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Paul Kirtley

Wilderness Bushcraft. Survival Skills. Outdoor Life.

Small green leaves available to eat in the winter
In Search Of Winter Greenery: Twelve Candidates For Frosty Foraging

In Search Of Winter Greenery: Twelve Candidates For Frosty Foraging

Paul Kirtley Comments 12 comments

Winter is often characterized as a season of dormancy. This isn’t all to do with snow and ice, either. Even in the relatively mild northern temperate climate of Britain, where I am from, the winter woods are quiet and sparse. Unlike the evergreen northern forests, the deciduous trees of Britain lose their greenery and leave stark, dark wooden skeletons.

When it comes to plants, in foraging books and websites I often see reference to spring greens but far less mention of what herbs can be gathered in winter. But there are plants we can seek out for some winter greenery. And, no they are not just the tail end of the leftovers from the previous summer.

Skeletal woods in the north of England.
Winter is often characterised as a season of dormancy but even in the darkest days of the year, there are some fresh greens to be found. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

First, it’s worth knowing a little about plant life cycles. An annual plant is a plant species that completes its life cycle, from germination to the production of seeds, within one year, and then dies. The most familiar to most people are summer annuals, which germinate during spring or early summer and mature by the autumn of the same year. Less familiar, perhaps, are winter annuals, which germinate during the autumn and mature during the spring or summer of the following calendar year.

A perennial is a plant that lives more than two years. The term is often used to differentiate a plant from shorter-lived annuals and biennials. The term is also widely used to distinguish plants with little or no woody growth from trees and shrubs, which are also technically perennials.

Edible perennials and winter annuals are of particular interest to us as they can provide greenery for us to eat in the winter when many sources are otherwise dormant.

Bittercresses, Cardamine hirsuta and C. flexuosa

Bittercresses are closely related to one of my favourite spring salad ingredients, lady’s smock, C. pratensis. They are all members of the cabbage family, Brassicaceae, which also contains the mustards. Hairy bittercress, C. hirsuta, and wavy bittercress, C. flexuosa, are both winter annuals and their leaf rosettes make an excellent addition to any salad. They have a cress flavour with a tinge of mustard and a satisfying crunch when fresh. If these were sold in a supermarket fruit and vegetable section, you’d buy them. But you don’t have to. You can pick them for free.

Bittercress rosette, Cardamine genus
Winter rosette of bittercress leaves emerging through the leaf litter. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Brooklime, Veronica beccabunga

Brooklime is a perennial plant of damp ground and stream edges that can be eaten as a salad. It is quite bitter, though, and is better cooked as a green. The plant can look similar to very young water mint, Mentha aquatica, which it often grows near. Brooklime has a round, not square, stem though. And it doesn’t smell of mint when crushed. A key feature is that brooklime has little roots at the leaf nodes, where these are in contact with the ground.

Fleshy, succulent plant in English stream
Brooklime on the edge of a shallow, fast-flowing stream. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
little roots coming from trailing stem of plant underneath where leaf is attached
Rooting leaf nodes of brooklime. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Common Chickweed, Stellaria media

Chickweed grows as an annual or, if the climate is mild, as a winter annual. Thus chickweed can potentially provide herbage in the winter months. It is a good salad plant, with a mild flavour and a pleasant texture. It can be added to soups and is good in omelettes. Chickweed has been shown to contain magnesium, phosphorous, copper, iron, zinc, vitamins A, B6, B12, C and D. It also contains saponins (as do many plants) but you would have to eat a very large quantity to cause a stomach upset. Chickweed is definitely one to look out for to provide some winter nutrition.

Small green plant growing at the base of a wall
Winter growth of chickweed at the bas of a wall. January, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
Small green plant with line of hairs up the stem
A key identification feature of chickweed is a single line of hairs on the stem between leaf nodes. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

You should also read How to Tell the Difference Between Chickweed and Yellow Pimpernel

Common Hogweed, Heracleum sphondylium

Hogweed is a perennial. You can steam or boil the winter shoots as a green. This plant should not to be confused with its relative giant hogweed, Heracleum mantegazzianum, which is notorious for causing severe phytophotodermatitis. It should be noted, however, that some people are also sensitive to H. sphondylium but reactions are relatively mild. Personally I don’t react to the plant. This being said, to be on the safe side maybe pick the plant wearing gloves. Either way, cooking renders the plant harmless. It’s a tasty and underappreciated green.

