Making the Best of Invasive Species
Garlic mustard and Asian carp can wreak havoc on their ecosystems, but do they have a future on your dinner plate?
- By Kristin Ohlson
- Smithsonian.com, May 25, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
“Dude, it’s the ultimate food!” Sawyer exclaimed as he passed out his artichoke and spinach dip with crème fraiche, garlic mustard and thick-cut potato chips. “It’s free, and nature wants us to get rid of it.”
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Comments (11)
There is a new weed field guide published this year by Dr. Nancy Gift, a weed scientist from Chatham University in Pittsburgh, titled Good Weed, Bad Weed: Who's Who, What to Do, and Why Some Deserve a Second Chance (2011, St. Lynn's Press) that includes recipes using edible weeds such as garlic mustard and Japanese knotweed. Her book contains many photos to help the homeowner recognize weeds in and surrounding their lawns, and what to do about them (in many cases, enjoy them!)
Posted by Sheila Johnston on July 19,2011 | 01:03 PM
And one more to add to the list - Crepidula fornicata or "Slipper snail." They wreak havoc on native oyster beds here in western Washington and wildlife experts are tearing their hair out trying to figure out how to control them. We tried them for dinner one night and they are delicious!
Posted by Melany Vorass on July 5,2011 | 01:52 AM
This is encouraging news. My husband and I have been eating our garden weeds for several years now. We (along with several gourmet restaurants in England) also enjoy Eastern grey squirrel, an invasive species here on the west coast. It's local, lean, healthy, reduces population of an invasive that's all but replaced native Douglas squirrels, and it's humane (they live happy lives in the wild all except for one not-so-good day.)
Posted by Melany Vorass on July 5,2011 | 01:48 AM
Let's hope there are more inventive minds here in Ohio to deal with Japanese & Bush Honeysuckles, Tree-of-Heaven, Japanese Knotweed, Emerald Ash Borer, Gypsy Moth, Multi-flora Rose, Autumn Olive, Purple Loosestrife, Japanese Stiltgrass, House Sparrows, Starlings, etc. etc. etc. ....and the hits just keep on coming.
Posted by Dennis Profant on June 16,2011 | 10:56 AM
My late father in law used to take nebraska carp and poach them with some condensed milk,onion,and salt and pepper. They were delicious.
Posted by Bernard Manning on June 15,2011 | 05:00 PM
Wait a minnit! Garlic mustard is a real plant? I thought it was some kind of special French sauce thing or something. Is there a Chipotle Garlic Mustard waiting to invade once the regular stuff has softened us up?
Maybe a filet of Asian Carp on a nice bed of kudzu with garlic mustard sauce.
Make that lionfish stuffed with longhorn beetles (ugh!).
Salt cedar-smoked Nutria and zebra mussels on pasta. There, that's better.
Posted by Daniel Kim on June 2,2011 | 05:01 PM
We always had carp in the creeks here in northern Ohio. We had a recipe for preparing them too. Prepare a blazing hardwood fire and let it burn down to embers. Nail the carp to a board and place in the embers. When the carp is done, pull out the nails, remove the carp, throw it away and eat the board.
Posted by Sue K on June 2,2011 | 03:24 PM
The carp are a danger to humans that wish to boat on the waters the carp inhabit. People have been knocked out of boats, received broken limbs from being attacked by these fish. Ok, maybe attacked is too strong a word, but I had one take aim at my son and saw them hitting other people in their boats. They jump when they hear/feel the vibrations made by the boats. I do not find them to be editable because they are very boney, but grind them up into a paste or some other useful product, by all means.
I love the Redneck fishing tournament and think this should be a weekly event where you get to take as many of those vicious fish as you can get. If you can't beat them or eat them, then fish them to extinction.
Posted by Shelley on June 1,2011 | 05:28 PM
You left out an invasive biggie -- Kudzu! It seems to be burying much of the southeast. There are a variety of ways to use it, including in food, for animal forage, and in crafts. Recipes include cooked greens, kudzu jelly, a thickener much like cornstarch or arrowroot, tea, quiche, casseroles.
Posted by MD Reser on June 1,2011 | 05:15 PM
Our dog likes to eat invasive species too. Crabgrass is her no.1 pick, but she refuses to move every time she finds an ailanthus sapling.
Great article!
Posted by sheila Callahan on May 30,2011 | 11:40 AM
This is one of the best articles about the invasivore movement that we have read- great work! We're definitely going to try to attend Pestival next year. We're always looking for new inspiration for our blog about consuming invasive species, http://invasivore.org.
Posted by invasivore on May 27,2011 | 10:25 AM