Using wild onions and garlic from the lawn

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video! To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance-buying, check out Policygenius: Policygenius.com/adamragusea
Most of the botanical info about wild alliums in this video comes from the the North Carolina State University Extension: plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/al...
1995 case report of death camas poisoning in Arizona: www.sciencedirect.com/science...
My old mushroom risotto recipe with yard onions: • Mushroom risotto with ...

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  • @aragusea
    @aragusea2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks to Policygenius for sponsoring this video! To start comparing quotes and simplify insurance-buying, check out Policygenius: Policygenius.com/adamragusea

  • @Mendroid

    @Mendroid

    2 жыл бұрын

    Poli what

  • @axsna4387

    @axsna4387

    2 жыл бұрын

    hello adam :) love your videos

  • @shravan1005

    @shravan1005

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey Adam I just wanted to say your beard and long hair look really great on you ;D

  • @redscorp99

    @redscorp99

    2 жыл бұрын

    hi adam

  • @RedRoseSeptember22

    @RedRoseSeptember22

    2 жыл бұрын

    I know there are mushrooms that smell good but are extremey deadly if eaten...what about those? Smells can be sometimes deceiving.

  • @purnasaimadala
    @purnasaimadala2 жыл бұрын

    We are inching closer and closer to “why I season my land instead of my food”

  • @VintageToiletsRock

    @VintageToiletsRock

    2 жыл бұрын

    Why I season my cow's feedstock, not it's meat.

  • @nyalan8385

    @nyalan8385

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wait for him to make a gardening video, soils quality has a major impact on plant flavor

  • @andybaldman

    @andybaldman

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lmao.

  • @Danaile1

    @Danaile1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nyalan8385 i'm a botanist, it does

  • @pinkysaurusrawr

    @pinkysaurusrawr

    2 жыл бұрын

    the endgame of this youtube channel is absolutely adam running a self sustaining homestead filled with weird food and farming related science experiments

  • @buddyguyman1993
    @buddyguyman19932 жыл бұрын

    I never ate it but I remember ripping up patches of this stuff as a kid and realizing that it smelled like onions, so I started using "onion grass" in all of my elaborate leaf potions. It's crazy to learn as an adult now that it actually was completely edible!

  • @jthemegaviru8681

    @jthemegaviru8681

    2 жыл бұрын

    You made a discovery the same way we have done for millennia. That still leads a question. Who was the 1st person to suck on a cow utter

  • @creativeusername1

    @creativeusername1

    2 жыл бұрын

    lol

  • @ilikevideos4868

    @ilikevideos4868

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Onion grass" is what we call chives here, Ruohosipuli

  • @ilikevideos4868

    @ilikevideos4868

    2 жыл бұрын

    In scandinavia also, graslök

  • @OriginalCreatorSama

    @OriginalCreatorSama

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same! i only recently discovered they're great with eggs when i ran out of parsley and wanted some green in my breakfast one morning

  • @Demagora
    @Demagora2 жыл бұрын

    When I was a kid I remember chewing on the "onion grass" that grew in the backyard. Glad I wasn't doing something horribly wrong I guess.

  • @Maximus-rm7jn

    @Maximus-rm7jn

    2 жыл бұрын

    plot twist: you were chewing on death amas and survived and now you have the strongest immune system known to man

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most of cooking is just the grown-up version of chewing on grass in the yard.

  • @GothVampiress

    @GothVampiress

    2 жыл бұрын

    i used to do the same; or dig up the entire bulb and throw it in a flowerpot of rainwater as 'soup.' turns out, it actually was!

  • @colin7242

    @colin7242

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hahaha this comment awakened long-forgotten memories for me

  • @somefreshbread

    @somefreshbread

    2 жыл бұрын

    as long as you didn't have dogs

  • @aidanwarren4980
    @aidanwarren49802 жыл бұрын

    Between the yard syrup and the yard onions, I’m really enjoying this suburban-foraging arc.

  • @electra424

    @electra424

    2 жыл бұрын

    yesss

  • @naolmstead

    @naolmstead

    2 жыл бұрын

    Makes me wonder if a future video might be dandelion wine.

  • @user-gf4lx6ol8u
    @user-gf4lx6ol8u2 жыл бұрын

    6:29 "Why I flavor my cow NOT my steak" is now possible!

  • @creativeusername1

    @creativeusername1

    2 жыл бұрын

    ye

  • @marshallzingkhai889

    @marshallzingkhai889

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lmao😂

  • @Zeero3846

    @Zeero3846

    2 жыл бұрын

    In some places, restaurants that raised their own chickens, ducks, or geese gave the birds a very rich diet of herbs and spices, which was found to actually change the flavor of their meat.

  • @jkuhl2492
    @jkuhl24922 жыл бұрын

    "This guy almost died eating a poisonous plant, so buy life insurance!" Great segue lol

  • @Stdagger
    @Stdagger2 жыл бұрын

    If you particularly like the taste of those wild field garlic plants, you should try them right before they flower. The garlic flower stem, or "scape" as it is called gets very sweet, almost tomato-ey sweet in my experience. Very delicious, although you do have to wait until around May until they start doing that. Since you're in Tennessee it'll probably be a bit earlier in the month or maybe even late April. Although "wait" is a relative term, there's always more of these plants than anyone knows what to do with anyway.

  • @elektronikzmbrtlar1586

    @elektronikzmbrtlar1586

    2 жыл бұрын

    my mother knows how to find them here in turkey. i think best way to eat them is get a fistfull of them and start eating it raw. it is unbelivibly painful and enjoyable.

  • @41A2E

    @41A2E

    2 жыл бұрын

    I cultivate some chives in my yard, and I particularly like to collect the purple blossoms immediately after blooming, then freezing them to use through the winter. I agree they are very sweet, almost like eating a Vidalia onion, and it also kinda tastes like what a flower smells like, very pleasant. I know the local honey bees dig the nectar from the blossoms too, they are swarming around the chive patch.

  • @justindai8401

    @justindai8401

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ive tried them. They taste like a milder garlic. I didnt really taste sweetness. Maybe its just me or they werent the sweet ones

  • @turtleman190

    @turtleman190

    2 жыл бұрын

    I love the scapes of chives and onions i pick them off my plants wile weeding absolutely delicious

  • @appa609

    @appa609

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes very common in Chinese cuisine

  • @rofltehcat
    @rofltehcat2 жыл бұрын

    "They didn't get poisoned because they spit out the bitter plant! Evolution works!" "These taste delicious, though a little bitter compared to domestic alleums."

  • @Bramble20322

    @Bramble20322

    2 жыл бұрын

    I laughed at that part too.

