Would you forgo your trips to the supermarket? Would you believe  (or want to believe) that you could feed yourself on a tantalising mix  of healthy and tasty foods that can be found for free in the wild?
Perhaps not everybody would be prepared to give up their ready meals  for a bowl of fresh nettle soup, salad of dandelions and cherry blossom,  or chicken of the woods mushroom tempura. But your local area – and  potentially your own back garden – is a treasure trove of edible wild  food, allowing you to feast on what nature has to offer without a  supermarket checkout or club card in sight.
“Foraging is an exciting way of engaging with the world.”
The popularity of foraging and wild food is peaking – and getting  celebrity chefs hot under the collar. Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall made  foraging cool on his River Cottage series, while Jamie Oliver proclaims  wild food pukka. Even the typically hot-headed Michelin-starred chef  Marco Pierre White says he relaxes with a little mushroom hunting. “I  could spend hours looking for mousserons, penny buns and chanterelle  mushrooms.” He often did so as a child, in the grounds of Harewood House  in Leeds.
Mina Said-Allsopp, 27, is a forager extraordinaire who has been  running monthly Food for Free walks in Leeds and around the north for  four years. “Foraging is an exciting way of engaging with the world,”  she says. “It makes you look at things with completely different eyes.  Everything becomes a source of food. Where everyone else sees scraggly  weeds, I see fantastic chamomile or Good King Henry.”
The foraging walks cost £15 (with discounts for students) and  Said-Allsopp teaches you how to find and identify wild food, including  berries, fruits, mushrooms and edible greens. All the money raised goes  to a children’s charity, NURU, in Kenya.
“I love teaching people about wild food,” she says. “It’s great to  see the light in people’s eyes when they realise that plant they’ve been  overlooking for so long is edible or that it tastes completely  different from the stuff they buy at the supermarket.”
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| Picking fruit | 
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Spring brings lots of exciting things for a forager. One of the most  exciting foods is wild garlic, a very versatile wild green that tastes  mildly of garlic and makes great pesto. “I really  look forward to spring because of the chance to find wild garlic,”  Said-Allsopp smiles. It’s also the time of year to hunt for morel  mushrooms, which are the holy grail of the foraging world. She adds that  springtime is when leaves from certain trees, like beech and common  lime, are edible – “they’re young and tender and a great addition to  salads”.
Summer brings another world of edible delights. “The highlight is the  St George’s mushroom and the fairy ring mushroom. Later, a  bright-yellow bracket fungus that oozes out of trees, called chicken of  the woods, appears. In autumn there’s a bonanza of wild mushrooms, as  well as all the wonderful fruits, nuts and berries. In winter, you’d  think there wouldn’t be much, but there are some things like  chanterelles, which can take freezing and defrosting. As long as it’s  not a very severe winter, you can pick things to February. Then there’s a  brief lull. Towards the end of March, it starts all over again.”
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| A foraged feast (found in September) | 
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She says that the people who go on her walks always say they cannot  believe how much good food there is that you can eat everywhere. “It  catches everybody by surprise,” she says. “We’re such a consumer  society. We’re used to buying everything in sterile packaging with best  before dates. Then you go out and see wild mushrooms in a field, and  you’re naturally suspicious.”
She thinks it’s a lack of understanding that leads to such suspicion  and, on occasion, hostility. Once in a while, as she’s picking wild  fruit, she’ll see people carrying plastic bags of similar produce bought  at the supermarket. “I’ll be picking plums, mirabelles or blackberries  and people will see me and get alarmed, telling me to stop because  they’re poisonous. No, I try to explain. The same things you’re paying a  huge price for, I’m getting for free.”
“In continental Europe foraging is normal.”
Another time she was foraging near an urban area when a boy asked her  what she was doing. “I explained I was picking blackcurrants. He said:  ‘Oh, are you poor?’ He thought I would only want to pick things in the  wild if I had no money.”
It wasn’t long ago that gathering wild food was a normal part of  British culture. During the second world war, rosehips were commercially  gathered, on the recommendation of the government, because of their  high vitamin C content. Now, says Said-Allsopp, we’ve lost our  hunter-gatherer skills. “In continental Europe foraging is normal and  popular. It’s a huge part of the culture. In autumn, families go to the  local woodlands to pick mushrooms to dry and preserve for the rest of  the year.”
Of course, another reason to be wary of wild food, especially  mushrooms, is that they can be fatal. It’s revealing that hospital  admissions for people with suspected mushroom poisoning doubled last  year. The Health Protection Agency’s National Poisons Information  Service received 209 calls from NHS staff attempting to treat suspected  mushroom poisoning, a rise on 2009’s 123 enquiries and 147 in 2008.
But Said-Allsopp explains that the number of very poisonous wild  mushrooms is actually limited. However, she adds that it is essential to  never eat anything if you are not 100 per cent certain of what it is.  She also says that the horror stories and old wives tales serve a useful  purpose, “reminding people of the dangers inherent in wild food”.
“You do need to be really careful. That’s why it’s important to go  out on a guided wild food walk. Get your confidence, learn what to pick,  what not to pick. As long as you’re methodical, you’ll be fine. A good  mushroom identification book will tell you how certain mushrooms only  grow in association with certain trees, whether they can be confused  with other species, and that you have to look at cap size, spore print  and length to make an accurate identification.”
And of course there’s also the question of sustainability.  Environmentalists have warned that varieties of wild mushroom could soon  be wiped out if the popularity of foraging continues. On top of that,  it is illegal in the UK to forage for commercial gain, under the 1968  Theft Act. Said-Allsopp’s philosophy is: “If you see something once,  keep walking, if you see it again, it’s okay to stop and pick it.” But,  she adds, “never pick more than you need. Think of others and future  generations who’ll want to enjoy this wonderful world of wild food.”
For more information on Mina Said-Allsop’s walks, see www.msitu.co.uk