Low growing plant leaf with someting of a feather-like structure
Fresh shoot of common hogweed. March, East Sussex. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
Young leaf of common hogweed, Heracleum sphondylium
Very young leaf of common hogweed. Note some people have a sensitivity to contact with the plant. If in doubt, use gloves. March, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

If you are unsure about the identification of the toxic giant hogweed, H. mantegazzianum there is a video of mine here, which will make it clear.

Common Sorrel, Rumex acetosa

Sorrel is a perennial. When the leaves are fresh they can be good in salads, providing a sour tang due to their oxalic acid content. The leaves have a pleasing crispness when raw. They can be treated very much as would spinach, steamed or wilted. As such it is good with eggs or fish. Sorrel can also be used in sauces, desserts and puddings. The leaves contain a reasonable amount of vitamin C.

Simple, elongated, fleshy leaves
Sorrel looks similar to, and can be treated like, spinach. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
Flat green leaf in amongst blades of grass
Keep your eyes peeled when out and about. Here there are sorrel leaves lurking in the thick grasses. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Opposite-Leaved Golden Saxifrage, Chrysosplenium oppositifolium

This plant is another perennial and it’s very common in its range. It’s found in damp places and is happy in saturated ground and shallow water. The leaves have a juicy lettuce-like crunch to them and they are pleasantly inoffensive in their taste, with no bitterness or sharpness. They can also be cooked as a green, which might be advisable if you can’t thoroughly wash them in clean water before consuming raw. As the name suggests the leaves are in opposite pairs. Take a close look at them and you will see distinct bristly hairs emanating from the leaf surface, reminiscent of stubble.

Little green lettuce-like plants
Opposite-leaved golden saxifrage is a common plant of damp ground in the woods, particularly near streams. March, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
Fleshy green plants with leaves in opposite pairs, with thick hairs on top
Note the stubbly hairs on the surface of the leaves. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Red Dead-Nettle, Lamium purpureum

This small member of the dead-nettle or mint family, Lamiaceae, has pretty pink flowers, which you might even see in the colder months of the year. It is a winter annual. You’ll find it on waysides up and down the UK. It’s incredibly common. The young leaves and stems can be added to your salad or you can steam them as a pleasant green.

small nettle-like plants that are not actually stinging nettles
Hiding in plain sight. Many pass by dead-nettles, discounting them as their stinging look-a-likes. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
Nettle-like plants with small pink-purple flowers
Here the red dead-nettles pink flowers are on display. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Read more about Red Dead-Nettle, Lamium purpureum.

Ribwort Plantain, Plantago lanceolata

This is one of my favourite wild greens. This may be surprising to those readers who have tried cooking this but ended up with green sludge. The key is not to over cook it. A couple of minutes only in boiling water is all that’s necessary. A good alternative to eating this green hot (suggested by John Rensten in his book The Edible City) is to run it under the cold tap immediately after cooking it, then add soy sauce. It is reminiscent of the seaweed you get with Japanese food and is great with sushi. This plants close relative broadleaved plantain, Plantago major, by contrast is more bitter to the taste and has very stringy leaf veins. Seek out ribwort plantain when you can. It is a superior winter green.

Elongated, strap-like leaves, with spear shape and ribs
Ribwort plantain leaves look like they emanate directly from the ground, with no proper stem. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
Lance-shaped leaves with ribs in the hand
It’s quick to collect a handful of plantain leaves and they provide tasty greens throughout the year. March, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Stinging Nettle, Urtica dioica

This very common plant needs little introduction. It’s a perennial that is good eating. It has good flavour and good mouth feel even after being boiled. It doesn’t turn to sludge like some greens and provides something to chew! Nettles are high in protein for a green plant. They also contain many micro-nutrients including calcium, potassium, iron, phosphorous, magnesium, vitamins B and C, and beta-carotene. This is definitely a worth addition to your winter diet.

Small plant with jagged leaves arrnaged in opposite pairs
Nettles popping up through the leaf litter. January, East Sussex. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
Very good example of young stinging nettle
Stinging nettles are a flavoursome and nutritious wild green. March, East Sussex. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Violets, Viola spp.

