Apples and Cloudberries Across Rivers

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Usually when you give someone instructions to your house, it involves a bit of driving.  On roads.  To get to John Lenart’s place, you need to drive, park, get in a canoe, paddle, get out of that canoe, get in another canoe, paddle, and then you’re there.  This delightful journey was one of the many reasons I love the Yukon!

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John Lenart and his wife live on a remote, off-the-grid property outside of Dawson City, and run a tree nursery called Klondike Valley Nursery.  Everything they have has been canoed over, a terribly impressive feat considering all that’s there. 

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John first bought the property as a young man in 1986, though he wasn’t sure then what he’d do with it.  He first built himself a teepee to live in, and began clearing the thick brush.  Over the years he opened up more and more land, and now has a huge garden, multiple greenhouses, and an entire field dedicated to raising various kinds of coniferous trees and berry bushes. 

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One of his most intensive projects is experimenting with varieties of apple trees to see which can survive in the north.  In cooperation with the plant sciences department at the University of Saskatchewan, he’s planted and raised hundreds of varieties, whittling them down to the few that make it through the Yukon’s long, cold winters. 

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In addition to planting seedlings and growing trees from seed, John experiments by grafting different varieties onto the same root stalk (tree trunk).  If he grows one variety that survives but the fruit proves to be unpleasant, he simply lops off the branches, and grafts several new varieties onto the strong root stalk!  One of his trees is currently growing at least six different kinds of apples; this technique allows him not only to see which varieties thrive, but also which ones produce the best tasting fruit. 

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In his gardens and greenhouses, John and his wife grow huge amounts of fruit and vegetables, including kohlrabi, broccoli, kale, Romanesque cauliflowers (one of my favourites - apparently Dawson is a Mecca for them!) basil, tomatoes, zucchini, grapes, melons, and more.

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At the back of the property we learned about haskaps, a sweet berry that’s not native to the north, but has proven to grow well in the Yukon.  John has three or four varieties, each with a slightly different taste (the strongest tasted almost wine-like to me), and all had the characteristic oblong shape and tart skin.  We loved them.

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We also were introduced to our first Swiss Stone Pine, the largest pine nut producing tree in the world.  They’re not the highest quality pine nuts, but apparently volume is not a problem! 

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Michele and her husband Hector were also thrilled to hear John had discovered cloudberries on his property, an elusive berry that only grows up north. 

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They're bright orange, have almost syrup-like juice, and have a very distinct taste, like a tart apple mixed with sharp cheese.  They're widespread in Scandinavia (here's a great Norwegian article about them), and we tasted a Finnish cloudberry liqueur at Miche and Hector's. 

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While hunting for cloudberries, we also came across bog cranberries!

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In addition to the plants and trees, John and his wife have chickens and a herd of adorable dogs (two of them, Oz and Peggy, accompanied us on our tour). 

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Sometimes they’re joined by moose (drawn by the brassicas), and Oz, approximately 1/1000th of their size, runs them off the property quickly. 

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John is an unbelievably knowledgeable man, and we listened with rapt attention for the hours we were there. 

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He lives quietly in the north, practically unknown, and yet his work is invaluable to issues of Canadian food security in the North.  We felt privileged to learn from him, thankful he didn’t mind how many haskaps we managed to eat, and so pleased to be canoed across two channels, twice.   THANK YOU JOHN!

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 -LA

*This was submitted to the Canadian Food Experience Project to address this month's theme of a regional Canadian Food Hero.

Finding Food in Unexpected Places

I don’t know if I’d ever truly realized a salad can be picked from the forest.  I knew that most of our food grows somewhere outside and that ‘foraging’ is a pretty hot word in the food scene right now.  I hadn’t, however, realized just how abundant food can be, and how we overlook many food sources each and every day.

Yarrow: a medicinal herb.  Aurora Mountain Farms makes a Yarrow jelly!

Michele Genest, author of the cookbook 'The Boreal Gourmet', focuses on just that, the abundance of wild food.  She specializes in foraging, cooking, and developing recipes with the food from the Boreal Forest, a vast ecosystem that covers nearly 60% of the land in Canada and exists, for the most part, north of the 50th parallel.  Michele is a remarkable woman, she hosted much of our time in Dawson City, and she took us on our first foraging excursion.

If you're like me, 'foraging excursion' will make you think of a full day affair, deep into the woods.  Not so!  We went for a walk down the 9th Avenue Trail, just skirting Dawson City, only a few blocks from the heart of the city.

Pineapple weed: actually tastes like pineapple!  would be great in salads or sauteed with other greens.

During our 200-metre walk, we discovered close to 15 new-to-us edible plants including yarrow, lamb’s quarters, artemesia tilesii, high bush cranberries, low bush cranberries (also known as lingonberries), lungwort, Labrador tea, soapberries, plantains (a green, not the banana), pineapple weed, juniper berries (an old fave – hello gin!), and even stumbled upon wild strawberries.

Wild strawberries! 

I left that walk with my belly full, my head spinning, and feeling astounded at the abundance of nature.

Lungwort: a great salad green

On our last night in the Yukon, Michele made us an incredible dinner highlighting some of these ingredients.  She prepared a wedge salad with a dressing made of local chevre, lungwort, yogurt, balsamic and olive oil; pasta with fresh basil pesto; steak rubbed with dried spruce tips and juniper; and served with a sauce made up of foraged morel mushrooms, cream, garlic and apple brandy.

There is much to learn about foraged wild foods. We can’t eat every leafy green plant or berry-bearing tree, but with an increased communal knowledge of edible foraged foods, our dinner tables would become much richer.  Have you ever thought about the possibility of spruce tip oil and lambs quarters being the new kale chips? 

Or whipping soapberries into ‘Indian Ice Cream’? 

Soapberries:  These berries can be slightly sweetened with sugar or fireweed and whipped into a meringue-like froth.  Served this way, it is called 'Indian Ice Cream'  

Food just got a whole lot more exciting for me.

-DV

Juniper berries

Labrador Tea: pick and steep in hot water!

High bush cranberries

Red Currants