Mina Said-Allsopp is my foraging heroine – she
knows just about everything there is to know about all things to do with wild
food. Of course, it goes without saying that she has found wild morels! (In a supermarket car park in Leeds, West Yorkshire, of all places...)
Here, she shares with us her story of
finding them in Leeds for the first time:
I found my first wild morels last
year, in 2011, after spending years dreaming and searching for them. They were
growing in the wood chip around the parking lot of a local supermarket.
I was so unbelievably excited that I
could barely control my urge to do a wild dance around them. The only thing
that stopped me wasn’t people thinking I was crazy, but me being afraid that if
they looked at me too long they would notice the morels!
I returned to the spot several times
over the next three weeks and picked a few more each time. I never used a
basket (in case people looked in it and saw my little treasures) but put them
into paper bags. It was the most clandestine foraging I have ever done!
“ It had been quite dry before I found the mushrooms, but they only came up when the rain started. Apparently they grow much bigger and faster if they get plenty of moisture, so the biggest ones I found were clustered around where the rainwater drained off onto the woodchip. ”
The find was a total surprise and all
the more awesome for it. We go to that supermarket quite often and I spotted
them while walking past the flower beds.
I dried the lot of them. This is
apparently supposed to intensify the flavour so I thought it would be a good
idea. I didn’t want to take the slightest risk that they would go funky while I
was still trying to think of a recipe. They were way too precious for that!
I used them to make a roast chicken.
I sautéed some onions, garlics and herbs and added in the rehydrated, chopped
mushrooms, the water I’d soaked them in and some fresh breadcrumbs. Then I
separated the skin from the meat of the chicken and stuffed the space with the
mixture before roasting it in the oven. It was just divine.
Next time I shall leave the chicken
to soak up the flavour of the mushrooms a bit longer before chucking it in the
oven, but even with the few minutes it had it still tasted amazing.
Morel season is still not quite over
(early May) and there are people still finding them around the country. Leeds
soil is not the right stuff to find wild morels growing in the woods so my top
tip is to keep an eye on wood chip.
Here's some more tantalising images...