The flowers are edible. To eat, pick, wash and remove the green 'seaple'(sp?), as it is very bitter. Dip in cornmeal batter, fry and eat like 'tater tots'.
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Dandelions
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The leaves are best before they flower
Amen to this. Also, most of the bitter latex is in the leaves' midribs- so strip 'em out! They are mildest when harvested from a shady area, and the leaves tend to be bigger- I love to pick them under pines- nearly perfect conditions for good greens.
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The milky "sap" in the Dandelion makes the stem inedible, the blossoms can be dipped in egg, then flower and deep fried( bite off the yellow petals to eat), the leaves are excellent early in the growing season ( the can get bitter with longer growing times ) though changes of water will help. The cooked greens remind me of spinach, my Grandmother used to send me out to get some for dinner when I was 5 yrs old.Last edited by Scottishblacksmith; 07-16-2011, 06:11 PM.
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I found a nifty youtube channel called Depression Cooking with Clara. She made dandelion greens look like ribeye steak. I want out to my vast front yard and picked a bunch and steamed them and ate them with vinegar....blossoms, leaves, stem, and all. If you get them young enough they are not bitter. The older ones become bitter. I've read somewhere about making them tender again by covering them for a couple days. I need to find that article, but it shows how to extend the season.
I was quite pleased with the taste, and have also enjoyed sitting on the fishing bank popping clover buds into my mouth like candy. So many edible treasures on God's green earth. People come to my house and tell me about how I should spray and use lawn services. I tell them they are crazy, I don't want to poison my food plot. Then they roll their eyes at me. Closed minds don't let any light in.Proverbs 22:3 & 27:12 If God says something twice...might be a good idea to listen.
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Originally posted by ttsearcher View PostI found a nifty youtube channel called Depression Cooking with Clara. She made dandelion greens look like ribeye steak. I want out to my vast front yard and picked a bunch and steamed them and ate them with vinegar....blossoms, leaves, stem, and all. If you get them young enough they are not bitter. The older ones become bitter. I've read somewhere about making them tender again by covering them for a couple days. I need to find that article, but it shows how to extend the season.
I was quite pleased with the taste, and have also enjoyed sitting on the fishing bank popping clover buds into my mouth like candy. So many edible treasures on God's green earth. People come to my house and tell me about how I should spray and use lawn services. I tell them they are crazy, I don't want to poison my food plot. Then they roll their eyes at me. Closed minds don't let any light in.
Robert WDemocracy Will Cease To Exist When You Take Away From Those Who Are Willing To Work And Give to Those Who Are Not.-Thomas Jefferson
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Its a sure way to identify them when they flower but the leaves are more bitter. As stated batter the flowers for fritters but avoid the center. They are very good for you, its rediculous how people poison this natural medicine. A little bitterness is helpful in stimulating and cleansing the liver. Never used the root yet for coffee though.http://www.leaflady.org/health_benef...dandelions.htm
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I have eaten the flowers and love them but I always fried them in butter or margarine. Soak flowers in salt water drip dry dip in salted flower and fry till brown and crispy. Kind of tastes like popcorn. But if you are short of butter I just saw a good idea to make them into fritters either by dipping in a fritter batter or pulling flowers apart and putting them in the batter and frying it. I think I will try that this summer. I have not tried to eat the leaves yet.
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Dandelions are great and overlooked alot you can eat the whole plant minus the stem and bottom of the flower (green part flower comes from) eat them young when you first see them popping up the leaves are easy to identify (being in a saw tooth pattern) the leaves can be eaten raw the roots just boil like carrots or dry them up using a hot rock or the sun pound them to a powder (or as close as you can get) and steep in hot water for a really good drink (they call it coffee doesn't taste like it to me) flowers of the plant can be eaten raw in salads or made into wine (there are instructions all over the net for this) the goo from the stem can be used as glue (only read about this never tried it) ... the only draw back to this plant that I have found is the older the plant the more bitter is is but you can take care of that by boiling the leaves (takes out alot of the bitter taste)
When I was younger and my grandmother was alive she used to make ham and dandelions for us on a Sunday (MMMM good stuff!) Don't just keep mowing them over pick a few and try them but if you use chemicals on your lawn leave them alone!Survival is not the art of living it's the art of existing
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