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Village Squire, 1977-10, Page 5Blanche Garrett displays one of the books she has written on wild food cookery which is her specialty. You need never go hungry in a weed patch with Blanche Garrett's know-how BY DEBBIE RANNEY Blanche Pownall Garrett lives in the country, a perfect place for weed gathering. So who would want to gather weeds you might ask? You would, if you knew of the nutrients in them and what kind of delicious meals they could provide. It's something Mrs. Garrett knows already and a knowledge she has put to use in books. Mrs. Garrett's interest in wild plant life has been lifelong but about 20 or 25 years ago she started taking it even more seriously. It's obvious she wishes more people would do the same and she stresses you don't have to live in the country or even be near the country to find this edible wild plant life. You can find it on your very own lawn. She said just taking a drive through the villages and towns of Huron County you can see a lot of mountain ashberry growing on people's lawns and people don't even realize that it could be used for jelly. Another wild fruit that could be used are elderberries. She says many people put these on their lawn just as a decorative tree. "When 1 lived in the cities, I still ate edible wild plants," Mrs. Garrett said. She uses plants mostly from the Huron County area. Huron County has a wealth of plants, she said. She not only uses plants for jams and jellies but uses them in everything including, soups, salads, main dishes and desserts. Two of Mrs. Garrett's books are in fact about jams and jellies but a third called, "A Taste of the Wild" is about all kinds of wild food cookery. Some of the things that she makes are: jellies with wild VILLAGE SQUIRE/OCTOBER 1977, 3.