I often hear that one obstacle to foraging for greens is that they are so hard to clean. Most humans do not care for gritty bits of sand in their food, and many prefer to buy their greens already rinsed and imprisoned in plastic so that their meals are guaranteed grit free. Here, I will show you a simple method to get every grain of sand out of your greens, even the muddiest of those low growing, but highly nutritious, greens.
Step One
Float the greens in a bowl of cold water. Agitate them a bit, then let them sit just for a few moments. One mistake people make is to think that a long soak will help remove the sand. This is untrue, and in some cases will cause the greens to begin to rot. A minute at most is all you need. Make sure you have used enough water to allow all the greens to float a good inch or more above the bottom of the bowl.
Step Two
Remove the greens from the water by lifting them gently up and out of the water, into a strainer. Do NOT pour the whole shebang into the strainer. As you can see from the photo below, the sand and dirt remain in the bottom of the bowl. If you pour the whole shebang into the strainer, you will just pour all that sand and dirt back onto the greens you are trying to clean.
Step Three
Touch the bottom of the bowl to see if you feel any sand or grit. If you do, you will need to repeat steps one two again. Repeat those steps until the water is clear and you do not find one single grain of sand in the bottom of the bowl.
For my quite muddy dandelion greens, I felt just a couple bits of sand after the second rinse, and only had to rinse them one more time before the bottom of the bowl had no grit in it at all. I did not need to use tons of water, and it took me very little time.
My first harvest of 2021
was a nice big bunch of swiss chard from a plant I had overwintered in my home in a south facing window. I kept it alive until well after it had stopped producing edible leaves, then planted it out in my cold frame a good month ago. It immediately began to grow vigorously again!
These leaves I simply held under running cold water to get the dirt and sand off, uncurling those edges to make sure I got it all. The floating rinse method would have worked too, but with leaves like these, rinsing under cold water is easier.
To produce the dish in my first image, I cut the chard into large two inch strips and stem segments. I then simmered the chard stems, uncovered, in salted water for a minute or two before adding the leaves, allowing it all to simmer until tender, another minute or so.
I lifted the chard out and into a strainer with a slotted spoon, then put the dandelion greens into the simmering water. These needed slightly longer than the chard to tame their bitterness some.
Then I combined both greens in a bowl, drizzled it all with fresh lemon juice, a good olive oil, and sprinkled with salt. It felt so very good to eat a large serving of greens in early May, reminding me why I do all this in the first place. This dish tasted so much better than anything I could buy, pre-rinsed and imprisoned in plastic, at the grocery store.
barn page break by@thekittygirl
I hardly eat greens these days (year or longer) but I do it the same way. What is rinsed and sacked is frequently rotten or it comes with a smell I can not stand.
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Good tip @owasco... it really works too!
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Hi,
I wanted to ask you something. My son is doing a PHD program in psychology and he needs a person to do a psychological evaluation for a report. It cannot be a relative or friend. Thus, it is hard to find someone for a 3 hour Zoom session.
I know you as a very friendly and down to earth person, and I was wondering if you might be interested to be a subject of such an evaluation?
Thank you!
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Does the three hours have to be all at once? Where would the results go? Anonymous? Would I get the results?
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Hi,
It is 3 hour long session
The results would go to the university only and they are completely confidential and anonymous.
No. Because my son isn't a licensed psychologist yet, but only a student
However there are some other perks that they offer and if you are interested to find out my son would be happy to fill you in.
He is the guy with spread arms and long hair on the picture of this video
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I fear that fearful feeling in the bottoms of my feet just watching this. But good for them!!!
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I am also afraid of heights. And they paid for it. )))
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I'm sorry, I can't do a three hour session. If we could break it up into at least two sessions, I would do it. But three all at once no can do. Thanks for thinking of me, and your kind words about me.
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Thank you! No problem. I did indeed thought about you, because my son wanted someone intelligent. )))
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