Scotchheather
09-25-2013, 09:05 PM
My husband doesn't mind eating weeds as long as they taste like doughnuts (I'll post a recipe for pine cambium doughnuts in the appropriate place.
So, this recipe is for emergency only. If you want to see the pictures that go with it, they are here: REMOVED URL.
I stumbled on some research about 10 years back, I thought, ‘Why doesn’t everybody know this?’ A small voluntary organization based in London, England, began promoting the use of leaf concentrate to counter malnutrition in children living in tropical villages and towns. Several studies were undertaken to establish the safety and nutritional value of the leaf concentrate in the diets of children. Find Your Feet ( LEAF FOR LIFE) has since started programs to teach women how to prepare leaf concentrate for malnourished children in Mexico, India, Bolivia, Sri Lanka, Ghana, Nicaragua and Bangladesh.
The thing about leaf concentrate (AKA leaf curd and leafu) is that it can be made out of any plant that isn’t poisonous. Plants that would have before been too tough, to fibrous, to old, to get much out of could be turned into a good source of protein with very low tech equipment needed.
How good a source of protein? The nutritional breakdown from the original work was that 20 grams of powder would provide 12 grams of protein. The amounts of vitamins and minerals (such as 440 mgs of calcium and 49 mg of iron) are impressive.
Leaf Curd is a homemade vegetable protein made from the coagulated protein curds of pulped edible leaves such as citrus, grasses and plants that one would normally consider not to be palatable.
The original research used kaffir lime (Citrus × hystrix), which is used in a lot of South Asian cooking. I opted to use blackberry leaves, mallow, mint, mugwort and a few grape leaves for this batch, but I’ve used other greens as well since then, especially nettles, and the taste hasn’t changed much. Green. Certainly palatable.
Today, I’m seeing a lot of bloggers talking about leaf concentrate so the idea is catching on.
It doesn’t require specialized equipment. You need a knife (or a blender), a pot and a suitable strainer. And a tiny bit of heat. The toughest part is finding the right size weave in a strainer. I really haven’t found the perfect strainer yet, but the last time worked the best. For my first batch I used a paint strainer but the holes were too big and the protein slipped through. I’ve used a both a silk scarf that had a very ‘open’ weave and a cut up nylon. Cheesecloth works fine for the first ‘squeeze’, but the second ‘straining’ you have to be careful not to press or push the gelatin soft proteins through the weave. The first time I made this, I lost i/s of the proteins through the mesh.
For my first batch, I started with about 8 cups of greens. You should end up with about 1/4 cup of curd. Tree leaves can be used as well, as long as they are not a poisonous species. Now, here comes the hardest part of the process. Break the cells mechanically by chopping them very, very finely. It’s hard because it’s so tedious. You could use a blender just as easily, (and I did in later trials) but I wanted to know how monotonous the task would be to do by hand. Every.Single.Day.
Blendering the Greens
For the first squeeze, you can use cheesecloth to press the liquid out of the macerated plant material. Place the resulting liquid in a soup pot and heated it up to about 95 degrees. After about 2 minutes, you can see the proteins start to aggregate.
Remove from heat. Have ready a strainer lined with either a cotton or silk scarf. You might want to experiment to try to find something better. The final squeeze is the most temperamental part of the process.
I spread this paste out onto a baking pan to dry (see top picture), Once dried, the powder will keep for several weeks and can be used to add nutrients to bread and mixed with other foods.
You can also mold fresh undried curd into a ball or a cube, and keep it in the refrigerator for 2 days, adding it to foods. It won’t keep fresh much longer than that.
How does it taste? Much like it’s cousin , soybean tofu. Fairly bland, a little bit green. I have used mint and other aromatics and there as rarely been much of the smell of the mint (or the mugwort or anything else) in the curd. Certainly palatable.
You could use the paste in smoothies or as a sandwich spread. Eat it on crackers or tortillas. You could add the powder could to any baked good, etc. for a nutritional bump, or use on it’s own in survival situations.
