It is prime nettle harvesting time, and I've been out several times in the past week to collect, with great reverence, this amazing plant. I think that nettles might be my favorite foraged food - they are perhaps the one I rely on most throughout the year, and feel profound gratitude for. In addition to all the good vitamins, I just learned that they help with allergies and hay fever. 😍
Nettle chips are a little fussy - you have to remove the nettle leafs from each stem (using gloves because they are still stingy), but they ARE delicious.
Nettle Chips, inspired from this post:
- A few tong-fulls of fresh nettle leaves (picked off the stem) - think a loose 2 cups
- 2 T olive oil
- 1 tsp magic mushroom powder (or use half as much salt)
- 1-2 T sesame seeds
- Preheat oven to 325 degrees while you de-stem your nettles (using gloves). I rinsed mine and spun them in my lettuce spinner to get the water off.*
- Using tongs, toss the nettle leaves in a bowl with the other ingredients. Spread the leaves (using your tongs again) in a single layer on 2 baking sheets.
- Bake for about 6-10 minutes until they crisp up. (The original recipe said to flip half way through. I did that with one pan, and not with the other, and couldn't tell a difference. I was using one of those insulated cookie sheets that prevents burning. If you have a regular cookie sheet, keep a close eye on things.)
- Consume! These stay crisp for at least many days in a tupperware sort of container, so no need to eat all at once unless you want to.
This was my first time drying nettles in a dehydrator, and it goes pretty
quickly, not more than a few hours. Once I got the leaves in the jar, I
used my rolling pin end to pulverize them. 7 trays of dried nettles resulted
in one quart of dried leaves (for tea), and about 1 1/2 cups of dried
nettle powder, some of which went into this Gomasio.
Nettle Gomasio, originally posted here:
- ½ cup raw, unhulled sesame seeds
- 2 Tbsp. sea salt
- 1 Tbsp. ground or finely shredded nori, kombu, and/or wakame
- 1 Tbsp. dried nettle powder
- ½ Tbsp. dried thyme
- ½ Tbsp. dried sage
- ½ Tbsp. dried rosemary
- In a cast iron pan, toast sesame seeds and salt on medium heat until a few seeds start to pop.
- Turn off the heat and transfer mixture to a mortar, then add seaweed and herbs.
- Using a pestle or food processor, grind mixture coarsely, leaving about half the sesame seeds intact.
- Store in a sealed glass jar, ideally on your table or counter where you can use as often as desired.
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