  • @lordgarion514

    @lordgarion514

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's right, and you can eat less of them than domestic before becoming sick. And you can eat more of them than that other, much more bitter plant, without becoming sick. Seems evolution is right on the money with this one.

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 жыл бұрын

    I never really understood the difference between "ew, bitter" and "mmm, bitter"

  • @arly803

    @arly803

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 a limitation of language perhaps.

  • @zooker7938

    @zooker7938

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Depends on how strong the bitter is. If something is overwhelmingly bitter, spit it out.

  • @AtomicShrimp
    @AtomicShrimp2 жыл бұрын

    Allium vineale produces little bulbils in place of flowers (if you let it develop) - the bulbils are about the size of wheat grains and I think they might be good to add to rice or barley at some midpoint of cooking. I keep meaning to try it - maybe this year...

  • @Jelly-lc2db

    @Jelly-lc2db

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love your channel Atomic Shrimp! Keep it up! I hope you and Adam are secretly immortal and will produce content for us forever

  • @kenta469

    @kenta469

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm expecting to see you somewhere in the comments, and I'm not disappointed

  • @elenas3571

    @elenas3571

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love your foraging videos! Unfortunately most of the wild plants where I live are drenched in chemicals but it’s still fascinating to watch!

  • @jamescanjuggle

    @jamescanjuggle

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its my headcanon now that your the batman of wild alliums. Whenever i see or think of wild garlic or foraging, your voice always whispers in the back of my mind "This can be quite tasty, but this one will most certainly kill you"

  • @luked4043

    @luked4043

    2 жыл бұрын

    Atomic Shrimp! Much love

  • @a_aron30490
    @a_aron304902 жыл бұрын

    At our old house, wild onions and garlic grew everywhere, and I always HATED mowing the lawn because when we would get to the spot where they liked to grow it would burn my eyes just like chopping onion in a kitchen

  • @tygokooijman1476

    @tygokooijman1476

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe change ur profile picture

  • @dotacow22

    @dotacow22

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tygokooijman1476 ?

  • @tygokooijman1476

    @tygokooijman1476

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dotacow22 Gus johnsons ex-fiancée recently came with some horroble stories about his emotional abuse, of which he has since admitted his guilt. I highly suggest you watch her video

  • @potapotapotapotapotapota

    @potapotapotapotapotapota

    2 жыл бұрын

    whenever I mow the lawn it smells like lemons because the lemon tree drops lemon fruit everywhere... it is lovely

  • @Warmaka

    @Warmaka

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe don't chop the garlic then. Grass mowing is overrated anyway. Once or twice a year is enough. Let wild plants reclaim some space and keep a path clear for yourself. The result is a vibrant garden full of color and life.

  • @dr.froghopper6711
    @dr.froghopper67112 жыл бұрын

    I once worked on a lady’s house and noticed that every time I walked across the yard I smelled garlic. Turns out that the lady’s father had had a garden in the back yard and he raised a lot of garlic. He died unexpectedly and the yard sat unattended for about 10 years. When the daughter got the place, she had to have a mountain of weeds cut out and removed and then she just had the ground tilled. She planted grass that came out in a nice lawn. But a huge amount of garlic had been growing there and it got spread all over the yard when they tilled the soil. Every year they mowed the garlic right along with the grass. Over time the grass started dying off and the garlic survived. It was a real pleasure to walk across the yard! She called it her pizza yard because she let thyme, oregano and other aromatic herbs grow there too.

  • @sydneygorelick7484

    @sydneygorelick7484

    Жыл бұрын

    A pizza yard! How lovely!

  • @potatobird52
    @potatobird522 жыл бұрын

    I actually protected one of them when it sprouted in our yard, I didn’t let my dad mow it. I named it Gerald, and Gerald was awesome. It grew huge, and come autumn it made a beautiful purple spikeball-shaped flower and scattered its seeds everywhere. Needless to say, the next spring we had a LOT more Geralds popping up in the yard. Never knew you could eat them though. I suspected it but I didn’t trust myself enough to try.

  • @patrickmcclintock7027
    @patrickmcclintock70272 жыл бұрын

    As a fellow Tennesseean I’ve seen a ton of these things. Ya know what Adam, you should do an experiment. Raise a cow on a lot of onion grass, then see if you can churn garlic butter out of the milk. 😂

  • @lucasrubinstein923

    @lucasrubinstein923

    2 жыл бұрын

    There is a farmer down here in Florida who feeds his pigs lots of onions and garlic along with other stuff. Some of the best tasting pork I have ever had.

  • @chadratboi2849

    @chadratboi2849

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@lucasrubinstein923 In general, herbs, in the best case a kind of natural grassland, are better for the animals and meat quality.

  • @bobbun9630

    @bobbun9630

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have had grass fed beef that had previously consumed a lot of crow garlic. The taste is not good at all. The "garlic" nature is apparent, but it's really not the same as beef that has been seasoned with garlic.

  • @tsugima6317

    @tsugima6317

    Жыл бұрын

    It will flavor the milk of dairy cows, and will flavor the breast milk of a nursing mother. Having been one, I can attest to that.

  • @luke_fabis
    @luke_fabis2 жыл бұрын

    My parents taught me what wild onions are when I was a very young boy. They’re incredibly easy to identify, they’re likely the safest and simplest wild green that anyone could forage, and they’re some of the first to poke out of the ground and some of the last to wither away. Literally anyone can spot it, and it’s good food almost year-round. My parents, being immigrants, taught it to me as ‘szczypiorek’. For a time, that’s all I knew it by. I didn’t know that the English translation was ‘chives’. One time, I was waiting for the school bus, when I spotted a distinct hollow sprig of foliage poking out of the ground, slightly curly in a way that grass just does not curl. Thinking nothing of it, I plucked it, and proceeded to place it in my mouth just as the bus arrived. Wild onions are a little on the fibrous side, especially mature ones. They’re best had finely chopped like chives, but they’ll break down with enough chewing. And so, chew I did. And as I got on the bus, I was greeted “Eww!”s and jeers all around me. Apparently they thought I was eating grass. The bus driver refused to get the bus rolling until I had come up to the front to spit it out, and threatened me with suspension if I swallowed it. I tried to explain that this is a vegetable, similar to green onions. I called it szczypiorek. The driver looked at me like I was making up gibberish. And once it was spat out in the trash, she berated me in front of the whole bus, straight up yelling at me that I had best not ever try to eat grass again, and how disgusting I was for doing that. One kid, literally only one kid, took my side. His dad happened to be a chef, and he identified it as chives. He was the only one that thought it was a neat skill to identify wild chives. I learned what chives were that day, and I also got a taste of how much I truly hate the average bologna-on-Wonderbread munching shithead. I carry it with me to this day, and I get unreasonably angry when I see things like a woman who forages greens appear on “Extreme Cheapskates”, or listen to geriatric Boomers make jokes about broccoli being from a different planet. Fuck you, learn what vegetables are.

