Tag Archives: Nettle

Bainbridge offers encore stinging nettle class

Did you read about the stinging nettle foraging trip last month and wish you were there? Well, Bainbridge Island’s park and recreation district has decided to offer an encore presentation with author and foraging guru Langdon Cook.

This time around, the nettles participants gather during a short morning hike will be turned into a pesto pasta.

The class is from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Wednesday, April 13 (yes, that’s next week). Cost is $35 for island residents, $5 more for those off-island. Register by calling 206-843-2306 or go to biparks.org. Here’s the flyer (pdf) for the class if you want to print it off.

Bainbridge foraging class a reminder of ‘bounty of the land’

On a recent sunny weekday afternoon, noted Northwest forager and “Fat of the Land” author (and blogger) Langdon Cook stood in a clearing in the Gazzam Lake preserve shaking a clipping from a stinging nettle.

“I remember the first time I got stung by nettles as a kid .. and then years later I have a distinct and fresh memory of eating them, having my revenge,” he said.

And with that, he and 16 people from Bainbridge Island, Seattle, Tacoma and trekked through the woodlands, snipping at a seemingly endless supply of the weed. They filled baskets and paper sacks and in a Strawberry Hill Park kitchen, sauteed onions, potatoes, garlic, added stock and whirled in freshly washed (using tongs) nettles into a a nettle soup.

From the taste, this revenge was a dish best served … with a scrape of nutmeg. The nettles added a bright note to the soup, which was akin to a potato leek style. No blistered tongues were found (boiling or drying destroys many of the stinging compounds in the nettle hairs), though I did feel a slight and very likely psychosomatic tingle on my tongue.

In the search for new tastes and exotic foods, it can be easy to forget that a walk through the woods can offer an edible bounty. It’s a lesson I’ve often forgotten, and one I was gratefully reminded of this week as I shot video for Tristan Baurick’s story on nettles.

As a kid, my grandma used to come home from a friend’s Hood Canal beachfront house with strands of seaweed, occasional bunches of horsetail shoots or bags of woodsy mushrooms. Or she’d put a garden shovel in my hand and tell me to dig fast for those butter clams.

A renewed appreciation for the food around us — and a way to entice foodies outdoors — is one Bainbridge Metro Park and Recreation District’s Jeff Ozimek hopes to spark with a series of spring and summer classes called “Bounty of the Land.”

“One of my biggest passions is going to hike in the woods and being able to figure out what to eat,” he said.

The classes, which opened for registration this week, will be led by Cook and others and range from digging and cooking shellfish on the beach to picking berries for pies. Classes cost $30 to $75 for island residents, though for $5 extra, non-residents can take them too. They encourage you to sign up early; some classes fill fast while others may be cancelled if there aren’t enough people who sign up.

Here are a few of the classes coming up. Download the “Bounty of the Land pdf” to see them all and register at biparks.org.

Oyster gardening, April 11: Take a tour of the Taylor Shellfish Hatchery, learn aout the gear you need, when to harvest and sample a variety of oysters on the half shell. Cost: $29.

Shellfish Foraging and Cooking, May 1 (repeated May 18): Visit Taylor Shellfish Farms with Langdon Cook to learn about several species of Puget Sound shellfish, learn how to shcuk them and cook a batch with a champagne vinegar and white wine sauce. Cost: $49.

Geoduck Dig, June 15: Hunt for the difficult-to-get geoduck with Langdon Cook and learn how to cook the briny delicacy. Cost: $75.

I hope to take a couple more of BI Parks’ classes this year, and would love to hear from any of you who do the same.

Class Teaches How to Forage for Stinging Nettles on Bainbridge Island

In some circles, it’s considered a painful annoyance when hiking in shorts. In others, stinging nettles are a superfood.

For the latter group, Bainbridge Parks and Recreation will offer a class on how to forage for nettles in local parks as well as how not to get stung and how to cook it with food foraging blogger and author Langdon Cook. Participants will leave both with knowledge and some stinging nettle soup.

The class comes during peak nettle-foraging season, early spring, when the plants are tender. The class runs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. March 23 (unfortunately for the working class, that’s on a Wednesday). Cost is $35.