But it's also easy to forget that the last two winters were abnormal, at least in recent memory. In my lifetime in Michigan and Northern Illinois, we've had a white Christmas less than 50% of the time.
And so long as there isn't snow on the ground, we can go outdoors and be greeted by some of our winter plant friends. Many seem to think you need a green house or hoop house to enjoy fresh greens in the winter, but it ain't so. In fact, even after having a good snow cover a couple of times, there are a whole cadre of over-wintering ephemerals and early spring ephemerals that only appear in the cold months, and they're some of the best!
So, here are some greens we can grow and forage to kick off the scurvy through the holidays.
Starting with some of the traditional vegetables, kale still looks great this time of year and in my opinion is at its sweetest after a snow.
Arugula is also looking good still, though starting to get bitter. But harvesting young plants and small leaves still gives amazing gourmet salads.
A wide variety of perennial herbs help spice up savory winter dishes. Sage is great with winter squash recipes. We're still making "Delicatta fries" with oil (or butter) and browned ssage sauces, and we'll soon move on to Butternut and Seminole pumpkin, sauteed with sage and turned into a pasta sauce.
A wide variety of thymes are also still helping out in egg dishes and soups.
Our perennialized patches of garlic are producing greens this time of year and can be dug when the soil's dry for fresh garlic bulbs. An absolute farmhouse delicacy.
Blood-veined sorrel and blue-stemmed Welsh onion.
A crunchy cultivated purslane, Stella Minutina.
Beautiful rosettes of endive, which were cut a month before to encourage fresh new greens over winter.
Others endives were potted up and brought inside for a true gourmet vegetable, Belgian endive loaf, that sells for as much as $5/head at the store - if you can even find them! Blanched in a dark closet or basement, they produce crunchy green heads than can be grilled, roasted, or used in salad or pasta dishes. We like to use the crunchy spoon-shaped leaves as "dippers" for hummus or tapas dishes instead of crackers or bread.
Deer stay away from the Evening Dame's Rocket, but I think it tastes better now than the Turkish rocket they've been feasting on.
Turkish rocket is a bit hairy this time of year. Not my fave to be honest.
Parsley is great in winter dishes. Next year I plan on growing way, way more. Bill Mollison says a sort of self-sowing permanant parsley patch can be set up so that you never have to do without. We'll plan on testing that out next year.
Salad burnet is at its best right now, too. A nice cucumber flavor and a texture like pea tips.
Egyptian walking onions are still producing green onions, and will continue to, even under the snow.
Chickweed is going strong and reminds me of sprouts when added to a sandwich.
Peppercress or shotcress is a great green that's a relative of watercress and gardencress. This time of year, it has a texture and flavor (and reportedly, nutrition) very similar to those two gourmet vegetables.
Speaking of, here's watercress growing in bowls of water on our window sill. A very economical way of producing winter greens that are very nutritious.
Looks very similar to the wild cress. At this size, virtually indistinguishable.
A polyculture of chickweed, onion grass, cress and sticky willy carpet the forest garden this time of year.
Young seedlings of miner's lettuce are just emerging and will be ready by spring.
A few larger specimens are further along, competing here with dead nettle, chickweed, and motherwort (and a leaf of poison hemlock! One must be very careful when foraging.)
Sorrel leaves are tangy and tender this time of year. Unfortunately, the deer think so, too.
The deer are also a little too fond of our campanula persicifolia, which is at its best this time of year. This one has been over-harvested by the deer.
Dead nettle Vs stinging nettle. Can you tell them apart? The nettle stings and is just finishing it's growth cycle for the year. The Dead Nettle is a mint with no sting, and it's just starting its yearly growth. Both are edible as a cooked green.
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