Wild Garlic

Allium ursinum

At a glance

Name
Wild Garlic
Scientific Name
Allium ursinum
AKA
Ramsons, Rams
Edibililty/Uses
EdibleEdible
MedicinalMedicinal
Foraging Seasons
SpringSpring
SummerSummer
AutumnAutumn
WinterWinter
Frequency
Very Common
Growth Habit
PerennialPerennial
Habitat
Hedgerow, Shade Loving, Woodland
Parts Used
Bulb, Flower Buds, Flowers, Leaf Shoots, Leaves, Seeds, Stem

Summary

Wild Garlic is in my top ten favourite wild foods to forage. And fortunately for us, it’s very common and easy to identify, making it an ideal beginners wild food. It’s versatile, delicious and plentiful. Just make sure there’s enough room in your freezer.

Edibililty & Uses

Delicious and beneficial. Wild Garlic is a relation of our much used cultivated garlic. The juice from the plant has been used for eons to sterilise wounds.

Parts Used

All parts of Wild Garlic can be used. The seed heads are wonderful when pan fried and used as a topping. The flowers make a pretty addition to a salad, and the leaves can be used in so many ways.

When to forage?

Feb – June for the leaves.

April – May/June for the flowers.

May-June for the seed heads.

The bulbs can be collected at any time of year.

Where to forage?

Very common throughout the British Isles, Wild Garlic can be found in deciduous woodland and shady hedgerows.

Similar Species

How to tell Wild Garlic from Lords and Ladies and Dog’s Mercury
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Wild Garlic (Allium ursinum) is an excellent beginner wild edible for many reasons. It’s common, versatile, tasty, easy to identify and has just the right balance of potential pitfalls to begin developing your awareness of other plant species as you forage.

There are only two species that you really need to be mindful of when harvesting wild garlic; Lords-and-Ladies (Arum maculatum) and Dog’s Mercury (Mercurialis perennis). They both grow within the same habitats and appear at the same time as Wild Garlic, and they are both considered poisonous. Lords-and-Ladies will give you some incredibly painful experiences – like eating a bag of broken glass, and Dog’s Mercury can cause some extremely unpleasant symptoms and even death.

 

Young Wild Garlic leaves in different development stages and young Lords-and-Ladies leaves in different development stages
Left – Young Wild Garlic leaves in different development stages
Right – Young Lords-and-Ladies leaves in different development stages

 

Lords-and-Ladies bear a slight similarity with its blade-like young leaves, however the differences soon become very apparent once the plant has developed. The leaves are broader with backwards pointed lobes and usually develop spots. Wild Garlic leaves remain long and pointed at the tip. Note the deeper veins radiating from the centre on the Lords-and-Ladies leaves, compared to the much less pronounced vertical lines running from base to tip of Wild Garlic.

A patch of Dog’s Mercury
A patch of Dog’s Mercury

 

Dog’s Mercury looks nothing like Wild Garlic, but the reason it’s mentioned is that it commonly grows amongst it. I have seen on more than one occasion enthusiastic beginners grabbing handfuls of Wild Garlic to put in their basket, unaware that they have also picked some Dog’s Mercury or Lords-and-Ladies. And this is the only real danger. It’s very easy to forget that vital first step of 100% positive identification of everything you add to your foraging basket in the face of an apparently obvious patch of abundant wild food.

Fortunately, Wild Garlic has a very obvious ID characteristic – the plant smells strongly of garlic.

The key take-away here is that no matter your experience level, complacency can leave you in a pickle, so stay mindful as you fill your baskets.

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