Pages

Monday, 5 April 2021

Creamy Ramsons Sauce


Ramsons Allium ursinum, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.

April is the time new plants start emerging in numbers and it's a great time for wild foragers. One of the plants they will seek out is wild garlic, known as Ramsons in English and Ail des ours ('Bears garlic') in French. It grows in damp woodland places, often beside streams. Where it grows it tends to grow abundantly so there is no danger of over harvesting if you are just picking for personal use. And bears are extinct in France so you are not depriving them now.


Ramsons Allium ursinum, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
 Ramsons growing on the banks of the Courtineau.

Usually you find it by noticing the strong garlic scent in the air. It really pongs, but in fact the taste is much milder, more like chives. You can chiffonade it and use it in omelettes or you can make a creamy sauce for steak, chicken or fish. The sauce freezes well, and is easier to make in a reasonably generous quantity.


Cooking wild foraged Ramsons Allium ursinum, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
 Sweating the ramsons leaves with onion.

Ingredients:
50 g butter
1 onion, sliced or chopped
1 clove garlic, crushed
A generous handful of ramsons, washed, leaves only
100 - 200 ml cream
Other herbs eg chervil, tarragon, chopped (optional)
200 g mushrooms, chopped or sliced (optional)
Pinch of salt

Method:
  1. Melt the butter in a medium sized saucepan.
  2. Sweat the onion and garlic.
  3. Add the mushrooms if using and cook until they release their liquid. You may want to tip some of the liquid out.
  4. Add the ramsons and herbs (if using) and sweat them until thoroughly wilted.
  5. Transfer to a blender and add the cream and salt.
  6. Blend until reasonably smooth.
  7. Warm gently to serve (this recipe makes at least 6 servings and if you've used mushrooms, twice that amount).

Homemade creamy ramsons sauce. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.
Sauce for the freezer.
Cooking wild foraged Ramsons Allium ursinum, Indre et Loire, France. Photo by Loire Valley Time Travel.



************************************************

For details of our private guided tours of chateaux, gardens, wineries, markets and more please visit the Loire Valley Time Travel website. We would be delighted to design a tour for you.

We are also on Instagram, so check us out to see a regularly updated selection of our very best photos. 

6 comments:

Ken Broadhurst said...

There is a related plant in North America, Allium_tricoccum. A springtime treat where it grows...

Carolyn said...

Ken, are you talking about ramps? I don't think we have them here in PA. Do they grow in North Carolina? Some friends went to West Virginia for a ramps festival and got lost. One of them went into a motel to ask for directions, and when the woman at the desk started speaking, our friend took a quick step back! He knew then that he was in the right area for ramps.

chm said...

I think I saw these wild flowers in Arlington a few years back.

Le Pré de la Forge said...

Thanx Susan.... will copy it tomorrow.

Ken Broadhurst said...

Carolyn, I'm not really sure whether ramps grow in the NC mountains or not. I connect ramps with WVa and KY, but it would be strange if some didn't grow as well in NC, VA, and PA. So that WVa woman had the local accent, eh? Is that accent as thick as the Philadelphia accent?

Carolyn said...

Ken, it wasn't the accent that told our friends they were in the right place; it was the woman's breath!

We lived in Phila for five years and I always thought the local accent was in a class of its own. So I just googled it and found my old boss on youtube saying the Phila accent is changing, becoming less southern. I never thought it was southern at all, but what do I know?

Post a Comment