  • @melanieniemann4160

    @melanieniemann4160

    2 жыл бұрын

    To be fair, broccoli only makes sense once you realize that it's just a bunch of flowers that haven't bloomed yet. Without that context it's pretty much the weirdest looking vegetable other than maybe artichokes - another unbloomed flower. We're used to roots, stalks, and leaves. Most Americans don't eat a lot of flowers. Sorry you got picked on for knowing how to find a free snack though.

  • @luke_fabis

    @luke_fabis

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@melanieniemann4160 I really don’t understand how you can defend that. Neither broccoli nor artichokes look even vaguely weird. Broccoli is one of the most common vegetables in North America; it’s got tons of context. Every vegetable has its own shape. Broccoli isn’t special here, especially when you consider there are similar vegetables like cauliflower. You say Americans eat root vegetables, but try showing a celeriac to someone. You might as well be handing them the egg of an extraterrestrial monstrosity. Or, see if they can tell the difference between a parsley root, a parsnip, and a white carrot, or if they can tell the difference between celery, angelica, fennel, and cardoons. We live in a country where kids grow up assuming carrots grow on trees, and become positively disgusted when they finally learn carrots are pulled from the dirt. We live in a country that has entire regions where people distinguish between white bread and wheat bread, and get confused if you say whole wheat. They don’t grasp that white flour also comes from wheat. Wheat to them is just something brown and bitter you add to bread because doctors say it’s good for you. It’s got caramel color and no fiber? It’s brown, which means it’s wheat bread! It’s good for you! American food culture is completely broken. And while the more bourgeois segments of society are steadily waking up to what was lost in the middle of the 20th century, a wide swath of America is still eating crap. That’s all they know, and it’s all they care to know.

  • @melanieniemann4160

    @melanieniemann4160

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@luke_fabis Sure, most Americans won't know what to DO with celeriac, but they will recognize it as part of a plant. Broccoli/cauliflower/artichokes look weird to some people because they're a part of a plant you'll never see unless you're actively paying attention to nature. Unopened flowers aren't colorful and attention grabbing enough to be noticed without actually looking. I imagine that the person in who said broccoli looked like it was from another planet had never done any gardening and only ever paid attention to flowers once they had opened. If I didn't know that broccoli was a collection of unopened flowers/had never seen, say, hydrangeas before their flowers open I'd think it was a pretty strange plant too. Is it sad that we don't stop to pay attention to the world around us? Yes, but blaming people for what they don't know isn't going to help anyone.

  • @luke_fabis

    @luke_fabis

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@melanieniemann4160 I really don’t follow what you’re saying here. Broccoli is much more recognizable as a plant than celeriac. For starters, it’s green and has leaves. I don’t blame people for being ignorant, but I absolutely blame them if they lack the curiosity and intellectual honesty to fill in their gaps.

  • @flapjack9495

    @flapjack9495

    Жыл бұрын

    @@luke_fabis Are you the food police?

  • @Phazon8058MS
    @Phazon8058MS2 жыл бұрын

    "Ooh maybe I should try and find some wild onion right now!" *Steps outside to see all the grass is covered by 1.5+ meters of snow cover "Ah, right. Canadian prairies."

  • @GrizzAxxemann

    @GrizzAxxemann

    2 жыл бұрын

    You too, eh?

  • @LARKXHIN

    @LARKXHIN

    2 жыл бұрын

    Frozen onion.

  • @SimonWoodburyForget

    @SimonWoodburyForget

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's a good time for syrup though! ;) Oh and if you're into onions, it's also a good time to get them started indoors.

  • @GrizzAxxemann

    @GrizzAxxemann

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SimonWoodburyForget no maples in Alberta.

  • @SimonWoodburyForget

    @SimonWoodburyForget

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@GrizzAxxemann Oh damn! That sucks.

  • @bellenesatan
    @bellenesatan2 жыл бұрын

    That first clip with you eating the garlic grass really gives a new meaning to "me with a goatee".

  • @JetpackYoshi

    @JetpackYoshi

    2 жыл бұрын

    Long live the empire

  • @RedRice94

    @RedRice94

    2 жыл бұрын

    Long live the empire

  • @zdrav4o2

    @zdrav4o2

    2 жыл бұрын

    Long live the empire

  • @creativeusername1

    @creativeusername1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Long live the empire

  • @matthewlacey4198

    @matthewlacey4198

    2 жыл бұрын

    Long live the empire

  • @ellenlanderson
    @ellenlanderson2 жыл бұрын

    When I lived in Oklahoma we would go out in the woods and pick wild enables. They were often buried under leaves & I was the only one who could smell the wild onions. We usually made omelets with them.

  • @petesahad3028

    @petesahad3028

    2 жыл бұрын

    Enablers are the worst

  • @AndyGneiss

    @AndyGneiss

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@petesahad3028 Always ruining diet plans. "Honey, I'm going on a diet". Honey: Hey, want some of this (insert thing not in their diet)?

  • @ellenlanderson

    @ellenlanderson

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@petesahad3028 enablers & saboteurs are equally bad

  • @MagnusGuldbrandsen
    @MagnusGuldbrandsen2 жыл бұрын

    In Scandinavia, the bulb of a flower is actually called the same as an onion. So if you for instance wanted to plant tulips, you'd buy tulip-onions to plant :) Danish: Tulipanløg Norwegian: Tulipanløk Swedish: Tulpanlök

  • @hyouki8529

    @hyouki8529

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hungarian too (hagyma = bulb, onion)

  • @Lapos.

    @Lapos.

    2 жыл бұрын

    In Polish, and i would assume also other Slavic languages its the same. All bulbs are called cebula - onions Tulip bulb - cebula tulipana

  • @bampabrudii3316

    @bampabrudii3316

    2 жыл бұрын

    The same goes for German with "Zwiebel"

  • @crazydragy4233

    @crazydragy4233

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same with Baltic languages!

  • @andybaldman

    @andybaldman

    2 жыл бұрын

    We have more in common than what divides us.

  • @lillankan555
    @lillankan5552 жыл бұрын

    Only Adam would be able to smoothly transition eating wild herbs into a life insurance sponsor

  • @VintageToiletsRock
    @VintageToiletsRock2 жыл бұрын

    I always remember seeing both wild onions and "wild strawberries" growing in my backyard. My grandpa always warned me they were toxic, but it turns out many of these things are not toxic and exactly what you would think they are... wild versions of the domesticated produce we eat today!

  • @rogervanaman6739

    @rogervanaman6739

    2 жыл бұрын

    I assume you are talking about the false strawberry (Potentilla indica). Completely flavorless to me, but completely edible. For some reason kids seem to love it, though. I think it is the novelty of strawberries growing in the yard.

