Digging Ramps in Appalachia
Come along with us as we go on a ramp digging trip in the mountains. Ramps are a native plant of the high elevations of the Appalachian Mountains and are considered a rite of Spring for many. It was a wonderful day fellowshipping one with another, in the great outdoors, good food, and fresh ramps!
Visit the following links to learn more about the tradition of digging ramps in Appalachia:
blindpigandtheacorn.com/the-r...
blindpigandtheacorn.com/rumin...
blindpigandtheacorn.com/a-mes...
blindpigandtheacorn.com/do-yo...
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#Appalachia #DiggingRamps #WildRamps
Пікірлер: 831
Visit the following links to learn more about the tradition of digging ramps in Appalachia: blindpigandtheacorn.com/the-ramp-tramp/ blindpigandtheacorn.com/ruminations-on-ramps/ blindpigandtheacorn.com/a-mess-of-ramps/ blindpigandtheacorn.com/do-you-like-ramps/
@everycoLor_312
3 жыл бұрын
You're fun!✌🏼☺👍🏼❤
@wandamoser7909
3 жыл бұрын
enjoyed reading the ramp tramp lol
@bengullett2837
3 жыл бұрын
I have been talking to my wife about going back,we miss it.
@cordyg4306
3 жыл бұрын
What is the nutritional value of ramps?
@bengullett2837
3 жыл бұрын
@@cordyg4306 not sure,but most green lefty plants are full of antioxidents and vitimins.I will have to research it.
Hello from Nicholas County West Virginia, near Richwood. The ramps this year were thick on the southern mountain sides, and extra tasty. The best spring tonic in the world. We just enjoyed a awesome cookout with fried taters, cornbread, bacon, eggs, deer meat, fresh caught trout just minutes old and bunches of ramps with good coffee. Life is good in the mountains!
@debbiehuser9056
3 жыл бұрын
My dads family was from Summersville. They always dug ramps .
@rosalindastourian3985
2 жыл бұрын
My Great Grandma lived in Richwood and she LOVED ramps!
@peachy75019
2 жыл бұрын
Hmmm ... wondering if you are my cousin Randy ??
@randy5766
2 жыл бұрын
@@peachy75019 Hello, I do have many cousins, some I have meet, others no. Where do live and what is your family roots?
@peachy75019
2 жыл бұрын
@@randy5766 Now that I re-read your comment, I think you aren't because you are calling out from Nicholas County and my cousin now lives in Berkeley County. Sorry about that.
There are so many KZread channels about Appalachia, my home. Only yours “celebrates” the beauty of the land, the traditions, the culture and the people. The rest exploit, denigrate, humiliate. Thank you for your work and your love of a home that is my place too. God Bless You!
@timesthree5757
3 жыл бұрын
No that's just us having fun.
@michaelciccone2194
3 жыл бұрын
I love this channel too! My maternal ancestors are from Outer Banks NC
@SC-oi9wp
2 жыл бұрын
DONNIE LAWS is an awesome channel. Check him out !!
Matt said something I haven't heard in a long time. "They're too stout for me to eat raw." Stout meaning strong flavor. Watching this channel is a blessing and a curse. I miss "back home" so bad. After every video my heart is both full and broken. How can I not love you all? Its like home movies of kinfolk. But its also reminds me of what's I'm missing. ❤️
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you 😀
Maybe not the first to say but here in Wales ramps are called wild garlic or ramsons and we pick them every spring. They grow along the streams and on the hills of our little hill farm in West Wales. Always seen as a sign of spring after the snowdrops, primroses and daffodils. We try to leave the roots in the ground and further down the valley you can smell them as you drive past, they're so abundant.
@HundedeskriegesWV
Жыл бұрын
Slightly different plant, same family though. In Appalachia we have Allium tricoccum. In Wales (and Europe/Asia) you have Allium ursinum. For eating though, they might as well be the same.
