Hello everybody
First of all, sorry for this stupid question, but i was wondering what part of cattail is edible in the fall, and how should i cook it for the best flavour?
Hello everybody
First of all, sorry for this stupid question, but i was wondering what part of cattail is edible in the fall, and how should i cook it for the best flavour?
In the fall the only part of the cattail that is useful would be the rootstock. in the late summer little horn shaped sprouts form at the end of the roots and remain through-out winter. you can eat them in a salad or boil them with butter. In late fall/winter the rootstocks become filled with starch. the only way to use them is to wash/peel them then soak them in cold water to remove the starch. once dried the starch can be used for flour.
Welcome to the forum BCK. Why not forage your way over to the Introductions and tell us a bit about yourself?
http://www.wilderness-survival.net/f...ead.php?t=7813
Tracks Across the High Plains...Death on the Bombay Line...A Touch of Death and Mayhem...Dead Rock...The Griswald Mine Boys...All On Amazon Books.
out of curiosity how do you dry the starch and how many roots do i need to collect and process to have a useable amount of flower, and how does cattail flower taste?
also maybe a silly question but, does cat tail have any poisonous look a likes?
thanks for the help......
Last edited by wareagle69; 09-25-2010 at 04:41 PM. Reason: spelling
always be prepared-prepare all ways
http://wareaglesurvival.blogspot.com
WE, I do not know of any poisonous look-alikes of cattail. Sorry, I can't answer the other questions.
Be sure to save some heads for carring fire, burn like punk sticks.
(This has gotta be true, I saw Cody Lundin do it on duel survival)
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Evoking the 50 year old rule...
First 50 years...worried about the small stuff...second 50 years....Not so much
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YCC scroll down to Identification. It lists poisonous look-alikes - no have the brown seed head.
http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles/duffyk43.html
Yes cattail does have a poisonous look alike but only when it is a very young plant. the look-alike is the iris plant i believe. the best way to be 100% sure its a cattail is to look for the brown sausage-like flower head.
here is a more detailed description on how to prepare the cattail flour. Good luck
http://www.tacticalintelligence.net/...at-cattail.htm
thats whats great about new folks-new links excellently written blog, almost seems like i wrote it, same methods same books same way of thinking, maybe thats why i am so impressed with it, cuz thats exactly how i do it.
To the bckid
i ask questions, leading questions at times about wild edibles cuz i see new folks coming on here all the time regurgitating the same info over and over, plaugurizing books, to which i have them all, so i ask questions that the books can't answer, only experience
we have a saying here-knowledge without experience is just information.
hopefully you turn out to have both
where abouts do you hail from?
Last edited by wareagle69; 09-26-2010 at 09:15 AM.
always be prepared-prepare all ways
http://wareaglesurvival.blogspot.com
Thanks for the info. I tried eating cat tails years ago, but I ate the stalks. I was 9 at the time. The ditch in front of my house is full of them, I might dig some up when I get back home.
Just make certain you know what's in that ditch with the cattails. Yard chemical run off or septic run off would not be good things.
Tracks Across the High Plains...Death on the Bombay Line...A Touch of Death and Mayhem...Dead Rock...The Griswald Mine Boys...All On Amazon Books.
You said it! I ate some along the IL. river one time (shoots) that tasted like, like.....gasoline...turpine maybe! IT WAS BAD!!!!!
The easiest way to get the starch is,after you peel them, crush them in a bucket water. Let the water settle, remove the stuff floating, and slowly pour off the water. Repeat a couple of times, untill nothing is floating to the top. Pour off as much water as you can and left the doughy lookin' white goo in the bottom dry. Then you pound that into flour. I've used it as a thickener for soups, stews and such but never done any baking with it.
The leaves can be eaten all summer but by the end of the season only about 6-10 in. of the inner shoot will be tender enough to chew.
You can eat the immature flower heads but I never have, and the pollen is said to make a good flower too but Ive never tried that either.
I'm a simple man, of simple means, turned my back on the machines, to follow my dreams.
[QUOTE=wareagle69;250266]out of curiosity how do you dry the starch and how many roots do i need to collect and process to have a useable amount of flower,
If I remember correctly about 8-10 large roots for 1/2 cup flour. Taste is kind of a potato like taste. Like acorn flour not the best but in a pinch it will work
If by what I have learned over the years, allow me to help one person to start to prepare. If all the mistakes I have made, let me give one person the wisdom that allows them to save their life or the life of a loved one in an emergency. Then I will truly know that all the work I have done will have been worth every minute.
I've ate the immature flower heads and they're quite good. Still green when eaten, both male and female parts.
so after extracting the starch from the rhizomes, are the rhizomes edible?
or does one do this for the flour, and not the actual rhizomes?
A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.
- Greek Proverb
Yellow Iris, Yellow Flag says my dictionary This is the plant that is usually believed to be cattail, because they grow in same places and sometimes even together. If brown seed head is missing you should look leafs very carefully to avoid uncomfortable stomach cramps ... ... few friends accidently tested it ...Originally Posted by backcountrykid
To be honest, most plants I have eaten on survival trainings taste like poo, but excellent part on cattails to eat is the end of the stalk (inch or so) which really tastes like cucumber!
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