fresh Coriander
Tofu shopped into cubes
Bean sprouts
Stock – preferably made with dried wild mushrooms
Method
Rehydrate the mushrooms by soaking in hot water. Dry on a clean tea towel, and then fry along with the tofu in a little oil with lemongrass and chilli. Add some hot stock of your choice. This can all be done at home, or at the picnic depending on your set up. The just garnish with the beansprouts, coriander and chilli.
6 Damper bread with hazelnuts and angelica seeds
Ingredients
Self-raising flour
Wild angelica seeds
Crushed hazelnuts
Water
Method
Pour some flour into a bowl and add enough water to make a dough resembling pizza dough. Break off a blob and roll and stretch with your hands to make a long sausage shape. Twist this around a stout stick in a spiral leaving space between the twists. Cook over the fire until the dough has risen and got a nice brown crust. Turn regularly so they don’t burn.
7 Rosehip and hogweed spiced cake
Ingredients
Cup of each of self raising flour, butter and caster sugar (around 175g of each)
3 eggs
Ground hogweed seeds (use cardamom and orange zest if you don’t have these)
Rose petal jelly
Some butter & icing sugar
Two handfuls of Rosehips (the big fat Japanese ones preferably)
Method
The cake
Chop up and deseed and defluff the rosehips and warm them in the juice of an orange until softened, Mix together the self raising flour, eggs, sugar, butter and a blob of ground hogweed seeds (about a tablespoon) and a bit of baking powder, and then stir in half of the orangey rosehips. Bake in a medium oven for around 40 minutes either as one cake and then cut or in two Victoria sponge tins (less time in oven with these) when it is bouncy and a skewer comes out clean. Cool before filling.
The filling
Make buttercream with butter and icing sugar. Spread a layer of this on one half of the cake, and then top this with a layer of rose petal jelly. If you don’t have rose petal jelly use a teensy bit of rosewater to flavour the buttercream. Pop the other half of cake on top.
The topping
Sprinkle icing sugar and a few whole hogweed seeds over the cake, and top with the rest of the orangey rosehips. Serve with swirls of fruit leather.
9 Seaweed crisps
Ingredients
Sea lettuce
Sesame oil
Toasted Sesame seeds
Method
Wash the seaweed and then dry thoroughly with a tea towel. Deep fry it until crispy in veg oil, drain and then add a dash of sesame oil and the sesame seeds. Spread out on tray to cool.