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GOOD
ENOUGH TO EAT
Far from
being just a weed, the Common Bistort can be eaten - and it still
is in northern areas of England, where it's made into a dish called
Dock Pudding. The long-stalked, heart-shaped leaves are mixed
with chopped nettle leaves, onions, oatmeal, salt and pepper and
then fried. Other leaves might include cabbage leaves, dandelion
leaves... almost anything green! Delicious!
FAST AND
FEAST
Dock pudding
is eaten around Easter. This is a very appropriate time. The dock
leaves are fresh and tender, of course, but the period before
Easter is called Lent, traditionally a time of fasting. There
are no exact rules but in earlier times people were encouraged
to avoid eating meat, eggs and other rich foods. Instead they
ate bread, vegetables and water. Pancakes are eaten on Shrove
Tuesday, the day before Lent begins, to use up the last of the
rich foods like eggs, sugar and milk. Dock pudding, made of vegetables,
makes an ideal dish for Lent.
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