Eating Wild Japan: Tracking the Culture of Foraged Foods, with a Guide to Plants and Recipes

Eating Wild Japan: Tracking the Culture of Foraged Foods, with a Guide to Plants and Recipes

Paperback

$18.95
View All Available Formats & Editions
Choose Expedited Shipping at checkout for delivery by Friday, July 9

Overview

From bracken to butterbur to "princess" bamboo, some of Japan's most iconic foods are foraged, not grown, in its forests, fields, and coastal waters—yet most Westerners have never heard of them.

In this book, journalist Winifred Bird eats her way from one end of the country to the other in search of the hidden stories of Japan's wild foods, the people who pick them, and the places whose histories they've shaped.

"A beautiful and thoughtful exploration of the deep relationship—past and present—between people and wild plants in one of the world's richest foraging regions."—Samuel Thayer, author of Incredible Wild Edibles and The Forager's Harvest



Related collections and offers

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611720617
Publisher: Stone Bridge Press
Publication date: 03/30/2021
Pages: 264
Sales rank: 617,577
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Winifred Bird is a writer, translator, lifelong cook, and lover of plants both wild and domesticated. For almost a decade she lived in rural Japan, where she worked as an environmental journalist, grew organic rice and vegetables, and ate as many foraged foods as possible. She currently lives with her family in northern Illinois.


Paul Poynter (illustrations) is an artist, tree climber, and woodsman living in Matsumoto, Japan.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Acknowledgments

Common Weeds and Woodland Wonders: The First Greens of Spring

Tree of Life: The Rise and Fall of the Japanese Horse Chestnut

Feast and Famine: The Split Personality of a Globe-Conquering Fern

The Tallest Grass in the World: Tales of Bamboo Wild and Tame

Seasons of the Sea

Conclusion

Recipes

Glossary


  • Plant Descriptions
  • Cooking Terms

Selected Bibliography

Customer Reviews