At a time when we urgently need to connect with the Earth, Rooted Kitchen offers a fresh way to appreciate nature and the treasures it provides. The cookbook is organized seasonally, which makes it easy to find recipes for your neighborhood foraging or farmers' market haul, such as a comforting Nettle Orecchiette with Sausage and Mint in spring (and how to use the leaves to make a nutritious and soothing cup of tea on chilly mornings); Nectarine Salad with Cucumber, Fennel, Feta and Herbs in summer; and Fire-Roasted Pumpkin Fondue with Chanterelles in fall.
You'll also find tips for harvesting ingredients from mushrooms to nettles to edible flowers, along with preserving, basic foraging techniques, and mindfulness activities. Seasonal ingredients are spotlighted so you can make the most of whatever nature is available nearby. It can be as simple as pairing salmon with the distinct flavor of spruce tips snipped from a tree or plucking lilac blossoms and making Rhubarb-Lilac Jam to dollop on a pavlova. From small urban backyards to nearby parks to forests and beyond, when we become more connected to the outdoors through our food, it also sparks a deeper connection to ourselves.
Deepen your relationship with the natural world through more than 80 delightfully inventiverecipes featuring seasonal ingredients, plus thoughtful essays, tips, and basic techniques forforaging, preserving, and cooking over an open fire.
At a time when we urgently need to connect with the earth, Rooted Kitchen offers a fresh way toappreciate nature and the treasures it provides. Organized seasonally, you'll find recipes to makethe most of your farmers market or neighborhood foraging haul, such as a comforting NettleOrecchiette with Sausage and Mint in spring (and how to use nettle leaves to make anutritious, soothing cup of tea on chilly mornings); Nectarine Salad with Cucumber, Fennel,Feta and Herbs in summer; and Fire-Roasted Pumpkin Fondue with Chanterelles in fall.
You'll also find tips for harvesting ingredients, from mushrooms to nettles to edible flowers,along with preserving, fermenting, beginner foraging techniques, and mindfulness activities.Seasonal ingredients are spotlighted so you can make the most of nearby nature. It can be assimple as pairing salmon with the distinct flavor of spruce tips snipped from a tree or pluckinglilac blossoms and making Rhubarb-Lilac Jam to dollop on a pavlova. From small urbanbackyards to nearby parks to forests and beyond, when we become more connected to theoutdoors through our food, it sparks a deeper connection to ourselves.
Author Biography:
When not writing about food, you can find author Ashley Rodriguez foraging, fly-fishing, andspending as much time outside as possible. A Seattle-based award-winning food writer andphotographer, Ashley is the host and cocreator of the James Beard-nominated video series Kitchen Unnecessary and has been featured in Outside, Food & Wine, Saveur, Epicurious, andmore. She is a certified nature and forest therapy guide and an integrative wellness and life coachfocusing on deepening the ecospiritual connection. She is also the author of two cookbooks, Date Night In and Let's Stay In.