  • @andybaldman

    @andybaldman

    2 жыл бұрын

    He didn’t want you to die.

  • @nopahrefa4466

    @nopahrefa4466

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@rogervanaman6739 Wild strawberries (the fragarias) and false strawberries (potentillas) are different things - strawberries are bred from the collection of various wild strawberry plants that are native across the entirety of the northern hemisphere. Actual wild strawberry is as a general rule quite delicious, but they are small and take forever to pick in comparison to strawberries. But they are either native or naturalised pretty much everywhere the legates live, so they might very well actually be talking about wild strawberry.

  • @catpoke9557

    @catpoke9557

    2 жыл бұрын

    I get the feeling parents say this because they're too lazy to identify plants properly and just lie to their kids that they're poison, lol My parents didn't do that, thankfully

  • @andybaldman

    @andybaldman

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@catpoke9557 This is exactly it.

  • @samuelkatz1124
    @samuelkatz11242 жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately my luck that the semi abandoned wetland near me, which I thought was full of ramps, turns out to all be the poisonous lookalikes. Thankfully I learned the easy way and not the hard way.

  • @mokshalani8414
    @mokshalani84142 жыл бұрын

    Flat blade => generally closer to a garlic Tube blade => generally closer to an onion Some flat leaves can taste oniony & some tube leaves can taste garlicky. Alliums that don't smell are usually poisonous, & some that do smell slightly may also be mildly toxic The city of Chicago was named by Algonquin natives "skunk" because of it's huge onion fields. Wild alliums remain a precious commodity for natives of many nations even today

  • @theVHSvlog
    @theVHSvlog2 жыл бұрын

    My mother told me they were poisonous growing up, very happy to learn that they're edible, free, and delicious!

  • @matthewr1207

    @matthewr1207

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe you were in an area with death Camas?

  • @annbrookens945
    @annbrookens9452 жыл бұрын

    I remember discovering "grass that smelled like onions" when I was in 1st grade. It was early spring and we were at recess, sitting on the ground, playing under a catalpa tree (before I knew the name of those, either). I was running my fingers through the nice green "grass" and it smelled like onions! I've chewed on them occasionally but never picked any to use while cooking!

  • @sophiophile

    @sophiophile

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good thing you didn't in the school yard. Probably sprayed with chemicals.

  • @TheSlavChef
    @TheSlavChef2 жыл бұрын

    I love adding wild green onions to potato salad. Such a perfect addition! We have these growing all arround in my village in Bulgaria.

  • @SilverCymbal
    @SilverCymbal2 жыл бұрын

    Adam never fails to deliver great info! So awesome.

  • @JGB_Wentworth

    @JGB_Wentworth

    2 жыл бұрын

    Along with crazy good promo transitions. That life insurance insert was genius lol

  • @Ghani_1

    @Ghani_1

    2 жыл бұрын

    I Think his journalism backround plays a great role in this, his texts are always A+

  • @DougASAP

    @DougASAP

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JGB_Wentworth I watch Adam primarily because I enjoy his promo transitions.

  • @FaizCaliph

    @FaizCaliph

    2 жыл бұрын

    I could say the same about you!

  • @OlTimeyChara

    @OlTimeyChara

    2 жыл бұрын

    This man could convince me that i should sleep with my bed upside down

  • @collarbones4511
    @collarbones45112 жыл бұрын

    Ooh I remember when I was a kid, I was pulling random weeds during recess, and being super excited when I found those ‘onions’. Some other kids joined me and we would show our teachers the handfuls of onions we picked. They did not appreciate the oniony smell in their classrooms, but I think they were glad we were having fun.

  • @hannahlah3878
    @hannahlah38782 жыл бұрын

    From NC. I have distinct memories of siting by a creek eating wild onion we washed off in the running water after breakfast during sleepovers. Can't say it was the healthiest method but as kids it was incredibly fun and maybe the dirt helped boost my immune system.

  • @chezmoi42

    @chezmoi42

    2 жыл бұрын

    No kidding, I really think it does. I can't help thinking that many of the illnesses that are common today are a result of our tendency to try to sterilize everything, to the detriment of our gut flora. We drank milk from the cow with no ill effects (and oh! The cream!), berries from the fields and woods, and never obsessed about the fact that our hands may not have been thoroughly washed first. Today I'm 80, and I love foraging.

  • @morgan0

    @morgan0

    2 жыл бұрын

    dirt can also give you small worms in your gut, and probably some other stuff too. i had that when i was younger for years, was pretty unpleasant.

  • @mayurmahale3049

    @mayurmahale3049

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@morgan0 it has been theorised that these tiny worms help moderate immune response and help stave off auto-immune disease.

  • @morgan0

    @morgan0

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mayurmahale3049 yeah well if they didn’t make my butt itch so bad at night i probably wouldn’t have cared as much about getting them out of me

  • @mayurmahale3049

    @mayurmahale3049

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@morgan0 get the de worming medicine then kek. Better be infected briefly than never be infected at all. Would you rather have some itchy butts or IBS like disease?

  • @glfrjack
    @glfrjack2 жыл бұрын

    One of my memories from early childhood was going out with my family, grandparents, and aunt/uncle/cousins and gather a bunch of wild onions. Then going back to my grandparents house and my grandmother would make wild onion dumplings in chicken stock and oyster soup.

  • @thefreeman1970
    @thefreeman19702 жыл бұрын

    In Germany, they're called "Schnittlauch" which translates to "Cut Leek" suggesting it shares some ancestry with leek. You can even buy them in seed packets here and plant them in your garden but I've never seen so much of it grow in the wild like in your video. Never mind I just googled wtf allium means...

  • @dionn6909

    @dionn6909

    2 жыл бұрын

    schnittlauch = chives (the kind you can buy in a store) but you can find Bärlauch (translates to " Bear Leek") which is pretty much wild garlic and it is growling like crazy in a lot of German Forests

  • @WutendPLayZ

    @WutendPLayZ

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dionn6909 early spring ptsd from everything having bärlauch in it. It‘s really tasty but damn do you taste it and smell like it (sweat) for quite some time

  • @sebastiancph

    @sebastiancph

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dionn6909 bärlauch is ramslök in Swedish. Absolutely love it but almost every dish has it during those spring weeks they are fresh. Might be a good thing it is a few weeks per year we can have them.

  • @RhodianColossus

    @RhodianColossus

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dionn6909 A better translation for _Bärlauch_ is _Bear Garlic,_ especially when Garlic is called _Knoblauch_ (knob "leek"). The German word _Lauch_ is just a lot more versatile than the English equivalent.

