Posts Tagged ‘foraging’
I too like to take the scenic route when I cook!
When I took a whiff of Matsutake mushrooms at Signona’s, I knew that I would have to make Matsutake Gohan. My version has Minnesota Lake wild rice, the ghost varietal, matsutake mushrooms, pearl couscous, pine nuts, dried tomatoes, salt fermented plums, green Szechuan peppercorn, black cardamom, bay leaf, cinnamon leaf and leeks. This meal was in honor of the Day of the Dead, a tradition I have adopted to honor those who are are no longer with me today. The first to pass away was my grandad, in fact, it was many decades ago this day. I was still a child then. He used to write long letters to me and might have played a strong hand in nurturing my contemplative nature.

The phrase “I Like to Take the Scenic Route When I Cook” is the title of a November 2025 newsletter from Yotam Ottolenghi. My cooking style has been described as my love language. I don’t see it that way but I didn’t have words to describe it until I came across Ottolenghi’s Nov newsletter. And then it clicked. I too prefer the scenic route when I cook. In any month, there is at least one day when I would just like to open a can of sardines and a bottle of wine for dinner. But most times, food is a journey, sometimes an hour, sometimes a day or three, and sometimes, a few seasons.
Here are some of the journeys I undertook with this dish.
Read the rest of this entry »Wilderness nourishes the soul

Last November, in honor of Native American Heritage month, I ended up buying manoomin from Bineshii. I am not fond of cultivated wild rice but chef Sean Sherman can be particularly inspiring and I was inspired to explore wild wild rice. Where cultivated wild rice is tough, the foraged manoomin, a true wild rice, is delicate. Manoomin cooks in 15 minutes and its aroma is the confluence of earth and wood. Around Nov/Dec, when chestnuts and mushrooms can be foraged, and cranberry is star of the festivals, a perfect union is ready to form. See Sherman’s recipe for wild rice pilaf, with mushrooms, chestnuts and cranberries.
I have since ordered my second batch of manoomin from Bineshii.
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