Table Of Contenta
  a 
F         
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Forager’s
a
g
In NNNNNNeeeeeewwwwwww ZZZZZZZeeeeeeaaaaaallllllaaaaaannnnnnd’s e
 
r
 treasurz
urban and rural wildernesses, there is 
’
s
an abundance of food just waiting to 
 
t
be discovered, if only you know what 
r
to look for. Foraged food is healthy, 
e
economical and sustainable, but the 
a
A New Zealandddddd  
best part about it is the fun you will 
s
have finding wild food. u guide to findingggggg  
r
and using 
This book is guaranteed to make you  z
look at the plants around you in a    wild plants
 
different light. A Forager’s Treasury   
 
features profiles of many edible plants   
J
commonly found in New Zealand,  o
h
including advice on where to find 
a
them, how to harvest them and how 
n
best to use them. n
a
 
K
n
o
Johanna 
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Knox
Cover design: Katy Yiakmis
Cover images: Sarah Featon
COOKING
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A 
’
Foragers
treasury
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A 
’
Forager s
treasury
Johanna Knox
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First published in 2013
Copyright © Johanna Knox 2013
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitt ed in 
any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, 
recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior 
permission in writing from the publisher. 
Allen & Unwin
Level 3, 228 Queen Street
Auckland 1010, New Zealand
Phone: (64 9) 377 3800
83 Alexander Street
Crows Nest NSW 2065, Australia
Phone:(61 2) 8425 0100
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.allenandunwin.com
A catalogue record for this book is available 
from the National Library of New Zealand
ISBN 978 1 87750 516 4
Internal design by Katy Yiakmis
Illustrations by Jo Rodwell and Sarah Hargreaves
Printed in Australia by McPherson’s Printing Group
10  9  8  7  6  5  4  3  2  1
The paper in this book is FSC® certified. 
FSC® promotes environmentally 
responsible, socially beneficial and 
economically viable management 
of the world’s forests.
Cover images
Front and back covers: Featon, Sarah Ann, 1848?–1927. Sarah Featon, Sarah Ann 1847 or 
1848–1927 :Karamu. Coprosma robusta. F.113. H.N.Z. fl ora. No 18. [ca 1890]. Featon, Sarah Ann (Porter) 
1848–1927 :[New Zealand fl ower studies not published in the Art album of New Zealand fl ora 
ca 1889–1926]. Ref: A-171-020. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. 
htt p://natlib.govt.nz/records/23205146
 
Front cover: Sarah Featon, Creeping fuchsia (Fuchsia procumbens) and Konini (Fuchsia exorticata), 
c. 1888, watercolours, registration number 1992-0035-2277/57, Purchased 1919; and Puriri (Vitex lucens), 
c. 1888, watercolour, registration number 1992-0035-2277/61, Purchased 1919, Museum of New Zealand.
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Contents
h
   
Introduction  8
Ready to forage
 
A pott ed history of foraging in Aotearoa, New Zealand  11
Why forage?  13
Th  e basic rules of foraging  17
Common poisonous plants  19
Foraging and pest plants  22
Top tips for harvesting and preparing wild foods  23
Th  e forager’s store-cupboard staples  25
The treasures 
Introduction  29 
Taxonomy in a nutshell  29
Adoxaceae — Muskroot family  30
Aizoaceae — Ice plant or fi g marigold family  32
Amaranthaceae — Amaranth family  35
Amaryllidaceae — Amaryllis family  38
Apiaceae — Carrot or parsley family  40
Asparagaceae — Asparagus family  46
Aspleniaceae — Spleenwort family  48
Asteraceae — Daisy or lett uce family  49
Boraginaceae — Borage or forget-me-not family  60
Brassicaceae — Cabbage or mustard family  62
Caryophyllaceae — Pink or carnation family  68
Fabaceae — Pea or legume family  71
Fagaceae — Beech family  75
Geraniaceae — Cranesbill family  78
Hippocastanaceae — Horse chestnut family  81
Iridaceae — Iris family  81
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Juglandaceae — Walnut family  82
Lamiaceae — Mint family  83
Malvaceae — Mallow family  88
Montiaceae — Miner’s lett uce family  92
Myrtaceae — Myrtle family  93
Oleaceae — Olive family  95
Onagraceae — Evening primrose family  100
Oxalidaceae — Wood sorrel family  102
Pinaceae — Pine family  104
Piperaceae — Pepper family  106
Plantaginaceae — Plantain family  109
Poaceae — Grass family  111
Portulacaceae — Purslane family  116
Rosaceae — Rose family  117
Rubiaceae — Coff ee or madder family  125
Rutaceae — Citrus or rue family  129
Seaweed  133
Solanaceae — Nightshade family  136
Tropaeolaceae — Nasturtium family  137
Urticaceae — Nett le family  139
Winteraceae — Horopito family  142
Xanthorrhoeaceae — Aloe family  146
Preserving the harvest
 
