I have a friend who found wonderful, good-sized truffles nearby last winter. He's local and has that knack I can scarcely believe of spotting the flies that hover over oak tree roots when truffles are underneath. I'm quite jealous that he can do that but I know my limits so I'll stick with the foods that are easier to find.(Have a look here for hunting truffles with pigs: Gaston and the Truffle Hunters (Home Use Version)
One of them is wild rocket. It's everywhere. More peppery than the shop stuff it needs to be added to salad in smaller quantities but it's a very good addition.
And then there are cherries and plums on the way. The plums are better than the cherries - small and sweet and easily turned into jam or made into desserts. I'm a bit spoilt for large red cherries anyway as my neighbours have two big orchards of cherry trees producing far more fruit than they can use. The only problem is that, since the trees are not treated with pesticide - happily - the flies get to the cherries and then the worms grow inside them. It's like a massive industrial process - every single cherry seems to get done on the same day so you have to keep checking the progress of the fruit and try to pick them just as they ripen but just before the flies get there. As the cherries are huge and sweet and a rich dark red they're worth pursuing. At present the trees are in blossom - great white petals buzzing with bees from the mielerie along the track - but the fruit forms and ripens with astonishing speed.
Lastly, the other good ingredient right now is the stinging nettle. I've been reading about the now-maligned nettle and it turns out it's a bit of a star. Packed with vitamins and minerals it's said to have about a dozen medical uses from helping arthritic joints to curing thinning hair. It used to be widely eaten during the war and was also harvested to make the dye for camouflage materials. IT can be made into material too. And paper. And very good soup. A friend made me a nettle soup this week, using an armful of young nettle leaves, a few small potatoes and a few small onions. He added a bit of creme fraiche just before serving and it was wonderful. It starts off looking muddy and brown but once it's whizzed in a mixer it turns a luxurious, velvety, deep dark green. You can use it just as you would spinach. It's high time it was rehabilitated and people stopped seeing it as a weed. Amazing the knowledge that society can lose...
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