Winter Dandelions

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FLDRD

Lifer
Oct 13, 2021
2,338
9,531
Arkansas
I uprooted mine a few years ago and placed them all in a safe area so they wouldn't get mowed down. Wonderful raw or in soup.
Mine always come back in spite of the mowing I do. Random locations. I also found I have sheep sorrel, which has a lemony, arugula type of flavor. I'm sure you know all parts of the dandelion are edible. I don't use any chemicals so all mine are good to consume. I picked quite a bit a season or two ago and have plenty to make tea from........
 
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condorlover1

Lifer
Dec 22, 2013
8,558
30,413
New York
I may try that!
Yep they are smokeable. I was told by my Father that they used to collect the leaves and tie them in bunches so that they went from green to yellow and then cure them by hanging them under the eaves of their barracks roof. Once cured they could be slices up very fine and added to either cigarette tobacco or pipe tobacco on a ratio of 1:3 to stretch out your weekly ration from the NAFFI. You could also use Colts Foot another common British plant for the same purpose. I used to cure and dry that stuff at boarding school to stretch out my supply of Three Castles RYO and I am sure inmates at Colditz Castle POW did something similar!
 

Hillcrest

Lifer
Dec 3, 2021
3,805
19,340
Connecticut, USA
I’ve known several people over the years who make dandelion wine. I never bothered to try it though.
I was going to suggest that. My sister made Dandelion wine as a school science project when we were kids many many years ago. IIRC it tasted like a lemony soda or mountain dew type taste. It was quite potent too but then we were kids so it would be strong.
 

condorlover1

Lifer
Dec 22, 2013
8,558
30,413
New York
@mawnansmiff : Big round green 3.5 oz tins or the pouches. Cut so fine it could have been armchair stuffing or the pubic hairs of a vestal virgin. I survived many years at a British boarding school on a diet of Will Woodbine or Three Castles, having a crafty 'fag' in the grounds behind the cricket pavilion. For some inexplicable reason my memories of the place were always sepia, it was always winter, always cold and the food was never edible. Funny how you remember things as you get older!
 
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condorlover1

Lifer
Dec 22, 2013
8,558
30,413
New York
@mawnansmiff : Wills Woodbine cigarettes. You would always ask for 10 Woods and they came in that slide tray pack. If you were feeling really positive you would buy a pack of Piccadilly No:1 which came in 25's so on a 'Free Weekend' you would buy a pack in Euston Station on the Friday evening that would see you home, last the weekend and you would have a few left to smoke before the train back to school on Sunday. Since you were traveling in your school 'Sunday Suit' you could even get a pint at the railway pub in Euston without anyone challenging your age before heading out and still have change out of a £1.00! Happy days.
 

MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
643
4,736
Ludlow, UK
Mine always come back in spite of the mowing I do. Random locations. I also found I have sheep sorrel, which has a lemony, arugula type of flavor. I'm sure you know all parts of the dandelion are edible. I don't use any chemicals so all mine are good to consume. I picked quite a bit a season or two ago and have plenty to make tea from........
@FLDRD - That's a sure sign that the soil underneath your lawn is acidic. You can alkalify it by adding lime but personally I like free salad vegetables on my lawn, too.
If you reach down to the heart of the leaves of a dandelion you will find, very close to the surface, flower buds in a tight little ball. They can be pickled and used instead of capers.
 
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FLDRD

Lifer
Oct 13, 2021
2,338
9,531
Arkansas
I’ve known several people over the years who make dandelion wine. I never bothered to try it though.
I had an organic chemistry teacher that said he made dandelion wine. Also stated it tasted terrible for 3 years and not until the 4th was it reasonable. I never had any.
 

FLDRD

Lifer
Oct 13, 2021
2,338
9,531
Arkansas
@FLDRD - That's a sure sign that the soil underneath your lawn is acidic. You can alkalify it by adding lime but personally I like free salad vegetables on my lawn, too.
If you reach down to the heart of the leaves of a dandelion you will find, very close to the surface, flower buds in a tight little ball. They can be pickled and used instead of capers.
It's not really a lawn, in the traditional city sense. There has been lots of grass seed planted previous to my ownership, and I've never used any chemicals to eliminate weeds. I do enjoy having the more natural and wild plants.

I've also let my native grasses grow, the ones that grow tall and have deeper roots - so that I can decrease my soil runoff. I'm on a hilltop with great views and shallow soil.... One of my neighbors has told me I'm "doing it wrong", but she has no clue about leaving an ecosystem to revert to taking care of itself.

I will have to look for those little buds, I'm not familiar with that.
 
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anotherbob

Lifer
Mar 30, 2019
16,850
31,596
46
In the semi-rural NorthEastern USA
During WW2 people in the U.K used to cure the leaves and then add that to tobacco as a sort of 'Hamburger Helper' to stretch things out until the next ration coupon!
and you can make a fake steak out of corn flakes milk and ground beef. That as far as making one thing more like another it's good that way but if you don't have to use ration points just buy a steak.