  • @joelegrand5903

    @joelegrand5903

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are talking about an invasive European weed called Allium vineale L., it is bad for the USA.

  • @Rezimez
    @Rezimez2 жыл бұрын

    Me: Gathering wild alliums sounds like fun Adam: A man from Northern Arizona got wildly ill eating something he mistook for garlic Me, living in Northern AZ: Guess I gotta be careful Adam: Buy life insurance Me: Maybe no wild allium for me...

  • @joelegrand5903

    @joelegrand5903

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are talking about an invasive European weed called Allium vineale L.

  • @catpoke9557

    @catpoke9557

    2 жыл бұрын

    If it smells like and looks like alliums, then it is alliums. It's really easy to identify. I think this dad just put it in his mouth without smelling and then swallowed.

  • @fakjbf3129
    @fakjbf31292 жыл бұрын

    Paresthesia is pronounced like anesthesia, they both come from the same Greek root of “aisthesia” meaning feeling or sensation and then modified with a prefix (“a-“ meaning a lack of or “para” meaning abnormal). Paresthesias (plural) means that there were several distinct areas of the body that felt tingly instead of just one area or it being the entire body as a whole.

  • @pelegsap
    @pelegsap2 жыл бұрын

    In Germany (especially in the center of the country) at around this time of the year in some forests there's an explosion of "Bärlauch" (lit. Bear garlic, colloquially known in English as wild garlic). It's amazing, you walk in the forest and suddenly the air smells strongly of onion. People make pesto out of the leaves, and it's delicious. One stroll in the forest can yield a week's worth of pesto material. And just like you said, some poisonous plants can be mistaken for Bärlauch, mainly "Maiglöckschen" (aka Lilly of the valley).

  • @WeLovetym0

    @WeLovetym0

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's great in dumplings as well 😋

  • @lemagreengreen

    @lemagreengreen

    2 жыл бұрын

    Love that smell, I harvest it in Scotland too. Going to try that idea of making pesto! what sort of nut do you use?

  • @pelegsap

    @pelegsap

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lemagreengreen I always use pine seeds

  • @sydneygorelick7484

    @sydneygorelick7484

    Жыл бұрын

    It's in Swiss forests too! They're different than the onion grass, they have big flat leaves instead, but are just as yummy! It's very cool to see whole groves of the stuff dozens of meters across just off of the path. Makes the whole air smell of garlic, very nice.

  • @Xdrakemanx
    @Xdrakemanx2 жыл бұрын

    0:14 it's shots like these that keep me coming back to the Adam Ragusea channel 😂

  • @PosauneundPapier
    @PosauneundPapier2 жыл бұрын

    That ad plug was so smooth I am genuinely impressed and not even mad

  • @pedroff_1
    @pedroff_12 жыл бұрын

    I find it really funny reading everyone's story of finding "grass that smells like onion". I've never had anything similar. Guess the tropical climate here isn't very suitable for them :(

  • @b.a.erlebacher1139
    @b.a.erlebacher11392 жыл бұрын

    If you don't already have them in your garden there are some easy alliums you can introduce. Chives (A.schoenprasum) has purple flowers in late spring. Garlic chives (A.tuberosum aka A.chinense) will invade your lawn quite successfully and has white flowers in late summer. Don't let it set seed if you don't want it in your lawn. If you grow hardneck garlic and let the scaphe mature, it will make a clump of tiny bulbils at the top of the scaphe. Plant these (just sprinkle them on the ground and rake them in) and you'll have lots of green garlic in the spring, small single clove garlic in late summer, and full size bulbs the next year. As Adam mentioned, topsetting onions (A. x proliferum) look wonderfully weird and will keep you in green onions for life with almost no effort. I'm in southern Ontario, and these things work for me.

  • @SuperCookieGaming_
    @SuperCookieGaming_2 жыл бұрын

    Me and best friend would often play with this during recess in elementary school. I have distinct memories of bringing home a bird nest we made of onion grass.

  • @bluekestral8316
    @bluekestral83162 жыл бұрын

    I love that you moved to Tennessee. When you do these videos it helps me figure out things that I've been trying to figure out in my yard

  • @ashurean
    @ashurean9 ай бұрын

    Foraging is both a skill and an artform. The artform comes from just being familiar with all the unique ways a single species can manifest, and the skill comes from knowing IF ITS BITTER DONT KEEP EATING IT.

  • @incorporealnuance
    @incorporealnuance2 жыл бұрын

    When I was little, I had great memories of the extremely dense woods behind my childhood home. Almost like a painting, there was a small clearing maybe two meters in diameter, where the sun shone through the trees, and wild onions grew so strong that you could smell them far away, and made a shaggy carpet of green. Unfortunately as I got older, poison ivy grew rampant through the whole woods and took over that clearing as well, but I still remember what it looked & smelled like.

  • @kendalldarveaux
    @kendalldarveaux2 жыл бұрын

    Last summer, I bought and planted two pots of a plant from a farmer's market that look just like that. They called it 'Garlic Chives', but I'm not certain exactly what it is - sounds a lot like what you're describing. Tastes like garlic plus 'green', and is more fibrous than store-bought chives. They grew great all summer, and I'd usually grab a handful every time I went outside. I'm from North Dakota, so maybe that's just the regional slang for it up here. Anyways, love your content! Keep 'em coming.

  • @b.a.erlebacher1139

    @b.a.erlebacher1139

    2 жыл бұрын

    Garlic chives are Allium tuberosum aka A.chinense. They are native to eastern Asia and do very well here in southern Ontario. They can invade your lawn if you don't clip off the seed heads before they mature seed, and they also spread out as a clump. They have pretty white flowers in late summer. I think they might be winter hardy in your area too. Enjoy!

  • @ninjalemurdude

    @ninjalemurdude

    2 жыл бұрын

    Garlic chives are great for cooking! Treat them like any fresh herb.

  • @ilikecherries3866

    @ilikecherries3866

    2 жыл бұрын

    I know those! It's called 韭菜 in chinese and is commonly used in chinese cooking, we add them in dumpling and bun fillings and they are delicious!

  • @maxmouse713

    @maxmouse713

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@b.a.erlebacher1139 I got garlic chives last year and thank heavens I decided to keep them as houseplants instead of planting them in the yard. Invasive species are super unwelcome around where I live. Thanks for the info!

  • @Roxor128

    @Roxor128

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@b.a.erlebacher1139 I've got some plants that were also called "garlic chives" but these ones have light-purple flowers. They're flowering right now (southern hemisphere summer).

  • @sword3197
    @sword31972 жыл бұрын

    I love how he does the ad live next to the road, makes it sound relaxing and less sellout-y and out of place

  • @AJ12Gamer

    @AJ12Gamer

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah I hate those pre recorded ads added in videos that makes it feel like a commercial rather than Adam just talking to his viewers.