As far as we know, all violets are edible. They are typically perennials and you can use the leaves or flowers in salads whenever you see them. The leaves are rich in mucilage, which is good for the stomach. I particularly like the leaves of common dog-violet, V. riviniana, and marsh violet, V. palustris, both of which, to my palate, have a mild nutty flavour. I generally avoid the sweet violet, V. odorata, which tends to be a bit pungent.

purple flowers, like pansies, in the woods
The leaves and flowers of all violets are edible. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
heart-shaped green leaf in amongst brown leaf litter
Common dog-violet leaves in the leaf litter. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Wood Sorrel, Oxalis acetosella

This common woodland plant, with its distinctive three-leaved shamrock shape provides a burst of flavour not suggested by its small size. The pleasant, yet sour, lemony, apple-peel flavour is provided by oxalic acid. This is a good for a tasty wayside nibble but also a good addition to fruit salads as well as regular salads. It contains vitamin C and beta carotene.

shamrock-shaped plant in the forest, a bit like clover
The distinctive shamrock shape of wood sorrel. December, County Durham. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Yarrow, Achillea millefolium

Yarrow is best known as a medicinal herb, in particular applied externally as a styptic and taken internally as a menstrual regulator. It is also edible as a herb (but note the oft-repeated advice to avoid if pregnant). It has a pleasant aromatic odour and flavour reminiscent of some of the Mediterranean herbs, although some people can find it overpowering. Use it in relatively small quantities, for example a few sprigs provide a flavoursome addition to salads, or chopped finely and tossed in with pasta and olive oil (along with other herbs if you like). Alternatively you can use this as a garnish on a variety of dishes. Cooking with yarrow tends to make dishes bitter though, so best use it raw, and relatively sparingly.

frilly, feathery green leaves in the winter
Yarrow leaves are an edible herb, as well as being medicinal. Photo: Paul Kirtley.
lacy, feathery, long leaf
The fine filigree-like leaves of yarrow are distinctive in form as well as aroma. Photo: Paul Kirtley.

Where To Find These Plants

The species featured here are all native to north-western Europe, including the British Isles. They are common, widespread and it’s highly likely you’ll encounter some of these plants on a winter walk or winter camp out when there is no snow on the ground.

Enjoy discovering these plants and their flavours. Plus, you never know, these winter greens might just keep you a little healthier though the dark days of winter too.

Improve Your Plant Identification Skills

Would you like to improve your ability to identify useful trees and plants? I offer an online tree and plant identification course, which flows through the seasons. Find out more about the next available course by clicking the following link: Paul Kirtley’s Tree and Plant Identification Masterclass

Foraging Plants For Wild Foods – Be Responsible

Be respectful towards nature and take responsibility for your own safety.

While the plants mentioned above are common and widespread species, please still be respectful of nature. Don’t decimate areas of wild foods. Take only what you need. Understand what is legal and what is not.

For anyone considering collecting wild food plants, it is worth first reading the Botanical Society of Britain & Ireland’s (BSBI) Code of Conduct, which can be found as a PDF document via the following URL…

https://bsbi.org/wp-content/uploads/dlm_uploads/Code-of-Conduct-v5-final.pdf

This article is meant as a guide to some of the plants available in winter in northern temperate Europe. Even though the species above are common and easy to identify, it is not a complete treatment of all edible plants. Nor does the article describe other, similar plants you may find alongside those highlighted above.

The safest way to learn about wild edibles is from an instructor or mentor who already has the knowledge. This being stated, it is indeed possible to learn a good deal under the guidance of good quality articles, videos, online training and books. Ultimately, though, the choice to put a plant in your mouth is yours. Any foraging you do on your own is at your own risk.

The most important thing to remember when learning to identify wild food plants is IF IN DOUBT, LEAVE IT OUT!

Additional Resources

Find out if a foraging teacher is a member of the Association of Foragers.

Obtain more information about my Tree and Plant Identification Masterclass online course.

Check out my short list of recommended wild food and foraging books applicable to the UK and Western Europe.

