13 Best Wild Edibles ANYONE Can Find Nearly Everywhere…
Today I’ve got something really important to share…
A List Of The Most Common Wild Edibles You Can Find Everywhere…
Because knowing a few common wild edible plants and flowers is extremely valuable when forced into survival mode.
Heck, most of these might even make it into your kitchen regularly.
But if fate hands you a raw deal, look for these best wild edible plants to help sustain.
13 Best Wild Edible Plants
1. Dandelions
2. Cattails
3. Wild Asparagus
4. Milk Thistle
5. Clover
6. Wild Onions
7. Bamboo
8. Purslane
9. Violets
10. Day-lily
11. Berries
12. Acorns
13. Wild Lettuce
You Can Never Be Too Careful
The 13 Best Wild Edible Plants
1. Dandelions
We are all familiar with this common lawn weed, but few people realize that this plant can be eaten from top to bottom.
The yellow flower can be pulled from the plant and eaten raw.
Leaves and roots can also be eaten, but leaves taste their best when the plant is still young.
Older leaves can have more of a bitter taste. Leaves and roots taste better after being boiled.
My grandmother used to boil young dandelions and put them in the refrigerator to cool off.
After cooling, she added olive oil, vinegar, oregano, and pepper.
For a picky kid, they weren’t bad at all.
If I were in the middle of nowhere, I’d boil them, eat them, and thank God I found them.
2. Cattails
We tried cattails in Boy Scouts.
They were a staple for Native Americans.
Both the tips and the white-colored bottoms of the stalks are edible raw, and palatable.
But be careful not to eat the fiber as it may cause a stomach ache.
They’re one of the best wild edible plants that provide an excellent starch source.
Cattail pollen can also be mixed with flour and egg to make cattail pancakes.
The pollen is gathered only from the top of this plant in late June and early July.
You’ll know you’ve hit the pollen when your hands turn yellow.
3. Wild Asparagus
Asparagus is one of the best wild edible plants widely found across North America.
If you find it in your life, you’ll probably find it in or around the same location for the rest of your life.
This wild edible plant is hardy.
Look for old dead stalks about three feet high.
Near those, new young stalks can be found.
Wild asparagus doesn’t like soil that’s too moist.
It can usually be found along ditch banks or next to railroad tracks.
When we were kids, we picked it along the tracks when we were pheasant hunting.
At least we came home with something!
If you live in a place where summers are dry, you can usually find wild asparagus.
Wild asparagus stalks are usually thinner than those you see at the supermarket.
If you cut a stalk as close to the ground as possible, a new stalk will grow back.
Wild asparagus can be eaten raw, boiled, or steamed.
4. Milk Thistle
Another wild edible plant found across North America is milk thistle.
This is the plant with the purple flower-like top that we see along some highways.
The spines can be removed from the leaves, and the leaves eaten with other greens.
Stalks can be boiled.
The plant’s roots can be boiled or even baked.
5. Clover
Everybody knows clover, which falls within the wild edible plant group.
Clover is everywhere in the United States and is very high in protein.
Raw clover can cause problems with digestion, but it can be made into a juice form.
Flour can also be made from dried clover flowers and seed pods.
Tea can also be made from clover, steeped in water.
Everybody needs a little luck to get out of a survival situation, so try not to eat the four-leaf ones.
6. Wild Onions
If it looks like an onion and smells like an onion, go ahead and eat it.
If it looks like an onion but doesn’t smell like one, don’t eat it.
It could be dangerous.
The same rule applies to garlic.
Wild onions like to grow in damp places, especially on the forest floor.
All wild onion plants can be eaten from top to bottom.
It can be eaten raw, cooked, or with other greens.
7. Bamboo
Classified as grass, bamboo is one of the wild edible plants found in certain parts of the United States.
The fiber content in bamboo is very high.
Shoots should be cut when very young and under a foot tall.
Bamboo cannot be eaten raw.
Outer leaves should be peeled off.
Remove any tough parts of the shoots.
Cut them into 1/8″ slices and boil them uncovered for at least 20 minutes or longer to rid them of bitterness.
They can then be eaten alone or with other greens.
Bamboo shoots are high in fiber, protein, and potassium.
Dried bamboo also makes excellent kindling for a fire if caught in a survival situation.
8. Purslane
This is a common weed we’ve seen before, but no one can pronounce the name.
It grows near the ground, resembles shady areas, and resembles a miniature jade plant.
We’d see it growing in sidewalk cracks going to and from school.
It’s one of the most nutritional edible weeds with high Omega-3 fatty acids and beta-carotene.
Purslane can be eaten raw or cooked, or mixed with greens.
It’s making its way onto restaurant menus, so it’s good enough for a restaurant.
So it’s good enough for somebody in the middle of nowhere with few nutritional choices.
Wherever you find purslane, it will be around for a long time.
Its seeds have been viable in the soil for well over 30 years.
Like asparagus, once it’s there, it will always be there.
9. Violets
Violets are wild edible plants high in vitamins A and C.
Their leaves can be eaten raw or boiled, or they can be dried to make tea.
The flowers can be eaten raw.
Be sure not to eat the roots or stems and avoid African Violets.
Violets have also been used medicinally.
A common headache cure is a warm towel soaked with violet tea and placed on the back of the neck.
10. Day-lily
The daylilies have a long history in China as both edible flowers and medicine.
Young daylily leaves can be cut at 5 inches and sautéed or stir-fried.
Don’t damage the flower stalks when cutting the leaves because the daylily can be cut again when the buds and blossoms are present.
The buds can be eaten raw, boiled, or stir-fried.
Partially opened or fully opened daylily flowers can be battered with a mixture of flour and water and fried.
The roots of the daylily are also edible, either raw or boiled.
They pack high nutrition in the late fall after storing vitamins and minerals from the summer season.
11. Berries
My favorite wild edible plants are berries, which grow everywhere in northern North America.
Wild blueberries and blackberries grow in cool and high climates.
Almost all berries with dark colors can be safely eaten in the wilderness.
Both blueberries and blackberries are loaded with Vitamin C and rich in fiber.
White, yellow, and red berries can kill. Stay away from them unless you are certain, especially in a survival situation.
Although grapes are not necessarily berries, I don’t know of a single type of grape that can’t be eaten.
If the birds have eaten all of the grapes, pick the smaller grape leaves, dry them for a couple of days.
And then boil them for about 20 minutes uncovered.
Any meat you might have can be wrapped in the leaves.
If there’s no meat, eat the grape leaves by themselves.
I’ve eaten at least 10,000 of them and never got sick.
Although relatively low in caloric value, they’re rich in vitamins and fiber.
I’d even eat them raw after washing them if I had to.
12. Acorns
Most people don’t realize that acorns are edible.
Not raw, of course, but if you take the time to process them, you can turn them into acorn flour.
This flour can then be used to bake just like wheat flour.
Now it has a unique taste, and the properties will make baking slightly different.
But as a last resort food source or as a way to use what nature provides, you should try a wild edible plant.
13. Wild Lettuce (Lactuca Canadensis)
I wanted to highlight one more wild plant that you should forage.
It’s not edible, but it’s a great find for medicinal purposes.
Wild lettuce can be harvested and processed to make wild lettuce extract.
This extract has many medical benefits.
So it’s worth finding, foraging, and harvesting if you happen to come across any of it!
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