  • @JGB_Wentworth
    @JGB_Wentworth2 жыл бұрын

    Lol I remember growing up and playing on the playground during recess I would rip me up some onions from the ground and just start munchin’ 😂 I felt like I discovered the elusive “wild onion” all on my own

  • @halfwayinfinate6342
    @halfwayinfinate63422 жыл бұрын

    Where I live there's plenty of wild alliums all year round. In spring there's wild garlic in the forests, in summer, my chives come up, in autumn this allium I don't know the name of comes up near rocky coastal cliff areas, there's so many tasty alliums!

  • @tomrake3264
    @tomrake32642 жыл бұрын

    My old man and his family had a dairy cow at home. She got into a pen which my grandad hadn’t cleared of alliums. Really ruined their breakfast and tea the next morning lol

  • @Matando
    @Matando2 жыл бұрын

    8:02..... ahhhhh Emril. He's such a great guy from what I've heard. Real down to earth too. I miss watching his shows, not that I even own a TV anymore anyways.

  • @zarblitz
    @zarblitz2 жыл бұрын

    I used to love going out and plucking up wild onions and just munching on them after a quick rinse. These days I love the garlicky smell after mowing my lawn. I also always collect the seeds when they finally do go to seed and spread them around my yard and garden beds.

  • @Shizzy_Mac235
    @Shizzy_Mac2352 жыл бұрын

    I have some of these in my yard too!! I showed my dad when we were outside and he was stunned that they were edible

  • @alexmiller3349
    @alexmiller33492 жыл бұрын

    I actually tried to grow a local wild onion variety (probably allium Carmeli) at home and I have to say that it's completely worth it. These plants are much more resilient than cultivated varieties so just natural watering from the rain and poor soil is enough to produce long and strong leaves (around 30 cm each), and they also are more pungent than store stuff, although not as strong as some other varieties that I haven't managed to get my hands on yet like allium Neapolitans. I never thought about using the bulbs, but now I'm probably going to try to do that with the older plants, especially considering that they are very easy to breed, each plant taking around 2 seasons to reach maturity from a seed. In short, it's a worthwhile project at least as some sort of gardening practice, that also has a direct reward in a form of literal loads of vitamins and all this good stuff. For better results it's also possible to grow those together with legumes, this way the onions will protect legumes from pests and legumes will aerate and enrich the soil with nitrates and organics, something that will be hard to do otherwise, at least without disrupting the plants - bulbs stay in the ground for a couple of seasons. Edit: if you ask why I even thought about that - I'm too lazy to go two floors to the garden in wadi to actually collect the wild stuff

  • @talapeanutbutter4250
    @talapeanutbutter42502 жыл бұрын

    We live on 6 acres and have arugula, onion, garlic, clover, blackberries and now sage growing. I thank the deer for help spreading them, too.

  • @kght222
    @kght2222 жыл бұрын

    when i was in preschool we had show and tell. at my house we had just moved to another house and one of the things that we got when we moved (less than a block away) was wild garlic. so that was my show and tell in preschool. i have loved it ever since.

  • @ManOfTheWeek596
    @ManOfTheWeek5962 жыл бұрын

    "Mom the weird man is eating our lawn again"

  • @NathanTAK

    @NathanTAK

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Stop calling your father 'the weird man'"

  • @ManOfTheWeek596

    @ManOfTheWeek596

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@NathanTAK "I will if he stops eating the lawn"

  • @NathanTAK

    @NathanTAK

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ManOfTheWeek596 Wait what the actual fuck is your profile picture

  • @rhubarb_crumble
    @rhubarb_crumble2 жыл бұрын

    these are not so common in the UK! but we do have something we call wild garlic, or ramsons, which is a broad leaf allium - just starting to come up now. Wizz with oil and any sort of nut and you get the best garlic pesto!

  • @matthewanderson1916
    @matthewanderson19162 жыл бұрын

    My dad and I used to pull these up at our old vacation home on Lake Hartwell in SC. Big handful of the green sprigs on our sandwiches for lunch, tasty stuff. Thanks for bringing back memories with another great video

  • @user-yx4xx8ek7n
    @user-yx4xx8ek7n2 жыл бұрын

    In Korea, wild aliums called dallae are used in herbal dish called namul. Dallae-muchim or -kimchi pairs well with meat recipes as side dishes.

  • @bryanhumphreys940
    @bryanhumphreys9402 жыл бұрын

    The ones around me are the Nodding onion and they are small like the one you dug up and are sweet like a red onion but sharper like a shallot. Also, there is a wild meadow near me that was cultivated by the native americans where they weeded out the death camas and encouraged the edible camas and strawberries to grow. Every year the purple camas bloom giving quite the show.

  • @benmolitor1519
    @benmolitor15192 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed this video, topic, and even the ad. The ad read blindsided me in the most entertaining way haha. Even considering how smooth they tend to be around here, that was very impressive. Good work Adam

  • @slbadvm
    @slbadvm2 жыл бұрын

    After substituting wild onions for chives in a dish which got rave reviews at a church potluck years ago, I've often cooked with yard onions when they're sprouting in late winter and spring in northeast Mississippi.

  • @bobbun9630
    @bobbun96302 жыл бұрын

    Allium vineale is the only wild allium conspicuously present in my yard. Adam is welcome to drop by and pull all mine up any time he likes. I did chew on it some as a kid, but the bitter notes mentioned at the end of the video are good enough reason for me to never use it in my cooking. Especially since I'm working on perennial cultivated alliums in my actual garden, and they'll also come up in early spring due to "last year's sunshine".

  • @jankoch267
    @jankoch2672 жыл бұрын

    In Germany we eat a lot of Chives (called Schnittlauch here). It's pretty similar if not the same, right? It grows everywhere over here and I like to snack it when on a walk in the forest :D

  • @tannerdavis8163
    @tannerdavis81632 жыл бұрын

    I remember when I was younger finding those little onions, and I ate them some times, once I found one that looked more orange and not white and tried it and it made my mouth numb it was so bitter so I spit it out, good to know what that was now

  • @frankhorrigan2047
    @frankhorrigan2047 Жыл бұрын

    A few years ago, I found a large patch of wild garlic next to a road so I ripped a bunch out of the ground and transferred it to my garden. Once separated, the wild garlic does form multi cloved bulbs which are small and quite pungent. Wild garlic that has bolted will have little bulblets post flowering and have a similar pungency to the cloves. But the flowers, before they form bulblets, have a very pleasant sweet garlic taste that works amazingly well as a garnish.

  • @Der_Kleine_Mann
    @Der_Kleine_Mann Жыл бұрын

    We have something called "Bärlauch"(Allium Ursinum) here in Germany, and it has leafs but it tastes pretty similar to garlic with a slight floral note. Perfect as a pesto. I always wait for it to grow in spring.

