BOOK REVIEWS
THE FORAGER CHEF’S BOOK OF FLORA
by Alan Bergo
Chelsea Green Publishing Co, £27 ISBN 978-1603589482
Forager-chef Alan Bergo’s ‘root-to-seed’ approach to plants looks at edibles in a completely new way and opens up a whole new world of flavours.
Reviewer Aaron Bertlesen is Great Dixter’s gardener-cook.
As a gardener, I have spent a lot of my life on all fours weeding. Thanks to this fascinating book, I am looking forward to spending a little less time wielding trowel and hoe, and a little more enjoying the intriguing flavours of what the French call plantes spontanées. So much more appealing – and more accurate – than referring to them as ‘weeds’.
Alan Bergo weaves together botany, cultural history and gastronomy in this guide to making the most not only of neglected plants but of the parts of everyday vegetables that would normally be consigned to the compost bin, such as broccoli stems. He also explores the potential for using plants at different stages of their lives – unripe pumpkins, say, or milkweed – from the first shoots of spring to the seedpods, encouraging us to develop what he calls a ‘hunter’s eye’. At the same time he is careful to point out the potential risks of foraging and to urge readers to consult a proper guide before heading for the hedgerows. He also stresses the need to leave plenty behind, for pollinators and to ensure the sustainability of
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