Wild Foods

Grow abundantly in Nature and Provide a Bounty of Free Nutrition

You can either take those recipes with some or no alteration and prepare new dishes or you can prepare wild boar meat with your of your own recipes.

There are a few things that you should know before handling the wild boar. Since pork meat is lean in fat that is why its fat is called soft fat. While the fat of the domestic or production pork which is a relative of the wild pork is called soft fat.

Since pork has lesser fat in its meat it requires lower temperature to be cooked than those required by the meat of other animals. You have to be careful while handling it because if you leave the meat unattended you can easily overcook it.

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The wild blue berry; a potent and tasty little berry well known for its health benefits, is making its way up the popularity ladder for this very reason. What was once considered nothing more than a seasonal treat, is proving to be one of the best sources of antioxidants, and with its power to maintain taste even after freezing, there is no excuse not to take advantage, no matter where in the world you may reside.

Here is a fun and factual list of things to know about the wild blueberry:

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Wild foods such as Marsh Samphire are making their way on to the plates of trendy international restaurants. They join such wild-sourced foods as truffles as culinary oddities and gourmet foods. Are these trail-blazers in a new trend, and is there something more going on here?

In Europe, at least, the Second World War marked a watershed in culinary tastes. Foraging for wild foods became an essential part of survival. Wild-sourced foods often became essential dietary staples for those who could access those foods. It was inevitable, after the shortages of the war cam to an end that people would shie away from such subsistence foods and that commercial agricultural produce and processed foods became the be-all and end-all of daily sustenance. Two generations lost the knowledge of which wild foods were edible and which wern’t (with the notable exception of fruit such as blackberries and certain mushrooms). Consumers became more distant from the land than ever before.

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