  • @BnFGProductions
    @BnFGProductions2 жыл бұрын

    Last time I was this early Adam still bought brown sugar.

  • @jennyneon
    @jennyneon2 жыл бұрын

    *Wild* onions make me cry even more now...

  • @arcadia-ego2951
    @arcadia-ego29512 жыл бұрын

    I'm in the coastal zone in Northern California. I have two main patches of wild Allium. The blades are much like a spring onion, but are triangular in cross section, and a bit more fibrous. They are also about to flower (March 7th). The white flowers are incredible added to a fresh salad or anywhere a touch of onion/garlic would be good fresh. I've even sauteed them with butter for an incredible shrimp or octopus scampi. My next foraging adventure will be nettles. So happy for Spring!

  • @Megamando93
    @Megamando932 жыл бұрын

    I have a ton of wild garlic all over my apartment complex. I do have a chive plant but the wild garlics all stayed green through the winter while mine went dormant in its pot. Loved using them as free chives with baked potatoes.

  • @cinderblockstudios
    @cinderblockstudios2 жыл бұрын

    I've been using yard chives in my cooking for years. They're especially great on pizza!

  • @fruitylerlups530
    @fruitylerlups5302 жыл бұрын

    Calling onion bulbs "the sweetness of last years sunshine" is the most goddamn beautiful way anyone has ever described an onion

  • @twig6102
    @twig61026 ай бұрын

    Discovered this last a few summers ago with my boyfriend. We were hanging out and gardening in his yard and I was picking some of the grass that had grown in the garden bed so it wouldn't steal nutrients from the flowers. It smelled like onions, so I googled it to see if it was safe and I tried some. It was delicious and it turns out it's invasive in my area, so I've been adding some to my cooking ever since!

  • @StapleCactus
    @StapleCactus2 жыл бұрын

    I'm extremely sensitive to bitter flavors, yet wild onion like this never bothers me. It tastes sweet and punchy, just like the domesticated variety. Another way to make them, which a wilderness channel mentioned, was roasting over a campfire. If you find these and manage to get a squirrel or rabbit, you've got a nice feast waiting back at camp. I believe I have what they call "'super taster" tastebuds. I can't stand any alcoholic tannins like beer and wine, or coffee/tea without plenty of sugar. Chocolate that isn't milk chocolate, even ones at only 30% cacao is too bitter. A lot of vegetables are too bitter, like celery, spinach, and asparagus. Carrots are extremely difficult to find edible because most taste like bitter dirt (but when I get a good one, oh boy is it a treat). On the other side, fructose is extremely powerful on my tongue, too. Any fruit is too sweet for me to stomach more than a single bite, combined with the bitterness that comes from the tannins to make for a really annoying flavor.

  • @annbrookens945

    @annbrookens945

    2 жыл бұрын

    Beets must be an extreme "no" for you since they always seem to have a distinct "dirt" element to their flavor.

  • @crazydragy4233

    @crazydragy4233

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe you have extra tongue in that tongue haha

  • @StapleCactus

    @StapleCactus

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@annbrookens945 Yeah, they've gotten really bad as I got older. I could get away with one or two slices of the candied ones we make at get togethers when I was 8, but now they're just bleh.

  • @catpoke9557

    @catpoke9557

    2 жыл бұрын

    There are certain compounds only some people find bitter due to genetics. I suspect that what makes wild onion bitter is one such compound, and you simply can't taste it. I also don't find it bitter, and I find broccoli sweet, which is something that contains a compound some people find extremely bitter and others don't taste at all or very little.

  • @LaceNWhisky
    @LaceNWhisky2 жыл бұрын

    Adam: **talks about poisonous look-alikes tasting bitter** Also Adam: "Man these bitter yard onions are delicious!"

  • @Axqu7227
    @Axqu7227 Жыл бұрын

    I loved picking these as a kid! My grandma and I used to use them to flavor onion soups. She thought they were too strong but I adore them

  • @fancyincubus
    @fancyincubus2 жыл бұрын

    Found Egyptian walking onions growing by some abandoned train tracks and wild garlic growing in my grandmas back yard before seeing these vids thanks for spreading the great info good for saving money for these hard times

  • @ianccornejo
    @ianccornejo2 жыл бұрын

    Wait, you can season the cows(with wild onions and garlic) rather than season the steak?

  • @UrbanPanic

    @UrbanPanic

    2 жыл бұрын

    In Dingle, Ireland they purportedly graze lambs on grass near the sea that gives the meat an already salted flavor. So… Why I Season my chop’s food, not my chop. Although, that would miss out on H E T E R O G E N E I T Y.

  • @jfbeam

    @jfbeam

    2 жыл бұрын

    No. You cannot. He's obviously never had beef from a cow that was grazing on wild onions. Commercial farms go to great length to keep those things out of their fields. (We'd just keep any cow destined for the dinner table in the barn on grains for a week or two.)

  • @ausore9832

    @ausore9832

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jfbeam "no you can't" "why? because we don't do it. i bet you've never even tried it"

  • @jfbeam

    @jfbeam

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ausore9832 Come to my farm. I'll give you a cow that's been grazing on wild onions. You will barf trying to eat that meat! If put in a barn to carefully meter what it eats, it's remotely possible to strike a balance, but that's an insanely expensive experiment. (that's the point of putting the cow to be eaten in the barn in the first place...)

  • @ausore9832

    @ausore9832

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jfbeam ah, you didn't make that apparent at first

  • @kaligula785
    @kaligula7852 жыл бұрын

    This is half my yard..the local rabbits love to eat em.. good video

  • @ultimatemeepo

    @ultimatemeepo

    2 жыл бұрын

    Those rabbits must be well seasoned

  • @bretwilliams249
    @bretwilliams2492 жыл бұрын

    I use these constantly out of my yard. Thank you for letting more people know!

  • @butternutsquash6984
    @butternutsquash69842 жыл бұрын

    Glad to see someone talking about these wonderful plants.

  • @outside8312
    @outside83122 жыл бұрын

    I'm deathly allergic to garlic but not onions so I'm curious, would this kill me?

  • @theslamjamfrincisco2820

    @theslamjamfrincisco2820

    2 жыл бұрын

    Don’t quote me on this but it’s probably a common ancestor of both so, probably don’t try it, especially if it’s a deathly allergy

  • @outside8312

    @outside8312

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@theslamjamfrincisco2820 I'm not about to go search it out and shove it in my mouth because science. It would just be nice to know whether it's an options for sudoku if I get desperate

  • @theslamjamfrincisco2820

    @theslamjamfrincisco2820

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@outside8312 I mean that’s whow the cavemen did it, embrace tradition and shove grass and various seeds in your mouth.

