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Eat your weeds

Posted on July 10th, 2007 – 7:40 AM
By Jaime Chismar

Didja know that Gandhi’s favorite food is growing in your own backyard? No, it’s not creeping charlie or dandelions, though both are edible. (Creeping charlie is a member of the mint family, surprised?) I’m talking about purslane, a little leafy succulent plant that sprouts between your patio bricks and cracks in your driveway.

My path to purslane appreciation started this spring. Little red and green sprouts had taken over the one of my garden beds. As I planted my snap peas, I thought I had pulled them all up. But I was wrong, so wrong. The little succulents multiplied faster than crab grass. A week later, I had twice as many sprouts and twice as much weeding to do.

Later in the spring, my girl crush, Lynne Rossetto Casper interviewed botany professor Dr. Peter Gail, an advocate of eating weeds. During the depression, his family was extremely poor. A concerned neighbor showed his mother how to prepare purslane. He and his siblings would harvest this nutrient-rich weed for dinner. (A 1986 study showed that purslane is high in Omega-3’s, Vitamin C and Vitamin B.) When Lynne said it tasted like spinach, my ears perked up. I’m a big fan of greens, but despite my best efforts, my spinach always bolts before I can harvest more than a serving or two.

“Gee, I wish I had purslane in my backyard,” I remember thinking, “I should really Google that…”

purslane.jpg

I soon forgot about purslane, but purslane did not forget about me. It thrived on our patio. It sprung up alongside the driveway. It crept between the cracks in our sidewalk.

“Grrr… What is this stuff?” Brian growled as swept the patio tile for our 4th of July party.

“Dunno,” I shrugged, “Just throw it in the compost bin.”

Then, Sunday morning, I finally put two and two together. Brian was playing Super Paper Mario while I was looking for ideas for lunch in Deborah Madison’s Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone. As I flipped through the salad section, I was struck by a drawing of some greens. The plant looked really familiar… Purslane… Purslane… a succulent with slightly salty, slightly sour taste… popular in Asia… used like spinach during the Depression… Purslane…

I jumped off the couch and ran out to the patio. I bent down and pulled a few leaves from the stubborn succulent plant sticking out between the tiles. Purslane? I took a bite. The plant had slightly salty, slightly sour taste.

“Purslane!!! Whoo-hoo!!!”

I hopped online for a little insight and few recipes, and found a world of purslane enthusiasts. In fact, the only country not in love with purslane is the United States. Most of us Yanks treat it as weed, not an edible plant. However, in New York, purslane is currently the little darling of haute cuisine and widely available in farmers markets. Who knew?

Monday, I tossed some purslane in a Tupperware container with some snap peas, mustard greens, thai basil, cashews and leftover chicken. It was a fantastic lunch. I made my coworkers try it.

“This is a weed? This is tasty!”

I guess Gandhi really knew his greens.

Are your a fan of purslane? How do you prepare this persistent little plant? Are there other weeds that tickle your palette?

(Note: I once knew a new age herbalist in Portland, Maine. She believed that certain medicinal plants would appear when people need healing. I *did* notice a ton of it growing outside the Subway restaurant on Washington Avenue. It certainly gives new meeting to the slogan “Eat Fresh.”)

12 Responses to "Eat your weeds"

Colleen says:

July 10th, 2007 at 9:11 am

Well, now I don’t have to feel quite so bad about not keeping up with my purslane. I can pretend I’m growing it all over my vegetable garden on purpose!

I’ll have to try some. I’ve literally pulled bushel baskets full of the stuff out already. I seem to have more this year than I have in the past.

Jaime Chismar says:

July 10th, 2007 at 9:29 am

If you like the taste and texture of seaweed, you’ll love it. Most chefs serve the tender leaves and tiny branches. I wasn’t adventurous enough to try the thick, vigorous stem.

If you try it, please let us know what you think!

D.D. says:

July 10th, 2007 at 10:36 am

Purslane! So that’s what it’s called. I’ve pulled it by the bushel, but never ate it. My wife reminds me that we got it last year in one week’s CSA bag, but I had forgotten.

Thanks for the name. I always prefer naming the weeds I’m pulling more accurately than *#&%.

Danika says:

July 10th, 2007 at 12:16 pm

Mystery solved!! This plant began to grow in my potted plants last summer and it just didn’t look like a weed to me so I let it grow… and grow, and grow, and grow, until it completely took over my pots. This year it came back, so I can’t wait to get home and taste it.

Jaime Chismar says:

July 10th, 2007 at 12:28 pm

Let me know if you like the taste… For those into canning, purslane is pickled in the former Soviet Block.

Liz says:

July 10th, 2007 at 5:43 pm

I have been letting mine grow because I liked how the leaves look, but now I will try to eat it.

Robin says:

July 11th, 2007 at 6:26 am

Organic Gardening had an article several years ago on weed eating. The title was something like “Eat Your Weedies”.
The parents in the neighborhood were shocked because I would point out the edible weeds and flowers in my garden to the kids and let them eat them. I had to quit, because they didn’t think the kids would be smart enough to not eat plants that are not edible.

Jaime Chismar says:

July 11th, 2007 at 11:40 am

It kinda takes some of the magic out of the world, no?

Peter Hoh says:

July 11th, 2007 at 8:57 pm

Gave some to my neighbor, who shared some with her 4 year old boy. He loved it. They followed me back to my garden for more. I pulled up a big purslane plant, and he was so excited. “That’s for us?!” On the way out, he turned to me and said, “Thanks for the weed!”

Jaime Chismar says:

July 12th, 2007 at 10:57 am

LOL! That is fantastic!

Ken Bradley says:

July 12th, 2007 at 1:32 pm

I just dug up my entire yard but had to let it sit for a couple of weeks prior to seeding. It is covered with purslane. So which local resturants would like to purchase my weeds?

I tried it… not bad. I have not tried it in a salad or mixed with other vegatables which seems like the preferable way to digest.

Garden Guy