« chive blossom vinegar. | Main | where the wild things are. ramp bloody mary. »
Tuesday
May282013

where the wild things are. poached egg with garlic mustard.

 

 

 

 

This past weekend a group of friends and I went on a "wild walk" on our friend Carver's land in Bovina in upstate New York. Carver and his wife Sonya own The Pines restaurant in Gowanus and are interested in seasonal local foods both wild and otherwise. We were lucky to have local Marguerite Uhlmann-Bower as our guide. She is wealth of knowledge when it comes to wild plants. We set out on an incredibly cold and rainy morning after a super delicious brunch (we were more than a little sad to leave the roaring fire) and roamed both pasture and woods. Before we even got out of the yard proper, we had spotted garlic mustard. Garlic Mustard from what I have read was brought to the United States in the 1860's as a culinary herb but escaped into the wild and is now an invasive plant. You will see this early flowering wild plant along roadsides in the spring, it has delicate vibrant green leaves that are heart shaped and toothy with  tiny white flowers. It does not have any poisonous look a likes. You will know this plant at once when you rub the leaves; it gives off a garlic odor. The leaves and the flowers are bitter but very delicious. Garlic mustard can be used in pesto or a salsa verde or raw in salads. All parts of the plant are edible and the roots apparently taste like horseradish.

 

When I got back home I searched our property for Garlic Mustard and found it literally two feet from my back door!

The next morning we decided to try it out for breakfast.

 I blanched the greens and served a poached egg over them. 

I have seen farmers selling Garlic Mustard at the Green Market in Union Square.  However, if you can't find any just substitute any bitter green in this recipe. You can't go wrong with eggs and greens.

I will post more on our walk soon.

xx

 

Poached Eggs with Garlic Mustard

2 farm fresh eggs

1/2 pound of Garlic Mustard with flowers or a similar bitter green (Dandelions would be just as good)

4 tablespoons of olive oil

 Cracked black pepper to taste

Sea salt to taste

 

Wash the garlic mustard and remove the leaves and flowers from the stems

Discard the Stems

Set the flowers aside

In pot of rapidly boiling water blanch the Garlic Mustard leaves for 10 seconds or so, just long enough for them to soften and turn a beautiful vibrant green.

Remove the Leaves from the water with a slotted spoon and divide between to plates.

Drizzle the greens with a bit of extra virgin olive oil.

In the remaining boiling water crack two eggs and poach. 

When the eggs are one slide one each with a slotted spoon from the pot to the plates.

Drizzle with a bit more olive oil

Top with cracked black pepper and Sea Salt

Add the delicate Garlic Mustard flowers on top.

Serve with tow slices of toast. I used walnut raisin bread because that is what I had around. (Thank you Paola!)

I rubbed the toasts with garlic after toasting.

Reader Comments (3)

You can even make mustard from the seeds later in the season...

You're right there is nothing better than greens with eggs. How satisfying to find and use some wild food from your own backyard.

aah...!! Simplicity is genius and definitely salivating in this case! Being a folklorist, I sometimes come across interesting proverbs about food and travel sayings. I guess a lot of proverbs originated right in the kitchen or some where near by :-) I grouped a small collection of proverbs like.....

1.) Love is like butter, it is good with bread. (Yiddish)

2.) Smoke from roasting meat does not irritate the eyes. (African-Shona)

3.) Better a sausage in hand than a ham at the butcher’s. (Polish)

4.) Butter is gold in the morning, silver at noon and lead at night. (English)

5.) With money one can even buy rabbit cheese. (Rumanian)

6.) Lentils without onions are like a dance without music. (Greek)

7.) Garlic makes a man wink, drink and stink. (English)

8.) Rice and fish are as inseparable as mother and child. (Vietnamese)

9.) Dumplings are better than flowers. (Japanese)

10.) Better some of a pudding than none of a pie. (English)

Howz that...??!! Hope you enjoyed it :-) more at ...http://cuteproverbs.com/popular-proverbs-2/sayings-on-food/

hurraae....!!! yum...yum...yum....

Ann

06.3 | Unregistered CommenterAnn

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>