Inspiration

Our simple guide to foraging

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Ella Perryman

Sawday's Expert

5 min read

Foraging for wild food is an activity you can do all over the UK. It encourages you to go out and connect with nature and provides you with some fresh and delicious ingredients too. With our simple guide to foraging, you can search for some wild foods the next time you’re on your daily walk in the woods or on the coast.

While the four foods mentioned below are relatively easy to identify, you should always make sure you are 100% certain of what you are picking. There are some brilliant guides such as Food for Free or The Forager Handbook that’ll help you when identifying plants.

Photo courtesy of @lindsaysfeast

Wild garlic

Wild garlic is one of the most commonly foraged foods in the UK. It loves wet ground, so you’ll often find big bunches alongside riverbanks and canals as well as in woodland. The plant is very easy to identify, especially as it has such a strong and distinctive smell – find it from midwinter to the end of spring. Wild garlic tastes delicious in homemade pesto as well as in pasta and risotto dishes.

Nettle

Nettle is one of the easiest wild greens to identify, but be careful when picking as they are prickly. You’ll find them in early spring, when the nettle tops are young and pale green, all the way through to June, when they’ll start getting tough. Never pick when they are in flower and handle them with care until they’re cooked. Cooking destroys the stinging acid and makes them perfect to eat. Try them in a soup, as a pesto or even in cake!

A nettle and gorse cake recipe from Tia Tamblyn, owner of Botelet in Cornwall >

Elderflowers

Pretty elderflowers are around from late May to early July, where you’ll find them growing on bushes in parks, fields, forests and gardens. They are most commonly used to create a cordial, but they are equally delicious in cakes and tarts. To forage, take a pair of scissors and remove flower heads just below where all the small stems meet the main stem. We’d advise you only take a few flowerheads from each tree to allow as many as possible to develop into berries in autumn.

Blackberries

Picking blackberries is often a nostalgic memory from childhood. They are easy to identify, growing on bushes at the edges of woodland and open grassland. To determine whether you have a good blackberry, grasp it between your thumb and index finger and if it pulls away from the stem gently it means it is sweet and ripe. They taste wonderful baked in a pie, as part of a fruit salad or even in a drink!

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Ella Perryman

Sawday's Expert

Outdoor enthusiast from the sea to the tallest mountains, content creator, dog mum. Growing up in Devon means Ella knows the south west very well but she also spends a lot of time in Wales and is on the lookout for dog-friendly places and activities wherever she goes. Her years in marketing have given her a keen eye for an interesting story and she loves the character she finds in Sawday's places, from decor and design to the owners' bookshelves.
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