@jackstevens6263
9 ай бұрын
If you leave or replant the roots will they grow new plants?
My dad and mom took all of us to dig ramps, before we were even in school. It was a family outing. All of us enjoyed ramp, and still do. Dad’s gone, mom is in her mid eighties. So we try to dig her a mess every spring. However she has a patch behind the house that I started when I was around sixteen. I am in my mid sixties and live a little ways off. God blessings to you and your family. Thanks for sharing with us.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you have those memories of ramp digging with your family 😀
@overout429
3 жыл бұрын
Ok, how did the word "mess " become associated with many vegetables ? I have been to several mountain ranges but the mess of Appalachian mountains is my favorite, I walked them in New Hampshire and Georgia. When I gave up watching pro sports I picked Appalachian State as my team. In Texas, going out of state to pick a favorite football team is unforgivable. My grandfather was from Kentucky so we learned some of the ways of mountain folks. I hope I take after him, he was a good man.
@victorbunch7725
3 жыл бұрын
@@overout429 My advice wheather you want it or not, Give up the BS. games and get serious about the good times in the Mountains and go dig some ramps,,,
In N. England we call them ramsons or wild garlic and in spring the woods smell of nothing else. We tend to use them in stews and as salad greens. Great video, thank you.
We always plant the root back in the ground. I have some on my bank that we planted back like that and they come up every year.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
We planted our roots-I'm hoping they come up here 😀 Thank you for watching Wanda!
Waynesville, NC 1982 went to the Ramp Festival. There was an old timer politician known as The King of the Ramps and he'd get on stage praising ramps with the fervor of a Baptist preacher during revival.
I just got to see this video, even though it’s 2yrs old. I love it my family and I would go out like that to pick honey suckle and butter cup flowers. If you put the yellow flower up to the bottom of your chin it would cast golden yellow. If it did cast you loved butter and had a heart of gold. At least mother told us that. Thanks for the memories. Brooks Oregon.
Just dug some ramps a couple of weeks ago. Been wanting and finally saw some not far from road. Landowner kindly allowed me to go digging. When growing up I only heard them called wild leeks and as an adult heard ramps. Are good and free. Love getting food from nature that God has provided.
All the cut off root ends can be replanted😊
@keemarie1
Жыл бұрын
Yes but they take about 4 or 5 years till you start seeing any come back up where you planted them!!
There’s nothing prettier than the mountains and hills of Appalachia! I’m so blessed to have grown up here! Thank you for all you do!!!❤TN Nana😊
My family from North Carolina every spring would have a ramp fry. I miss it so much.
Looks so much like Cherokee Nation Oklahoma where I live, so beautiful. Hills always make me feel safe. The mountains & the hills are our protectors, & gives of life as they always been. Donadagohv'i
@mikethompson1464
3 жыл бұрын
Brasstown is close to the EBCI Rez. Parts of it in Marble and Robbinsville. Heart of Cherokee country.
@LissieMac
3 жыл бұрын
@@mikethompson1464 Never been to N. Carolina, know it would be emotional trip. The mountains are so beautiful, how lucky you are!!🤗
@biancacox9699
2 жыл бұрын
I live in far North Texas about 45 mins from the red River…Our daughter went to Unuversity of Arkansas Fayetteville and the past 2 years we discovered the beautiful mountains of Oklahoma as they are approaching Arkansas…I love the mountains and although these mountains are not as big as Colorado they do just the trick to give me my mountain fix…We won’t drive to Arkansas any other way now only thru the back way thru the mountains …just so beautiful ❤️
Such beautiful wildflowers growing in the woods with the ramps. Thanks for this video and the outdoor foraging and cooking tips too.
@CelebratingAppalachia
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it 😀
We always make sure to cut the roots and put back in the dirt where we got them so they will keep growing! They grow at around 700 ft in central kentucky. We love your contributions to celebrating Appalachia and enjoy coming along with your everyday life.
