Wild garlic, a lawn pest you can eat
In the Twin Tiers
(Western New York’s Southern Tier and Pennsylvania’s Northern Tier), springtime
has its own flavor. Wild leeks, which are related to onions, are vernal
culinary delights that many people will cook in soups with ham and/or potatoes.
You’ll also find them used by small grocers and delis to lend some pungent
power to sausages and dips. Some small towns will have cooking contests and
community fundraisers centered around leeks.
Despite its abundance on
the menu in those lands, it’s not the most abundant plant in the wild. Those
who provide leeks to the grocery stores and church events on an annual basis
understand that, and they know how to manage a sustainable crop that yields
from the forest floor every year. But, for those who are new to the harvesting
experience, it’s very easy to go overboard picking the greens and bulbs, thus wiping
out entire colonies.
That’s why I often encourage
people to instead pick a related plant that is quite the opposite when it comes
to numbers. It’s a plant that’s so common that many people who are particular
about their lawn or garden consider it to be an obnoxious pest, a weed. That
plant is wild garlic.
You can see it now,
rising out of the ground in backyards and meadows, clusters of what look like tall
spikes of dark and waxy grass. Those leaves are round and hollow, which
separates them from their equally edible cousin, the wild onion.
Entire mini-economies
have been built within the gardening world encouraging you to buy various herbicides
to eradicate wild garlic from your lawn. Don’t spend your money on those
chemicals. Not only are those leaves so waxy they inhibit the effectiveness of
the spray, but chemicals, in general, alter your lawn’s biome in very negative
ways. Instead, eliminate them in the most effective means possible – dig up the
bulbs. When you do that, you can then eat them, too. It’s a win-win.
If you squeeze the bulbs
you can smell that tell-tale scent of an onion. It’s not as powerful as a leek,
but it’s strong enough to satisfy your cravings. It’s that smell, too, that can
save your life. Garlic, leek, and onion bulbs can superficially look like bulbs
of other plants that can harm you. A perfect example is the star of Bethlehem,
a feral non-native species. That gorgeous white flower blooms in many a lawn
later in the spring and it will be preceded by leaves that, when young, I could
see someone easily confusing with wild onion. That flower’s very toxic bulbs aren’t
stinky like the onion family’s bulbs. Remember: If it doesn’t reek, it’s not a
leek (or its cousins). That potential for misidentification is why I suggest
harvesting wild garlic and not wild onion -- the former’s tubular leaves are
less likely to be confused with other plants’ than the latter’s flat leaves.
Wild garlic bulbs can be
cooked just as leeks, onions, and shallots. Chop them up, fry them, and add
them to any dish imaginable…soups, stir fries, casseroles, and more. You can
also fry them with a little bit of water and save that liquid as a sort of
broth to touch up other foods.
Our wild leeks, onions,
and garlics are very healthy, too, as they contain great amounts of vitamin A,
which accounts for their traditional uses by indigenous peoples as a sort of
tonic to treat colds and other ailments. They are also full of vitamin C and
B1.
If you get a hankering
for leeks this spring, give their cousin a try. You’ll be eliminating a weed
from your lawn – an invasive species no less – and adding some kick to your
menu, all while protecting the fragile population of leeks.
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