Butterfly bushes
Salvia
Cosmos
Zinnias
Marigolds
Lamb's Ears
Peony
Sedum
Starting with the butterfly bush, no clue, I have nothing about them on the edible side of things.
Salvia, is the common sage.
Cosmos, The only thing I know to do with these is to candy them.
Gently rinse off blossoms, allow to dry thoroughly. Beat egg whites lightly. Using a small paint brush, coat petals with egg whites. Sprinkle with sugar or gently dip flower to coat. Set on a plate to dry completely. When dry, store in a tightly sealed container. Use to decorate pastries, or as a sweet snack.
(other flowers to candy: Rose petals, lavender and lilac, nasturtiums, pansies, chive blossoms, fushia, carnations, pinks and most herbs, such as mint leaves, borage, bee balm, etc.)
Zinnias, they are in the marigold family and edible.
Marigolds, (eat petals only!)
Beltane Custard
2 cups milk
1 cup unsprayed marigold petals
1/4 tsp salt
3 Tbsp salt
1-2 inch vanilla bean
3 egg yolks
1/8 tsp all spice
1/8 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp rose water
Whipped cream
pound the marigold petals. Mix together salt, sugar, and spices. Scald the milk with the marigolds and the vanilla bean in it. Remove the vanilla bean, add egg yolks and cook on low heat. When the mixture thickly coats a spoon add the rose water and allow to cool.Serve with whipped cream and garnish with fresh marigold petals.
Marigold Pie
4 tablespoons of marigold or borage petals
3 organic, free range eggs
3 heaped tablespoons organic cottage cheese (plain)
1 tablespoon icing sugar
small pinch of salt
small pinch of nutmeg
1 baked pie shell
preheat oven to 350 F. Bring petals to the boil in about half a pint of water. Drain immediately. Separate eggs . Mix the yolks with the petals. Sieve cottage cheese, add sugar, salt and nutmeg. Mix together petal mixture to the cottage cheese mix. Whisk the egg whites until a soft peak forms and fold into the mixture. Pour into baked pie shell and bake for about 25 minutes or until the pie feels firm to the touch.
Orange Marigold Iced tea
1 quart water
1/3 cup sugar (optional)
3/4 cup organic, edible marigold petals
3 tablespoons whole-leaf assam tea
2 medium oranges, well scrubbed
Ice
Place the water in a medium saucepan over high heat, add the sugar, if using. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium-low and add the marigold petals. Simmer 2 minutes, add the tea leaves and remove from the heat. Allow to steep for 3 minutes, strain into a pitcher, discarding the solids. Refrigerate until cold.
Cut the oranges crosswise into thin slices. To serve, line the sides of tall glasses with 5 to 7 orange slices each. add ice and tea.
Mullein Tea for congestion and cough
4-6 Young Mullein Leaves(Lamb’s Ears)
Milk
Teaspoon of sugar or honey per cup of tea made
Boil the Mullein leaves in just enough water to cover. Strain through a cheese cloth. Add some milk and a teaspoon of sugar or honey to personal taste per cup of tea.
Peony, is another to be candied.
Sedum leaves can be added to salads, they have a slight peppery taste. You can also fry them with other veggies or add them to your soups. The yellow flowers do have some toxicity, but frying them removes that problem. The red ones are fine to eat.
Relish for hot dogs or hamburgers
fry sedum leaves with a couple of slivers of sweet bell peppers and onions over a high heat in olive oil until the onions are browned and bell peppers nearly translucent, add pepper to taste.
Do I pass?
12 comments:
Pass with flying colors! I love eating stuff outta the yard and am going to try candying some mint leaves.
A+ Outstanding! Hee hee. We went to a wedding once where the cake had a white frosting and all marigolds/zinnias on it. Oh, and mint leaves. I was a bit nervous to eat ANY of it. I scraped off all the flower bits and ate the cake. I noticed most other people did the same thing.
I did not know anything you talked about today. I'll be looking up recipes for candying.
On a side note, Cole has been sampling various "weeds" he sees in the front yard. So far, he's still alive and kicking. LOL
The candying recipe is posted above, right under cosmos.
I'd be really interested in hearing why it's called Beltane Custard. Is it typically eaten during the Sabbat?
Custards are traditional to eat on Beltane because they are made with milk and eggs, symbols of fertility.
I seem to remember that Buddleia (Butterfly Bush) is used in food dyes or something like that. But, I can't find my book, so don't take this for the truth just yet. ;-)
And don't forget rose hips for tea. Lots of vitamin C in them
Always a wealth of information on your site, my friend! Think you passed with flying colors.
You'd be a handy person to have as a neighbor, for sure!
Gee, and I thought I was doing well eating artichokes from the front yard and teaching my kids to nibble the nasturtiums!
Wait!!! Lamb's ear and mullein are the same thing? I thought mullein grew tall tall tall (mine does) but lamb's ear stays close to the ground with a shorter flower spike. Holy cow.. are they the same family and I just didn't pay attention?
Do tell.
Flannel Mullein and Lamb's ears are the same thing.
I can't wait to try the marigold tea! What an interesting blog, and I LOVE the picture of the butt and the sheep! :-)
Love the idea of eating more of my flowers. I freeze borage flowers into ice cubes for horomonally sad teen girls who shall remain nameless. It makes them happy. Who knows why it works, but it does! And they are pretty. :)
Bookmarking those recipes too.
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