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Sunday, August 8, 2010

Jello Love

I love food. Real food, that is.

Food without ingredients. Organic food. Whole food. Food with health and vitality. Wild food. Local food.
Beautiful food. Food as medicine. Food that nourishes and transorms body, mind and spirit.

I'll be sharing more...recipes, pics, ideas, thoughts.

Here's the first one.

Herbal Jello
2 cups of liquid total. I use a combination of berry juice, herbal infusions.
Gelatin or agar
Flowers

Prepare the liquid. I like to use raspberry juice or sour cheery as a base. To make the juice I use approx 2 cups of fresh or frozen berries or fruit, add enough water to cover and then simmer until the juice is extracted. Strain the juice from the pulp.

Prepare your herbal infusion. I like to use rose hips, hawthorn berries, elderberries. 1 cup of dried berries to 4 cups of water. Decoct down until the liquid is reduced by half ie 2 cups. I also like to add some nourishing herbal infusion - raspberry leaf is my favourite. I like the flavour and I like the refrigerant properties.

Mix the berry juice with the herbal infusion so that you have 2 cups of liquid. Add sweetener to taste.
This is the amount that one package of gelatin will set. Follow the instructions on the gelatin packet. If you are a vegetarian you can use agar as a substitute for the gelatin.

Pour the gelatin, infusion mixture in to a pretty bowl. Let sit under the top is tacky. Decorate with flowers. Let sit until firm.

Serve as is or with homemade yogurt or whipped cream from Breezy the Cow!

Chock full of flavanoids, anthocyanidins, Vit C, Calcium and more.

Photo credit: Tammy Fairbrother 



Saturday, August 7, 2010

Plantain Love

Summer is in full swing here in the Shuswap and the living is easy. Gardens are offering up a plethora of goodness - plump zucchinis, sweet onions, succulent chard, melt in your mouth strawberries and, as always, a bumper crop of weeds! And a good thing that is, I say. For among those weedy wonders is one that could, just one day, save your life - Plantain! Here's a little Plantain-to-the-Resuce story....

Last year, a good friend of mine who lives in a remorte area, miles and miles from the nearest hospital (no phone) got bit by something while getting dressed. His face immediately began to swell and upon looking in the mirror he discovered his head growing in size, eyes were bulging, face growing redder and redder by the second while his throat began to swell and constrict. With the understanding of the gravity of the situation (made even more serious given the fact he was alone in a remote area) he ran outside and grabbed a handful of plantain, chewing it well to extract the juices and mixing it with his saliva, he swallowed it down. Within a very short time the swelling in his head and throat began to subside and minutes later he was fine and breathing normal. It was a very close call, and, had he not known about plantain as a remedy for anaphylactic shock, he may not have lived to tell his story.
Update to this story...I talked to this same friend last night. He had another encounter and was stung all about his head after disturbing a wasp nest. Again, he had the presence of mind to gather a handful of plantain and manged to get some juice down his throat only this time, due to the number of bites he succumbed to them and passed out! He awoke a couple of minutes later with serious symptoms. Fortunatley for him, he had a friend staying with him and his friend drove him to the hospital where he was given medical treatment for anaphaltic shock. He believes that if he hadn't injested that first bit of plantain he would have died.

While this is a rather extreme situation, it is not an uncommon one. "Anaphylaxis can occur in response to any allergen. Common triggers include insect bites or stings, foods, medication and latex rubber. Anaphylaxis results in approximately 1,500 deaths per year in the U.S." The most commonly used antidote to anaphylaxis is the antihistamine benedryl. However, I am always amazed by the number of people I meet who are allergic to bee stings or bites of some kind, who don't carry benedryl with them. Besides, benedryl alone doesn't always stop an anaphyalxtic reaction. Moreover, one does not always know one is severely allergic to something until one has said allergic reaction. (And, it seems to me, that more and more people are becoming allergic to stings and bites. That's a whole other topic for another day).