Introduction  149
Tisanes  152
Infused syrups  157
Infused vinegars  168
Wild butt ers  170
Infused oils  174
Infused honey  177
Infused alcohols  180
Th  e art of freezing  184
Th  e art of drying  187
Th  e art of pickling  191
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Choose-your-own-adventure cuisine
 
Introduction  196
Th  e art of the wild salad  200
Th  e art of cheesemaking  210
Light meals  214
Wild pasta dishes  227
Winter warmers                 232
Sweet treats        235
Cooking for invalids         247
Solar cooking       249
Wild ways
 
Introduction        252
Wild perfumery                 252
Wild bodycare    278
Wild medicine    285
Local colour          292
Wildly entertaining          298
Th  e language of wild fl owers       303
Pick ‘n’ nick picnics           306
Bringing the wild to your garden 
 
Native gardens  308
Resources   309
Acknowledgments  317
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IntrodUction
[Forage: verb Search widely for food or provisions]
New Zealand is a nation of foragers. At the very least, can any of us say that 
we’ve never picked a blackberry? 
Māori have a strong, continuous history of gathering, and a Royal Society study 
recently found that while consumption of wild foods is declining in industrialised 
countries around the world, in New Zealand over 60 species of wild plants and 
animals are still in common use, largely due to Māori traditions.
Th  e annual Hokitika Wildfoods Festival has been popular since its launch in 
1990, and the Monteith’s Beer & Wild Food Challenge — with a strong emphasis 
on hunted as well as gathered food — has been going strong for fourteen years. 
Immigrants, especially from Europe, have brought with them their own foraging 
traditions, and chefs and cooks such as Italian Alessandra Zecchini regularly 
include wild foods in their dishes. 
Foraging can be just as integral to medicine and craft s. Both Māori and Pākehā 
herbalists, weavers and dyers have always treasured wild plants. 
It’s the New Zealand way to head for the bush, the countryside or the beach 
when we have leisure time. Foraging for useful or edible treasures is a natural 
extension of that. 
In recent years blogging, email lists and social networking sites have enabled an 
explosion of information-sharing between foragers. 
8   A Forager's Treasury
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According to my Mum, my own foraging life began at the age of about 3 when I 
unexpectedly squatt ed in the middle of my grandmother’s garden and ate a pansy. 
I recall adoring pansies with their litt le monster faces so, maybe, wild-thing-like, I 
thought, ‘I’ll eat you up, I love you so.’ Th  en again, perhaps I was just exhibiting the 
deep foraging instinct that fi res in every child’s mind. 
Children love to share nuggets of local wild food lore with each other; how 
to nibble on onionweed or wood sorrel; how to eat Romulea rosea seed pods or 
suck the nectar from jasmine fl owers. Many people have shared such childhood 
memories with me, and I feel almost deprived that at my school all we did was 
chew grass stalks now and then.
Nonetheless I was lucky enough to live on a bush-clad subdivision and have 
a keen gardener for a Dad. Th  ere was plenty of plant life to explore. As well, my 
mother was an insanely busy environmental activist, continually dragging my 
sister and me to protests, fundraising stalls and urgent meetings. True, it could 
be achingly boring, but now and then I found myself wide-eyed and breathless at 
some of the back-to-nature projects that ’70s adults were working on. Th  e strange 
foods! Th  e clever craft s! All the Xeroxed books that these shaggy-looking grown-
ups were writing about their passions!
Being an excitable child, I embarked on my own projects. I made cosmetics 
— especially face-packs — and enlisted my younger sister Andrea to lie still each 
morning while I plastered her face with bananas and oatmeal and bits of random 
garden plant. I stripped apples from my father’s tree and dug a small pit in the 
ground so I could bury them, hoping to surprise and delight my family by bringing 
out this fresh supply in the depths of winter. (Th  ey were surprised, but not so 
delighted.)
I also remember making a birthday present for my wonderful friend Vanessa 
Rhodes by infusing water with rosemary and decanting it into an old perfume 
bott le. When Vanessa upended the bott le onto her wrist, out plopped a shocking 
lump of blue mould that quivered on her skin until she shrieked and hurled it off .
Despite early failures, I continued this kind of dabbling throughout my teenage 
years. Th  en, in my early twenties, something changed. For the fi rst time I started to 
earn a reasonable amount of my own money. Buying things suddenly seemed more 
fun than scrounging them and materialism ruled. 
Within a few years, another wave of change broke over me. My son was born 
and I was washed into a twilit world of human body fl uids, disintegrating sleep 
patt erns and single-minded dedication to this small, new cause. Th  e dull band of 
pain across my head became a part of me, and my inability to remember what I’d 
Introduction   9
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