Wild plants suggests wilderness. Untamed. Possibly dangerous (ie. toxic). But weeds implies a valueless nuisance. An overgrown eyesore.
Alright. We'll go with 'weeds'.
"So, that thing with sharp edges was 'prickly lettuce'?" Hannah asked, gingerly touching a finger to her lips. She'd just finished up our lunch salad made of plants unrecognizable to her.
On our kitchen table was the 1995 St. Albert Gazette Homestyle section with my first story on edible weeds. I'd pulled it out for this post because I was trying to calculate how long weeds have been a part of my diet. More than thirteen years, apparently.
Along the mid-rib of a prickly lettuce leaf is a row of spines. I was studying the tiny spikes on a piece of prickly lettuce that was protruding out of my cheese sandwich. They looked vaguely menacing and I wondered why I do this? Do I actually like the taste of prickly lettuce? In a salad or cheese sandwich, all you taste is salad or cheese sandwich. But a leaf of prickly lettuce by itself is bitter-tasting.
Over 13 years ago, the Toxics Watch Society campaigned for a right-to-know bylaw that would require advanced notice whenever and wherever pesticides were to be applied. ('Pesticides' in a broad sense, including insecticides and herbicides.) The most widely used herbicide is 2,4-D on dandelions, and it doesn't take long to discover the history of the dandelion as a valued plant. The generation of Toxics Watchers at the time decided that a useful part of an anti-pesticides campaign would be a pro-dandelion front and we launched The Lion's Tooth Festival to celebrate some of the uses of dente-de-lion.
My weed-eating, then, began as ideology. But it rapidly became an over-all value activity. It was pretty easy to calculate the value of dandelion-root coffee-extender by price of coffee conserved. Today, my purchases of green produce at the supermarket simply ends the first day that the chickweed comes up. And now that resource inputs like water and fuel are becoming limiting factors on food production and distribution, having foodstuff that require no additional water than rainfall, and no fuel at all, is a valuable thing.
Here's a photo of prickly lettuce:

I just use it as a substitute for lettuce.
June 30 2008, 04:42:43 UTC 3 years ago
June 30 2008, 19:31:42 UTC 3 years ago
I just finished another prickly lettuce & cheddar cheese sandwich for lunch. I think I liked it...
None of my books say so, but this website says:
The bitter, milky latex sap is a mild narcotic and sleep inducer. The early Romans ate lettuce at the end of meals to aid digestion and induce sleep. Later, with the development of lettuce varieties containing less of the bitter, soporific sap, they ate lettuce at the beginning of the meal to whet the appetite. The European prickly lettuce (Lactuca serriola) contains considerably more of the milky, narcotic juice and has several medicinal and herbal uses. The sap is sometimes dried and used to adulterate opium.
Mmmm. Narcotic juice.
July 3 2008, 02:34:43 UTC 3 years ago
July 3 2008, 02:38:29 UTC 3 years ago
So, this would fit then? It's still heavy on the anecdotal content, I was thinking. Not quite a how-to-eat-weeds post yet. But if you think it's okay, please do x-post it.
July 3 2008, 03:19:17 UTC 3 years ago
July 3 2008, 20:08:29 UTC 3 years ago
I made a new "block" in the lower left-hand corner called "100 Foot Diet". The first link, "edible weeds", will display all of the posts tagged with the category of the same name.
I made a few edits. Changed the title. If that's not cool, just log in and edit.
July 14 2008, 02:51:37 UTC 3 years ago
September 9 2008, 04:36:06 UTC 3 years ago
a question for you...
http://greenedmonton.ca/prickly-let