@lindaspillman1817
2 жыл бұрын
This was a question I was wanting to ask Thank you because of the root I figured u should just replant so if u cut the green off and use it instead of pulling up the whole bulb they will do better the following year is that right ?
@AuntJennyMarie
2 жыл бұрын
@@lindaspillman1817 yes, that is correct for my area. Happy gathering 😀
@lindaspillman1817
2 жыл бұрын
Aunt Jenny Marie Thanks I figure this was the case why just toss the root on the ground when u can just cut off the green where there at and leave the rest to replenish
You got that 100% right aint nothing better than being in them Carolina mouuntains
Enjoyed the video so much. Reminded me of when I was small and people would go out and look for what they called dry land cress. Some called it creasy greens I think. I think it’s great this has been passed down. Wish I had paid more attention to things back then.
Good land, good friends, good times, and good memories ... God’s daily blessings and joys.
Before viewing this video I'd never heard of the wild-growing ramps you dug and enjoyed as part of a delicious looking picnic meal. The wildflowers you included in the video were delightful to see, especially the dogtooth violets and the trilliums that are also native to my part of the country, way out west.
Tipper I want to thank you for sending me this video now I will know what Matt is talking about next time I here the word ramps and I’m a ole fashion country gal and I have a good felling I would like the ramps my self I really enjoy this video
Thanks Tipper great information for a now 64 year old man that to my knowledge and memory never had them. My Father grew Texas sweets onions for years. He would take then to church to give away to anybody there. Precious memories for a guy that moved away but is back to stay in Elizabethhton TN! Thanks again!
This seems like heaven. I hope to one day visit this beautiful part of our Country. Thank you so much for sharing this with the world.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
I hope you get to visit! Thank you for watching 😀
@LissieMac
3 жыл бұрын
@@CelebratingAppalachia hopefully I will before its time to go. I know few from Eastern Band, it will be an emotional trip. If you're every around our neck of the woods looks us up. Some of the ancestors on my father's father side are buried in Rowan Co at the Presbyterian church Thyatira, John Knox was my 6x grandfather from Renfewshire Scotland to Coleraine N.Ireland then N. Carolina. My grandmother's family were from N. Georgia & N. Alabama my Cherokee family. Keep up your good works Wado Sgi, Mary Elisabeth Knox
Used to have a ramp festival in konnarock, va and a ramp eating contest - was great fun - there would be a Ramp Queen
I really enjoyed this video, Tipper. There's nothing that pleases me more than seeing people enjoying nature and celebrating the practices of those who came before us. It's a great way to connect with nature and appreciate the bounty it provides. Three weeks ago, my wife and I traveled from the northern Appalachian Mountains where we live in northern NH down yonder to your neck of the woods. The purpose for the journey was to hike the Foothills Trail from Oconee State Park to Table Rock State Park. While on trail, we were blessed with the emergence of spring and were surrounded by beautiful wild flowers, some of which you captured in your video. Trillium, wild iris, violets, bloodroot, and yes, even ramps, though they were not yet in bloom. I must say that you live in a beautiful place. And though some may think of the north and south as two different planets, your videos have shown me how incredibly similar we are. God bless you and your family. Thanks for what you do.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
So glad you enjoyed it Roland! I'm glad you and your wife got to make the trip 😀
Dug a few ramps today....there used to be ramp festival in Whitetop,VA every year as a fund raiser for the Fire Dept...that's a nice patch you have...take care
@1Melody1963
3 жыл бұрын
Barnardsville, NC still has one in early spring each year
i dug a handful of ramps 3 years ago & chose to transplant a few of them. now, i've got 5 big patches of ramps that come up in my yard every year. Delicious!!!
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
That is wonderful! We planted a few but I'm worried we're not high enough in elevation for them to do well. Congratulations on yours!