However, if you or someone you know are in such a situation as my friend, it's nice to know that an antidote is most likely at hand, or in this case I should say "at  foot".
Botanically speaking Plantain is known as Plantago (spp). Plantago comes from the Latin word "Planta" meaning sole or foot. Native people associated the plant with the Europeans, who seemed to leave a trail of the alien weed wherever they went, and called it “white man’s foot”. I suspect that plantain was deliberately brought over by our pioneering ancestors who were well acquainted its healing properties. (It's nice to know that the white man brought something useful to First Nations people).

The common plantain - Plantain major - has broad, irregularly rounded to oval leaves, 1-6 inches in length that form a basal rosette that is prostrate to the ground. The leaves have smooth, wavy, or toothed edges; 3 – 11 parallel veins run their length and are large and noticeable. A tall spike of inconspicuous flowers, then tiny seeds cover the central flower stalk, which stands erect from the center of the basal rosette and can be 3 – 12 inches tall. This spike of seeds easily identifies common plantain. The round, prominently veined leaves are readily found during all seasons. Plantain is so common in grassy areas that it is likely to be overlooked - that is, unless, you let your three horses graze on your lawn all summer whereby eating up all the grass until there is nothing left but plantain - flower stalks poking up from the ground leaving your lawn looking very much like some experimental site in alien agriculture. Here's a pic. Yes, you have seen this plant everywhere!

The good news is that you don't have to actually experience something as serious and life threatening as anaphylaxis to reap the healing benefits of Plantain.

Plantain is to any kind of insect bite of any magnitude - be it simply an annoying itch, a painful sting or even one of a more seriously venomous nature (think brown recluse spider) - what cold water is to a burn. The number one remedy.

Should you get bit by some venoumous insect, or wound yourself, puncture yourself, burn yourself or get an itchy rash here's what to do with plantain:

Chew it! This works good for bites, stings and puncture wounds. Pick some fresh plantain - 1 large leaf or several small ones - and put it in your mouth and chew well until you can taste the juice. Allow it to trickle down your throat. Apply the chewed up pulpy mass to your bite, sting, cut. It should stick pretty good on its own, or, you can cover it with a bandaid.

Plaster it! This works great for cuts. Take a leaf and apply it to the cut like a bandaid. Believe me, it will stick just like a bandaid. I cut my finger open while filleting fish one summer and applied a Plantain bandaid. Voila!  Almost instant pain relief and the cut healed nicely in few days.

Juice it! Run fresh plaintain through your juicer. Freeze in ice cube trays for future use. Apply neat to bites , cuts and burns. Unthaw and use as a poultice. Or unthaw and drink the juice if you are concerned about an anaphylactic reaction.

Make a vinegar. Gather fresh plantain leaves and coarsely chop until you have enough to fill a clean, sterilized four once jar about 2/3 to 3/4 full. Pour apple cider vinegar over the plantain until the plant material is immersed. Poke or stir with a chopstick, wooden spoon or whatever. Top up with more vinegar if necessary.
Put a plastic lid on the jar. (If you don't have a plastic lid for your jar, insert waxed paper between the liquid and the metal lid). Label the jar with "Plaintain in Vinegar" and the date. Let the preparation sit, prreferably four to six weeks (although if you had to you could use it sooner than that)in a cool place but in sight of where you can check periodically to make sure that it hasn't spoiled. At this point, you can either strain the plant material from the liquid or leave it in...if you leave it in you must store it in a cool, dark place or even the fridge. You can use this vinegar topically if for all manner of bites, stings, wounds, burns, rashes etc as well as injest it for the same reasons.

Now go outside and find some plantain and say thank you!

NB  Please be advised that I am not claiming plantain will save your life if you are unfortuante to experience an anaphylactic reaction. But, it could save your life, like it did for my friend. If you know you are allergic to bees or wasps or anything else, please carry the appropriate remedy with you at all times. My friend now carries and epi pen. I know he will use the epi pen right away if need be and I know he will still reach for the plantain.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Spring Newsletter

Hello Everyone and Happy Spring and Happy Earth Day. Yes, I know it is a belated Happy but, we all know that every day is Earth Day),

Well, I started this Newsletter back in March when Spring was not quite green and the Cottonwood buds were just starting to swell, and, I have only now completed it - as bud has to turned to leaf and there is an explosion of green goodness everywhere!