  • @ausore9832

    @ausore9832

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@outside8312 why not just use regular garlic for sudoku

  • @BrosMinecraft2
    @BrosMinecraft22 жыл бұрын

    I started out watching your cooking videos and finding them very different and normal(its hard to explain). As I watched through the weeks I noticed that I would be watching videos that weren't about cooking(making a recipe) and enjoying them as well. it might be your tone or something but I just can't stop watching them.

  • @jmangan17
    @jmangan172 жыл бұрын

    I didn't realize anybody didn't know this. I just thought that was part of childhood, your mom or dad explained there were onions in the yard, showed you how to pull em out, and for about a week you were super thrilled with the idea of helping make dinner.... And your parents got you to do some weeding without it sounding like real work.

  • @thelonelyrogue3727
    @thelonelyrogue37272 жыл бұрын

    Been doing this since middle school.

  • @hi-radical9120

    @hi-radical9120

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@blackstar9481 Don't pretend like you haven't eaten grass

  • @Theeswaglord

    @Theeswaglord

    2 жыл бұрын

    OG grass eater

  • @thelonelyrogue3727

    @thelonelyrogue3727

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Theeswaglord it keeps it away from my goats, chickens, and cattle, while flavoring my food. I see nothing to be ashamed about.

  • @benjaminwilkin2960
    @benjaminwilkin29602 жыл бұрын

    I love when brand integrations are seamless, like promoting foraging and life insurance

  • @Policygenius

    @Policygenius

    2 жыл бұрын

    Our thoughts exactly

  • @emilyjones9787
    @emilyjones97872 жыл бұрын

    So nostalgic from the smell of these, pulling them whole from Tennessee creek beds were a childhood past time 💖💖💖

  • @codymiskelley3533
    @codymiskelley35332 жыл бұрын

    Every time I get into a particular subject and go to learn more about it, you make a video doing a great job covering it. I literally picked some wild garlic today and wondered more about it and I get home from the kitchen to see this wonderful video ! Thank you for your knowledge and insight into the culinary world!

  • @SpaveFrostKing
    @SpaveFrostKing2 жыл бұрын

    The main thing I learned from this video is how closely related garlic and onion are.

  • @SuperDavidEF

    @SuperDavidEF

    2 жыл бұрын

    ...and tulips!

  • @damienknapman2308
    @damienknapman23082 жыл бұрын

    I'm too cowardly to trust my identifications of any plants even in my garden. I think I have plenty of well established wild garlic. But will not be testing my surety any time soon. (We're also fighting knotweed in this garden with strong weedkillers)

  • @jaewol359

    @jaewol359

    2 жыл бұрын

    Then definitely don’t try it if you’re treating your lawn lol

  • @Bullsquid592

    @Bullsquid592

    2 жыл бұрын

    The main trick is the smell, the garlicky oniony smell only comes from the allium family. There are several allium lookalikes depending which species you are looking for and there are good guides out there on what to be careful of but as Adam says, evolution works, if it tastes bad don't swallow it, there are very few plants poisonous enough to hurt from a taste but if it tastes like onion it's an onion. (Nothing else makes that oniony chemical)

  • @Gr3nadgr3gory

    @Gr3nadgr3gory

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've been eating wild onions out of people's flowerbeds for years now. Don't think if found a poisonous look alike yet. Come to think of it though I probably wouldn't think it really looks alike.

  • @benjaminmiller3620

    @benjaminmiller3620

    2 жыл бұрын

    I also have to fight my paranoid side when trying a new wild plant, but I'm making an effort and starting small. If I see a plant I recognize, I eat a small amount. Just what-ever I'm comfortable with. Once you've had it several times and know it doesn't hurt you, and what it's supposed to taste and smell like, it's not scary anymore. As @Ben M says; very few plants are poisonous enough that a small taste is dangerous. And I'll add: Even grocery store veges contain _tiny_ amounts of poisonous compounds, as herbivores/omnivores, our livers are designed to just deal with them. "Poisonous", is not an all-or-nothing state. It's a continuum.

  • @injunsun
    @injunsun2 жыл бұрын

    @Adam Ragusea , it's common, older wisdom like this that keeps me coming back. Now, if only I could find and spread "ramps" in my yard and garden. My whole life, I've heard of these Native American Alliums, and haven't ever tasted one.

  • @Optimally_healthy5831
    @Optimally_healthy58312 жыл бұрын

    This is very useful to know! I love your videos and appreciate how novel and informative they are :) The trick of using dried mushrooms in soups and utilizing wild free onions from the backyard are really neat to know!

  • @stevej71393
    @stevej713932 жыл бұрын

    Here's a tip for would-be foragers: do your research before sticking something in your mouth. Find some books on native plants in your region - virtually every edible plant has a toxic doppelganger. Or better yet, just buy vegetables from the grocery store or grow some in a garden. I just bought a bunch of green onions for 89 cents.

  • @BromTeque
    @BromTeque2 жыл бұрын

    It is very common in Norway to have a tuft of "gressløk", literally "grass onion", of the allium schoenoprasum variety. Alongside currant, black currant, and gooseberry bushes, and rhubarb. I'm probably forgetting a common garden food, but that's a few from the top of my head. I mostly use "gressløk" for omelets, but I'm sure there is a wide variety of use cases. I'm unsure if wild grass onions grow randomly like the ones you showed in the video, but I'll keep a keen eye the next time I leave my home.

  • @JoshGrayMusic
    @JoshGrayMusic2 жыл бұрын

    I like that you're going this direction. There's lots of good stuff out there.

  • @sohatyi
    @sohatyi2 жыл бұрын

    In England we usually refer to ramsons as wild garlic. Long, quite fibrous leaves that have a very strong smell that can be detected metres away. Some people mistake lily of the valley for wild garlic, which is toxic. Again bruising the leaves is a way to easily check (aside from the flowers looking very different).

  • @sophiophile

    @sophiophile

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought lily of the valley is a mild medicinal depressant?

  • @royster1957
    @royster19572 жыл бұрын

    6:32 the real flavoring the cow not the meat

  • @allyenderman1502
    @allyenderman1502 Жыл бұрын

    I love when I drive past a larger patch of grass that has a good amount of this stuff in it, because with the windows down it suddenly smells like sauteing onions for about four seconds before it just buggers off again.

  • @thealandude9146
    @thealandude91462 жыл бұрын

    love how he just bites on the wild greens at the beginning

  • @thomasking49
    @thomasking492 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been looking for this guide for years. Thank you 🙏

  • @imnolongercheesecake741
    @imnolongercheesecake7412 жыл бұрын

    Harbingers of Spring sounds so cool.

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