@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney
3 жыл бұрын
@@CelebratingAppalachia I dig them in and around Huntington, WV, almost always at elevations under a thousand feet (the best spot I know is barely above the Ohio River water level, which I think is around 500’ there), so I don’t think elevation is necessarily a requirement, but I’m sure better patches exist higher up. I’ve very rarely found any up in the mountains, but I’m generally not there til summer, so that’s no real surprise. I make pickles out of the bulbs and stems and dehydrate and crush the greens to use kinda like chives, they take on a nice, roasted-garlic/chive sort of flavor and are tasty on nearly everything. The pickles are good for salsa and relishes and stuff, or just minced up in some good grainy mustard for burgers and hot dogs and stuff. I’ve only ever seen the red ones.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
@@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney That's encouraging news! The only ones we've ever known about in WNC are at higher elevations. Thanks for sharing that info!
@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney
3 жыл бұрын
@@CelebratingAppalachia What’s WNC? Sorry.Seconded.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
@@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney Sorry I meant western North Carolina 😀
What a beautiful area! I’ve never heard of ramps before. Thanks for taking us along 🙂
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it Kat 😀
@christinachildress6109
3 жыл бұрын
Each year in the spring there is a ramp festival in Cosby Tenn. They have entertainment and fry up lots of ramps with scrambeled ehgs.
@shaallen8412
3 жыл бұрын
Hard living. We have alligator, strawberry , crawfish, bbq , & Chilli festivals. I love Texas. Appalachia would be a great place to go to loose weight.😆
@wiseguysoutdoors2954
Жыл бұрын
Pretty much a wild garlicky leek
What a beautiful day all around! We are going morel-hunting here in a bit, too, love these rites of spring.
I used to go out digging ramps with my Dad when i was a kid! I loved it, at least until we cooked the ramps. I never quite liked them unfortunately. Great memories though! Thanks for posting it.
Thank you for sharing your little slice of heaven with me. My Maternal grandmother was from southern Appalachia. I remember her talking about Ramps. The one gentleman used the word “Gomm”. My grandmother used that word too. She would say Mess and Gomm as well. I love your channel. ✌️💕
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
I take the roots and plant them in the back of my yard for next year, just learned about ramps a few years ago - how did I live without them!!
We dig ramps every spring, we love them with eggs in them and we love branch lettle too. From Burnsville, N.C.
I dug ramps last weekend here in rural NY State . Its just like a big green carpet in the woods right now there are so many.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Charles-that's how it was here too. So pretty! Thank you for watching 😀
@jaxszeszko5291
3 жыл бұрын
I live in Kingston ny is there someplace close by me to get them
@NCrdwlf
3 жыл бұрын
It’s ramp season in md too .
My dad is from Kentucky, but I was raised in northern Ohio. My dad found a patch of ramps in some woods here in Ohio and I remember him taking us kids out to ramp hunt, but boy did they smell. Thanks for the memories.
Have a ramp patch in robbinsville that's been amazing for me . Grew up on snowbird and been digging them for 30 years
Yes LOVE them Lucky yes It's a good day whit dad love those times
Midwest Illinois we have blood root, ramps,and molly moochers (morels)
I appreciate the intelligent content that you present. There is power in the use of knowledge, and there is great power in knowing what growing things God placed on planet Earth for us to thrieve on. Thank you.
THAT WAS FUN. YOU ALL SOUND LIKE MY DADDYS PEOPLE TALKING. I MISS THEM. ALL GONE NOW. THANKS FOR the memories
I remember going out with mum, brother and sister, aunties and cousins to dig up some wild garlic. There used to be an old lady up the back of nana and pas place, everyone called her Granny and saw her for medicinal help as going into town took ages and if the rivers were up you couldn’t cross them. The wild garlic was hers and some would wash down the creek and settle on the banks. Wonderful taste. Cheers Wendy
I really enjoyed this. It looks like you had a lot of fun. This reminds me of when I was on my dad's farm in Alberta, Canada. We also had wild edibles, that were very good. I recall getting hazelnuts, from a hazelnut bush, wild berries, and my dad and his brothers picked wild mushrooms. It was very tasty. I love garlic and onions very much. A ramp festival sounds very awesome. Cheers!
