Everything We Need is Here: Reconnecting to a Foraging Heritage

Reader Contribution by Jonny Malks
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Every place has its own bright flavors, its sugars, its staples. 

“Every place has its own bright flavors, its sugars, its staples. It has just been in the last five centuries that we’ve decided to take the most concentrated products from each category around the world and consolidate them into the western market. This process may have had an incremental benefit at first in the nutritional or aesthetic interest of the consumer, but its imperial-colonial origins have ultimately extended into the modern day, robbing people of the rightful and necessary knowledge of place.” 

This is my friend Russell speaking. He’s responding to my wonder at having eaten my first fresh winterberry in the forest behind Shutesbury town hall. We’ve been harvesting acorns from the leaf litter, and I am so surprised to find a gorgeous soft-pink berry amidst the amber hues of autumn in the woods. Initially thinking that it’s a poisonous ornamental fruit – like all the berries I grew up with in my family’s backyard – I show it to Russell and remark on its beauty. He laughs and says that if it “smells like gum,” it’s edible. Incredulous, I raise it to my nose. Wintergreen! It smells like wintergreen. But wait. Wintergreen has never been something I could find in nature. Wintergreen’s a product that people make in a factory somewhere to ship to 7/11 where it sits for months on counter-shelves before a middle-schooler buys it for his backpack gum stache. 

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