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Tuesday
Jul312012

where the wild things are. no. 20. pick a peck of pickled milkweed. 

I have gone a little mad for milkweed this summer! You could have knocked me over when I first learned that it was edible. I have always known that Monarchs are dependent on milkweed for survival but I was dubious about eating it but no more, I am now a total convert. I have made milkweed frittata, a tempura of the blossoms and buds and now i have come to the pickled milkweed pods! They taste a bit like pickled ochre  and have a caperberry like texture. Do not worry, you will not end up like Sylvester with a mouthful of fluff! The tiny pods get pickled when they are between one to two inches long and the fluff inside the pod is not really fully fluff yet. I have tried these out on friends and family and the consensus seems to be that they are surprisingly good.

 

So grab some milkweed pods before they get too big and get pickling.


 Pickled Milk Weed Pods

 

4 cups of milkweed buds (between 1-2 inches in size) 

5 cups raw apple cider vinegar

1/4-cup sugar in the raw

2 sprigs of fresh dill flower

1-tablespoon whole juniper berries

1/2 teaspoon crushed juniper berries (crush them with a mortar and pestle)

1 tablespoon of black pepper corns

3 tablespoons grey sea salt

 

 

 

 To Make The Brine:

Add the spices and sugar to the 5 cups of vinegar

Heat to a boil in a non-reactive pot

Turn off and allow steeping for 20 minutes for the spices to infuse

In the mean time, clean and wash and de-stem the milkweed pods 

 

Blanch the milkweed pods for 30 seconds and then plunge them into an ice bath

Place the blanched milkweed pods in two 4-cup sterilized mason or Weck jars.

After the brine has infused for 20 minutes or so, return it to the heat and bring it to a quick boil and turn off.

Remove the brine from the heat and slowly pour it over the milkweed pods.

The pickled milkweed pods will last a couple of weeks in your refrigerator.

 

 

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Reader Comments (5)

i am staring at fields of them, trying to keep my horses away since for them it is not edible and toxic.
when doing research i came to all the things that could be done and how in away they benefitted our
bodies but never daring enough to try. now i see and read this and i think i need to try this.

oh Andrea, a workshop of foraging on the hill, how incredible it would be to have you here.

07.31 | Unregistered Commenternadia

Pickled milkweed? Wow, really? I wish I'd known about these as a kid--because a milkweed plant grew like clockwork in the far back corner of our yard. If my mom knew she could pickle the pods, it would have saved her a lot of weed-oriented frustration!

07.31 | Unregistered CommenterEileen

Oh dear! I forgot to mention that I blanched the milkweed and then plunged them in an ice bath!
I will amend tomorrow!
;)

07.31 | Unregistered CommenterAndrea

I'm the founder/moderator for Punk Domestics (www.punkdomestics.com), a community site for those of use obsessed with, er, interested in DIY food. It's sort of like Tastespotting, but specific to the niche. I'd love for you to submit this to the site. Good stuff!

08.2 | Unregistered CommenterSean

Very interesting, I had no idea. I just started to look into foraging this year but did not get much farther than making dandelion syrup. There is so much to discover out there! Beautiful photography.

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