Ah, delicious ramps! The American Club in Kohler Wisconsin pays up to $20 a pound for ramps. They do grow here but they are very few and far. Great video!
DIDNT KNOW WHAT RAMPS WERE NEVER HEARD OF THEM I LOVE LOVE YOUR VIDEOS KEEP MAKING THEM I LEARN FROM YOU I COULD LISTEN TO YOUR STORIES ALL DAY
My Dad always talked about wild alliums and I just thought he meant onions but now I'm thinking it's the ramps. As a child he grew up on the Va & NC middle line. He also had beautiful teeth and people thought he had false😁 teeth, he loved that and said he had good teeth because his granny ( Irish) showed him how to take a nice twig from a tree (I want to say birch but can't remember but he showed me one time) and furry the end of it and it almost looked like a soft furry tip to brush your teeth with. Funny watching you and the homeview of what you can remember and by the way I did not get my Dads perfect straight & white teeth.🙄 Tks
I'm 73 years old and my first grade teacher called some of us boys ramp scallions.
@ompaloompa4970
3 жыл бұрын
Chuckles!
I’ve never learned about ramps till today ... but from the description , think I’d take a liking to them. Sure looked tasty cooked in all that goodness . Yummy , then topped off with delicious peanut butter cookies ... best of all just being together on a lovely day in a beautiful place ...Celebrating Appalachia . I do want to try me some ramps❣️
What a wonderful country way of life to travel the forests and hills harvesting nature’s wild bounty with family and friends . Thank you so much . Respect !!
we have family property in southwest NY,,, ramps literally cover acres and acres of our woods. can fill a 5 gallon bucket without moving more than 50 feet,,,,
That reminded me of camping on the cranberry river in richwood every April for years. I agree with the gentleman that said you can make a mistake, by not putting in enough ramps.
My friend told me some good stories about digging ramps. I had never heard of them until then. She also told me the same thing about the school kids being sent home because of the smell.
We used to head out in the spring picking poke salat. Loved that first batch of the year with cornbread.
We don’t have ramps but our yard is full of wild garlic every spring and early summer So we learned to harvest it during the pandemic and had it then and still do in season It’s delicious Thanks
Thank you for showing how to harvest ramps. They are some kind of good.. God bless.🦢🇺🇸🌹
Beautiful area and a great outdoor meal after a short days work. Sure looked yummy.
Watching from Uganda African
I’ve never heard of Ramps, but would love to try some. That’s about as close to the fresh earth as you can get. It looked Sooooo GOOD!! Would sure like to be walking in those woods with y’all. ♥️❣️🙏🏼❣️♥️
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Judy-they're good! I hope you get to try them sometime. Thank you for watching 😀
I've heard of ramps but never really knew what they were. Thanks for sharing this information with us.
I always liked ramps cut up in branch lettuce and kilt with bacon grease.
Love ramps, wish it was time to go ramp digging. We love ramps and eggs together, good eating.
Love the mountains and the mountain people
I'm going out for ramps tomorrow in Western PA. - I'm at about 2000 feet and we get them here. I was out two weeks ago and they were just starting to come up so I'm hoping for a good harvest. My favorite combo is buttered ramps on venison - their strength is perfect for cutting down the gamey flavor of a high-stress kill.
Believe it or not, ramps grow in NJ. After I moved up here, there was a group going ramp digging. I was so excited. I got a good amount and for supper I made ramps, potatoes, peppers and eggs. We had good corn bread with them. We hadn’t had them in years and my goodness they were good! Another springtime staple is dandelion greens. I prefer them as a salad.
