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Aug 13, 2010

Did you see the purslane article by Brigitte Mars in the "Food" section of C2 today?

A variety of purslane grows in much of North America as a weed in areas where the earth has been disturbed, usually where there is no grass.  Some farmers will be happy for you to get rid of it for them.  It tends not to be so clean by the side of the road.  Very tasty, briefly pan-fried in good oil or butter.  Though it has the mucilaginous quality of okra, it cooks much faster and has no spines, and is full of healthful essentials. 

There's plenty of free food outside, available for a minute's work, if you know where to look and what you're looking at.  But "organic" wild greens are hard to find unless you're off the beaten path. 

Purslane's Portulaca relative the "moss rose" is beautiful and much easier to care for than rosebushes. I'm definitely a Portulaca fan. 

And here's a tip: if you ever wonder if a weed you see might be good to eat and can positively identify it in a book or online, a last name of "sativa," as in Portulaca sativa, tells you it's been considered good food for a long time.

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Posted: Aug 13, 2010 8:04pm
Jan 10, 2010
The bitter element in certain extra-virgin olive oils, oleocanthol, is actually good medicine, not just tasty salad dressing.

--"A daily dose of 50 g or 4 tablespoons of olive oil confers the equivalent of around 10% of the recommended ibuprofen dose for adult pain relief, say researchers led by Paul Breslin of the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia, who discovered the effect. So although it won't cure a headache, it may give you some of the long-term benefits of repeated ibuprofen use, including helping to ward off Alzheimer's."--

--Source: "Olive oil may help stave off cancer, as long as you stick to the good stuff,"
citing Beauchamp G. K., et al. Nature, 437. 45 - 46 (2005).
--Article by Michael Hopkin for
Nature News
--Article Copyright © 2005 MacMillan Publishers Ltd.

-- http://www.bioedonline.org/news/news.cfm?art=1989
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Posted: Jan 10, 2010 8:52am

 

 
 
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