Wild
garlic seemed like a miracle to us when we first discovered it. It was
gorgeous (after a good scrubbing), it was delicious, and it was
abundant. We dug, cleaned, and sold several thousand bunches of it that
first year we were farming. While we struggled to learn how to grow good
food, care for our crops and efficiently manage our fields to get
viable yields (i.e. produce that was not field-stressed and bug eaten)
there was an abundant source of food thriving all on its own in the
fields next to ours. It’s a contrast I still think about often when I am
out in the fields battling “weeds”.
Few
farmers share my fondness for field garlic. Field garlic is not native
to the United States and is listed as an invasive species in our
neighboring state of Illinois. As a “pestilent invasive weed”, it’s
rather hard to eradicate from agricultural fields. Tilling often spreads
bulbs rather than eliminates them and bulbs can lie dormant in fields
for years before producing plants. Field garlic clusters reproduce not
only through their underground bulbs but also through aerial bulblets
that contain seeds. It can be a huge pest for grain and livestock
farmers. Wheat growers are docked on the price of their grain if their
harvested crop contains these seeds or bulbs as they will taint flour
with the essence of garlic. Dairy farmers have their complaints about
wild Alliums too. Cows that forage on too many garlicky plants
give milk with an unpleasant garlic flavor and odor. The same is said of
meat from livestock who have eaten too many wild garlic or onion
plants. I can
commiserate with these farmers up to a certain point, I too have my
share of undesirable plants invading my considerably smaller operation,
but being a produce grower and a food lover, I can’t help but delight in
any food that insists upon growing itself.
Field
garlic is a hardy winter perennial, appearing in the fall and growing
slowly over the winter so that it is one of spring’s earliest and most
versatile wild food offerings. The baby garlic found in late winter can
provide a creative cook with loads of inspiration. It is delicious as a
creamed vegetable, in soups, or pureed into a salad dressing. If you are
serious about your food and willing to put in the tedious work of
cleaning baby wild greens, it is especially good when collected as tiny
as possible and used as something akin to a micro green onion. As it
matures into springtime, it can be used in almost any recipe you would
use garlic, onions, scallions, chives, or shallots. In late spring or
early summer it develops a hard scape and a hard purple bulblet that
resembles a purple flower with tiny chives growing off of it. The seeds
that make up the bulblets can be pulled apart and added to salads or
vinegrettes or really anywhere you can include them raw. Cooking them
the seeds, however, seems to give them an unpleasant bitterness.
Field garlic not only grows in grain fields, but also in pastures, meadows, lawns, gardens and in waste places too. Wild garlic is not hard to spot, the scallion-like greens are usually quite a bit taller than the spring grass. Sometimes I find I can gently tug the more mature garlic out of the ground without breaking it. The dampness of the ground in springtime usually makes this an easy job. Other times, they need to be dug out. A small garden trowel works just fine for this. Cleaning wild garlic might be the most tedious thing about it. The roots are generally very dirty and the browning on the tips of the greens needs to be cut away. Wash away as much mud from the plant as possible before cutting the roots off. The outer layers generally look quite rough, but peel them back and the inner garlic bulb is usually in pristine condition. Wild garlic does not store especially well but wrapped in clean, damp paper towel it should keep for close to a week.
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