Love this type of video. Enjoy learning about different areas. We dig "spring onions" here but I think its actually wild garlic.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it 😀
@d.b.8447
3 жыл бұрын
Ramps are actually a wild leek.
Foraging is a great excuse to go outside for a day. I like to do it when I have time.
Tipper, my mother grew up near Lenoir City, TN. She would take us into our woods here in S.C. looking for bloodroot, but we never found it here. She used it for play lipstick as a child, and they called the hidden parts under the leaves "little pigs." We finally found some when we went back to visit some of her family. I'll never forget how happy it made her to discover the little treasures.
@CelebratingAppalachia
Жыл бұрын
What a great memory 😀
I have 3 gallon freezer bags that were dug in the mountains of West Virginia. I love the fresh mountain air and exercise.
We call them leeks up here in PA, hubby has his favorite spot that he picks his. One of his favorite meals is bean, ham and leek soup.
I've heard of ramps but never really knew what they looked like until watching. Thanks for sharing!
so you take care of nature to ensure next years harvest ..live in harmony with nature ..perfect life ..bless you
One of y'all said something about "God's country", I've been many places in this nation...The mountains out here in Aridzona are awesome, but to my heart, there is no place in the world as beautiful, and just comforting to be in as the Blue Ridge/Smoky mountains. The beauty just make you want to cry.
I’m slowly watching the past videos of this great channel, and I’m enjoying every one of them. I enjoy learning about Appalachia in this format. It’s almost like I’m there. Great video👍
I have fond memories of digging a mess one year near Asheville when I was a student at UNC-A. Took them to opening weekend of trout season at Edgemont NC and we enjoyed them in most of the meals. Great friends, bluegrass music, good food and trout fishing . . . can’t be beat!
I have never seen ramps growing in nature but I have certainly smelled them!! My first year of teaching was in the mountains of WV. I had never heard of ramps even though I grew up in WV. The year I taught in Hillsboro WV the fire department's big fund raiser was a ramp feed in early spring. I dated the fire chief at the time and we stopped by the fire house while the women were cooking. We were there for 5 minutes but in June when I was packing up to move to another job my coat I had on that day still reeked of ramps!! My students used to eat them because they would not be allowed to ride the bus or attend school for 3 days, until the smell wore off!! I have never eaten a ramp as I could not get them past my nose although many in my family eat and love them. The saying in the mountains was you had to eat them to not smell them!!
Never was quite sure what a ramp was, now I'm ready! The gentleman Travis did an excellent demo on the processing of them, thank you Sir. Also thank you & your family for sharing......ATB
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
So glad you enjoyed it!
@sandragreen9560
3 жыл бұрын
Just wondering why they didn't take those cut off roots and plant them, so the would replace what they took.
I only got to go once when I was 8 or so, but this brought back some memories!
This video brings back such sweet memories of my grandparents. Happy, innocent family times!
Hearing you speak reminds me of my people in Southern Arkansas and is music to my ears. Love your channel.
Ramps, I remember hunting bear on black mountain NC and eating breakfast with eggs bacon and fried potatoes with ramps. I got in trouble in High School cause I brought ramps to school and kept them in my locker, the whole hallway was filled with that pungent smell way more than onion or garlic, after removing them the smell was still there the next day. I love Ramps
a few of the communities here put on ramp feeds. never went huntin for them though. thanks for sharing! i enjoyed watching!
It just don't get no better than that! Thanks for sharing
You are blessed with a beautiful place. My grandmother loved trilliums.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Sara-they're such a pretty flower 😀
I loved how the men took charge of the cleaning and cooking. And I loved the gratitude expressed! What good people you are. I learned a lot by watching
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@Mrs.TJTaylor
3 жыл бұрын
@@CelebratingAppalachia The pleasure is all mine.
Looks like you folks had an enjoyable outing in the mountains,good food,beautiful scenery,and some good Fellowship.Heard about ramps from family and friends, but never eat any,hopefully I'll get to try them some spring. Thanks Tipper for letting me tag along,enjoyed so much.🙂
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the trip Donald! I hope you get to taste some ramps!