If you liked this article, you’ll also like…

Foraging For Early Spring Greens: Some To Eat, Some To Avoid…

12 Easy-To-Forage European Plants For Spring And Early Summer

Ten Common European Poisonous Plants You Should Know

Bark & Buds: How to Easily Identify 12 Common European Deciduous Trees in Winter


Edible Wild Plants, Wild Food Foraging
Achillea millefolium, brooklime, Cardamine flexuosa, Cardamine hirsuta, Chickweed, Chrysosplenium oppositifolium, common dog-violet, common hogweed, Common Sorrel, Giant Hogweed, hairy bittercress, Heracleum mantegazzianum, Heracleum sphondylium, Lamium purpureum, marsh violet, opposite-leaved golden saxifrage, Oxalis acetosella, Plantago lanceolata, Red Dead-nettle, Ribwort Plantain, Rumex acetosa, Stellaria media, stinging nettle, sweet violet, Urtica dioica, Veronica beccabunga, Viola odorata, Viola palustris, Viola riviniana, wavy bittercress, wood sorrel, Yarrow

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12 thoughts on “In Search Of Winter Greenery: Twelve Candidates For Frosty Foraging”

  1. JC says:
    at 15:21

    I am excited to hear stinging nettle is good to eat in winter. I have always heard it’s not so good, that I should wait until spring. It’s certainly abundant here in Hungary, and it will now be abundant in my foraging pouch.

    Reply
    1. Paul Kirtley says:
      at 15:42

      Hi JC,

      Thanks for your comment. In winter you have to make a distinction between the old nettles from the previous year and the new, fresh shoots coming up over winter. It’s the latter you should be taretting, not the old ones that are long past their best.

      Happy foraging.

      Warm regards,

      Paul

      Reply
  2. Jim says:
    at 18:17

    While none of these species are available, at least currently, in frozen central BC, it is, as always, an excellent little article. Thanks Paul, keep up your fine work.

    Reply
    1. Paul Kirtley says:
      at 19:11

      Hi Jim, it’s good to hear from you my friend. Thanks for your positive words about the article and thanks for taking the time to look at it. I hope you are enjoying your winter.

      Warm regards,

      Paul

      Reply
  3. Natasha de Chroustchoff says:
    at 23:39

    Thanks for this informative article. Might I mention a couple more candidates? Wall pennywort, Umbilicus rupestris, makes a lovely crisp crunchy addition to winter salads, and sow thistle or hare’s lettuce, Sonchus oleraceus, is another useful winter vegetable.
    Nothing nicer than picking odd leaves here and there for tasty Vit C additions to the evening meal!

    Reply
    1. Paul Kirtley says:
      at 13:17

      Hi Natasha, it’s lovely to hear from you. Thanks for your additions to my basic list. They’re both good ones. I think Sonchus oleraceus, in particular, is generally undervalued and overlooked.

      Warm regards,

      Paul

      Reply
  4. Richard Tiley says:
    at 10:06

    As ever, a brilliantly informative article. It’ll mean that my winter walks will have an added purpose! Thank you very much.

    Reply
    1. Paul Kirtley says:
      at 23:44

      Wonderful. I’m glad to hear you’ll make direct use of this Richard.

      Thanks, as always, for your comments and support.

      Warm regards,

      Paul

      Reply
  5. Dawn Marie Baldwin says:
    at 20:45

    Hi Paul, thank you for taking the time to share some of your knowledge, it was great to hear the nutritional value of these plants.

    Reply
    1. Paul Kirtley says:
      at 23:43

      Hi Dawn, it’s good to hear from you. I hope all is well. I’m happy you enjoyed this article. There are indeed some very nutritious plants all around us.

      Warm regards,

      Paul

      Reply
  6. Bob67 says:
    at 04:59

    Hello Paul – Great article, but I doubt that common chickweed contains vitamin B12. I am not a qualified nutritionist but everything I have read or heard on the subject states that B12 is only available from animal sources. This is why vegans have to take a (presumably synthetic) B12 supplement. That said, I love your web site & your pragmatic approach to bushcraft. Great to read about edible plants available in the dark days of Winter.

    Reply
  7. Tray-Ann says:
    at 22:12

    Hi Paul,
    Thoroughly enjoyed your article. I’m new to foraging but have managed to find nearly all of the plants you’ve mentioned down here in balmy Devon. We do seem to have an abundance of a particular plant that I think is an Alexander – are they common this time of year and do you have ways of identifying it? I’ve also found lots of 3 cornered leeks. Is it okay to use any part of the plant?
    Thanks
    Tray

    Reply

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