So there you go. Honestly, I don’t expect any of you to make it. It’s a lot of work. But I post it once a year, just to ke
So, this recipe is for emergency only. If you want to see the pictures that go with it, they are here: REMOVED URL.
I stumbled on some research about 10 years back, I thought, ‘Why doesn’t everybody know this?’ A small voluntary organization based in London, England, began promoting the use of leaf concentrate to counter malnutrition in children living in tropical villages and towns. Several studies were undertaken to establish the safety and nutritional value of the leaf concentrate in the diets of children. Find Your Feet ( LEAF FOR LIFE) has since started programs to teach women how to prepare leaf concentrate for malnourished children in Mexico, India, Bolivia, Sri Lanka, Ghana, Nicaragua and Bangladesh.
The thing about leaf concentrate (AKA leaf curd and leafu) is that it can be made out of any plant that isn’t poisonous. Plants that would have before been too tough, to fibrous, to old, to get much out of could be turned into a good source of protein with very low tech equipment needed.
How good a source of protein? The nutritional breakdown from the original work was that 20 grams of powder would provide 12 grams of protein. The amounts of vitamins and minerals (such as 440 mgs of calcium and 49 mg of iron) are impressive.
Leaf Curd is a homemade vegetable protein made from the coagulated protein curds of pulped edible leaves such as citrus, grasses and plants that one would normally consider not to be palatable.
The original research used kaffir lime (Citrus × hystrix), which is used in a lot of South Asian cooking. I opted to use blackberry leaves, mallow, mint, mugwort and a few grape leaves for this batch, but I’ve used other greens as well since then, especially nettles, and the taste hasn’t changed much. Green. Certainly palatable.
Today, I’m seeing a lot of bloggers talking about leaf concentrate so the idea is catching on.
It doesn’t require specialized equipment. You need a knife (or a blender), a pot and a suitable strainer. And a tiny bit of heat. The toughest part is finding the right size weave in a strainer. I really haven’t found the perfect strainer yet, but the last time worked the best. For my first batch I used a paint strainer but the holes were too big and the protein slipped through. I’ve used a both a silk scarf that had a very ‘open’ weave and a cut up nylon. Cheesecloth works fine for the first ‘squeeze’, but the second ‘straining’ you have to be careful not to press or push the gelatin soft proteins through the weave. The first time I made this, I lost i/s of the proteins through the mesh.
For my first batch, I started with about 8 cups of greens. You should end up with about 1/4 cup of curd. Tree leaves can be used as well, as long as they are not a poisonous species. Now, here comes the hardest part of the process. Break the cells mechanically by chopping them very, very finely. It’s hard because it’s so tedious. You could use a blender just as easily, (and I did in later trials) but I wanted to know how monotonous the task would be to do by hand. Every.Single.Day.
Blendering the Greens
For the first squeeze, you can use cheesecloth to press the liquid out of the macerated plant material. Place the resulting liquid in a soup pot and heated it up to about 95 degrees. After about 2 minutes, you can see the proteins start to aggregate.
Remove from heat. Have ready a strainer lined with either a cotton or silk scarf. You might want to experiment to try to find something better. The final squeeze is the most temperamental part of the process.
I spread this paste out onto a baking pan to dry (see top picture), Once dried, the powder will keep for several weeks and can be used to add nutrients to bread and mixed with other foods.
You can also mold fresh undried curd into a ball or a cube, and keep it in the refrigerator for 2 days, adding it to foods. It won’t keep fresh much longer than that.
How does it taste? Much like it’s cousin , soybean tofu. Fairly bland, a little bit green. I have used mint and other aromatics and there as rarely been much of the smell of the mint (or the mugwort or anything else) in the curd. Certainly palatable.
You could use the paste in smoothies or as a sandwich spread. Eat it on crackers or tortillas. You could add the powder could to any baked good, etc. for a nutritional bump, or use on it’s own in survival situations.
So there you go. Honestly, I don’t expect any of you to make it. It’s a lot of work. But I post it once a year, just to ke