We live in SE Wisconsin. Our forest floor is exactly as yours except for the red trillium, we have only white. I and my daughter harvest ramps each spring. She pickles them and roasts them. I enjoy seeing the whole forest floor covered with ramps!
I live in Jefferson NC and it was great to see the pics of the trillium and the bloodroot plants, great ramp cooking.
Beautiful spring flowers in wine, yellow, blue and pink. We don’t have those flowers or ramps in northeastern Missouri. We like foil meals but never had one like you, but we are going to try. The water flowing background noise is so peaceful.
For some reason this video reminds me of the O Henry story where a city man comes to an old country doctor complaining of several ailments. After examining the man, the doctor says I can cure you, but we need to search out a rare, scarce plant which grows on the mountain. So each morning for 2 months the doctor and patient would climb the mountain searching for this plant. It was never found. But, the patient's health remarkedly improved.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Love that story!
Great video I think it's amazing what God has given us to eat. It's wonderful to go out in the woods and find such wonderful stuff to eat. I remember that some where in NC they have a ramp festival?I saw it on the PBS channel. And one place had a festival where they made collard sandwiches?? They would cook them and put them on bread?? I remember that once I went to see a dietitian and she asked me what I ate I told her I ate lite bread 🍞 and she said what kind wheat localorie. I just told her that is what us mountain folks call bread litebread. My brother said yesterday that he was going to get a cake of bread 🍞. Grandmother loved crease greens and turnip greens ect.
We had ramps and branch lettuce last weekend
I've never found ramps where I live (after years of searching, hopefully someday), but man this reminds me so much of my home in south central Pennsylvania. I cant wait for spring!!
Ok thats a new one on me . Never even heard of em . But sounds like it would be good .
I grew up in the southwestern part of Pennsylvania in the mountains and loved digging and eating ramps this time of year. Mom's homemade bread with homemade butter and ramps was truly a treat. Thank you for bring back those memories. I just discovered your channel and have subscribed , and am looking forward to more of your videos. Thanks again.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the video 😀
Pretty little flower bell at the 1:29 mark. I had never heard of ramps until reading/watching your content. They kind of look like little spring onions but with a different leaf top. Never heard of a swedish log cooker either. It all looked good, bet it tasted good especially outside by the creek like that. Love to hear the water in the background and the countryside scenes too. Thank you for this educational video!
Ramps are delicious in fried potatoes and in scrambled eggs, like you mentioned Tipper. They sure are loved here in West Virginia. There's lots of ramp festivals here, especially the one in Richwood, WV. We used to go up in the mountains to pick them, too. One time when we were teenagers my brother and a couple of his buddies went ramp pickin' and they ate a whole bunch of ramps to mess with us. When they come home, none of us could stand to be near them because they stunk so bad! They'd chase us around to try to breathe on us!
I say the same things every time u post. We used to into the woods to gets ramps for my granny to cook. It was such a fun experience. I’m not sure if it was around the same time but my granny used to slice turnips paper thin, dredge them in a flour mixture and egg. Then she would lightly fry them. OMG!!!! The best. When I moved to Texas people thought I was crazy bc who likes turnips. Ty. 🤗❤️🙌🏻🥰🙏🏻😊
Have always wanted to go ramp hunting. Maybe one day will be blessed to do so before crossing over. Beautiful video thank you. 🍀
OMG, lol when i saw the title, I thought it was a center trench where you could drive a vehicle on to it, and work on the bottom of that vehicle. I apologize, for my stupidity. Thanks again for the informative video, I am humbled by my lack of knowledge to the subject of the video.
@CelebratingAppalachia
3 жыл бұрын
😀
Used to go to the Ramp Festival in Waynesville ever year when I lived in Maggie Valley. Had them growing in several locations on my property up there. Thanks for sharing...