My exuses/reasons for taking such a long time complete the Newsletter include: I'm a very (very) slow writer, I had a number of personal distractions (some really good, and some not so good) this past month and (my best exuse).... I'm on plant time. So, I guess if I start writing the Summer Newsletter now it might be ready in time!

I hope you enjoy the Newsletter, even if it is a bit late. I welcome your comments and feedback and just generally like to hear from you.

Click here to read the Newsletter

Monday, November 2, 2009

People Love

















Needless to say, one of the best things about being a Herbalist (among a whole lot of many good things) is that I get to hang out with plants. Being a Herbalist gives one the legitimate excuse to wile away the hours (and even days) wandering around in forests, fields, meadows and along riverbanks. (Not that I've ever needed an exuse, thank you very much.)

The other best thing about being a Herablist is that I get to hang out with the most amazing, awesome, wonderful people in the world – my students! My students are among some of the most amazing, beautiful ,wonderful and talented people I have ever met. And this year's students were no exception. Actually – that's not quite true – they were exceptional!!


My students this year raised the bar. They challenged and inspired me.....


They made me laugh...


They made me cry (in a good way).....



They impressed me beyond my wildest expectations. And for those who know me, you know my expectations are high.

Indeed it was my honour and privilege to have been their guide and mentor these past six months.
As my good friend Jean aka Faery Prairie Dancer said ....10 more women who love the Earth just a little bit more".


And so it goes....











Thursday, August 20, 2009

Symbiosis

So.....is it a garden within a weed patch or weed patch within a garden?


To Bee or Not to Bee

I wrote this in response to a message I received from one of my students who had heard that honey wasn't good for you because it was made from bee waste. She was, at the time, at a point in her life when she was unsure of what her purpose in life was meant to be. Here's my response .....

......My thought then is this - if honey is bad for us because it is waste from a bee then is oxygen bad for us because it is waste from plants??!! Or is it just a matter of perspective?

I've spent the last few days hanging out with dandelions - harvesting the blossoms to turn into sweet medicine for winter so that, when all the world is white and stormy, I can open a jar of that golden goodness and bee immediatley transported back to a warm, sunny day in the Shuswap, when all the world was green and gold, on a day wherein I was privilege to one of the miracles on Earth - the ancient and oh-so-intimate-and-delicate dance between plant and pollinator - the bumblbee engaged in her ancient, ritual of relationship with the dandelion - harvesting sweet nectar to bring backto hive, to transform into food that will keep her hive alive during the winter. In her short life she will have lived a privileged life - long days filled with playing in the sun, dancing among all the beautiful flowers - not questioning the purpose of her life - living completely in the moment. She is thus a manifestation of the wisdom of the Earth, the alchemy ofNature, the siral of Life, and in partaking of her sweetness - her honey - we too become part of that ancient, delicate ritual and yes.....how sweet it is!!!

On that note - pass the rose petal honey, please!



Wednesday, August 19, 2009

In Love With Weeds - A Weedy and Always Seedy Love Affair

Some call them “aliens”, some call them “invasive species”, some call them “noxious”, some call them names that are not fit for the ears of gentle readers, some pull them out by their hair or their roots and some even poison them.

But some of us love them! We love for the very reasons others don't. We love them for their stubbornness, we love them for their tenacity, we love them for their resilience, we love them for their abundant availability, we love them for their uncommon beauty, we love them for their food and we love them for their medicine.....we love them, we love them, we love them for many, many reasons!

Weeds are to the plant world what pioneers are to the people world – they come from somewhere else. Unlike native plants (and people) they are not indigenous to the landscapes they call home. In fact, many of the weeds in North America were purposely brought here by the pioneers, being used as food or medicine in their country of origin or, they simply hitched a free ride on an unsuspecting host - animal fur, clothing, soil etc. (For all their immobility plants have incredibly amazing ways and means of getting around!)

And Just like the people/pioneers who introudeced them, they more than thrived in their new homes. And some even kinda “took over”. (Hmmm....at some point we'll discuss the parallels between the plant world and the people world). At any rate, they are here to stay, for better or worse – it's a matter of perspective. And from a Herbalist's perspective it's more better than it is worse. Let's find out why......

To be continued...