Making Acorn-Chickweed-Omelet...

in #hive-12058614 days ago

...from foraged ingredients!

I am a real fan of fried egg on a bread in the morning but I recently switched to acorn--chickweed-omelete. Never looking back dude!!

Before going into how to harvest and process acorns I figure I would share the why. Why do all this work? Well because acorn omelete is mindblowing, super filling and arguably a lot healthier than wheat bread.

Let us start with the greens, I collect them around the property, chickweed in this case:

IMG_20241204_111546330.jpg


It just loves to pop up from under the natural mulch that is the leaves from all the oak trees.

IMG_20241204_111721414.jpg


The more I look for it the more there is of it somehow, everywhere.

IMG_20241204_111525473.jpg


Ok, that should be enough. It's wet outside and I even caught a raindrop on camera.

IMG_20241204_112534933.jpg


Wash the greens and put them in the salad spinner. Not that there is much of anything to wash off...

IMG_20241204_113310582.jpg


And chop the chickweed!

IMG_20241204_113343468.jpg


Now for the real stars - the acorns! These have been leached already, which I will go into another time. For now just accept that they are perfectly kitchen ready edibles!

IMG_20241204_113626983.jpg


I chop them into smaller bits so they can better soak up the oil in the pan:

IMG_20241204_113815718.jpg


Add oil to the trusted iron skillet.

IMG_20241204_113909812.jpg


Then put the cut acorns in, and let them soak in the oil for a bit. I also add some cumin seeds at this time.

IMG_20241204_114003121.jpg


And our dill from Albania!

IMG_20241204_114024098.jpg


I spare you the pepper picture. Now stir it!

IMG_20241204_114142640.jpg


And because it's a house in the forest of course there is a kitchen witch (German term for wooden cooking stove). No need to waste any gas, it's a cold day and the stove is running already. There is a great sense of conservation and efficiency when using the heat of the stove in multiple ways... You can also see our latest acorn batch in preparation, drying in the background. As well as sticks for firewood /which is why the stove top is so messy).

IMG_20241204_120705450.jpg


Wait for the acorns to fry a bit

IMG_20241204_121406568.jpg


At this point I will take the pan off the stove to put the eggs in. Taking the heat away will allow me to spread the eggs, and add salt before the eggs turn white and solid.

IMG_20241204_121439201.jpg


Spread them out

IMG_20241204_121534711.jpg


Add the greens...

IMG_20241204_121605420.jpg


...and press down so they fuse into the still wet egg.

IMG_20241204_121614388.jpg


Now I wait for the eggs to become sort of a carpet that I can lift:

IMG_20241204_122050914.jpg


When I can lift the whole thing...

IMG_20241204_122101373.jpg


...I flip it.

IMG_20241204_122111831.jpg


We are done! After another minute on the stove I take the pan down...

IMG_20241204_122212712.jpg


...and take horrible pictures of the presentation. Ahahaha. God I suck sometimes lol. Wanted to fold it into an omelete but that did not work out. But you get the idea!

IMG_20241204_122240044.jpg


Time for a taster!

IMG_20241204_122316637.jpg


It's way better than it looks ahaha. The acorns are fatty and crunchy, the egg is mildly spicy with cumin and the chickweed is "melted" slightly, tasting similar to most greens. It's such a great combination!

IMG_20241204_122651484.jpg


Since the acorns are so energy dense a handful really is enough. It fills me up for hours and I just love the concept of eating things the trees next door have dropped. It's so delicious also.

Needless to say the only cost for this meal was the cumin seeds and the two eggs. I am in love with foraging! Yay, yet another new passion of mine! I am easily excited by awesome things!

IMG_20241204_122740068.jpg

If you have oak trees near you, there might still be time to gather some acorns before they degrade too much. I can totally recommend it!


Img srcs:
unsplash.com


Thanks for stopping by <3

Sort:  

Manually curated by scroogergotchiheroes.com from the @qurator Team. Keep up the good work!

cheers

This post has been manually curated by @steemflow from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.

Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share more than 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators in the form of IUC tokens. HP delegators and IUC token holders also get upto 20% additional vote weight.

Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.

image.png

100% of the rewards from this comment goes to the curator for their manual curation efforts. Please encourage the curator @steemflow by upvoting this comment and support the community by voting the posts made by @indiaunited.

Wow this is amazing! I really need to learn more about the acorn leaching process and can't wait until you discuss this topic in a post!

naturally ;)

the post is done :)
https://peakd.com/hive-150329/@paradigmprospect/how-to-make-acorns-edible-a-step-by-step-of-the-hot-leaching-process

these acorns have become a real staple of this life phase. ahahaha.
we had acorn pancakes this morning.

Enjoy the delicacy

well, another day, another acorn omelet. i tend to go into extremes.

until i am sick of it 🤣

today's variety comes with curry.

Hahaha
Keep enjoying