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Hen of the Woods Roast with Leeks and Black Walnuts

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Maitake mushroom roast with frizzled leeks (13)Since hen of the woods can have such a large size, I love swapping them out for meat in recipes. With the maitake coming up in earnest in late September/October right now, I’ve had more than my share of them hanging out in the fridge queue waiting to get cooked, so big ol’chunk of hen has been on the menu often, and you won’t hear any complaining from me.

One of my favorite recipes I was toying with hit the mark on the first try: a big hunk of hen pan roasted like a piece of meat, with a good handful of julienned leeks tossed in for the last few minutes of roasting to soak up some flavor from the pan and brown around the edges. The inspiration came from a few different places, but mostly from being at my grandmothers house having a burger the other week, complete with a little pan of her fried onions, slighly black around the edges.

Old timers I used to cook burgers for on West 7th street in St. Paul will agree with me here: there’s an art to the cooking onions, and a little char, as opposed to caramelized onions, which are very sweet, can be a great foil for something rich, like a Sunday roast.

big bastard hen of the woods mushroom

My friend Jeremy with a big bastard hen. I donated it to him, as it was donated to me. I had no desire to clean that monster in my apartment, or a resto kitchen for that matter. I feel sorry for the prep cooks.

After the leeks and mushrooms are cooked, I finished it off with a few black walnuts for an earthy undertone, cut the hen into slices, spooned all the goodies and browned butter from the pan on top and called it dinner, with a bowl of greens on the side. Just a different way to make them you might try sometime. The black walnuts (or a nut of your choice, as long as they’re toasted!) are optional, but complete a good earthy flavor trio of mushroom, onion, and nut.

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Before you try cooking large pieces of hen of the woods, clean them, then clean them again. 

One thing to mention about cooking large pieces of hen is that, unfortunately, just because you found a large hen doesn’t mean you’re going to be able to treat it like this, since nature doesn’t care about what humans enjoy eating.

As the hens grow, if there’s a rainfall, or a couple, or just a good wind, particles can go into the shelves, nooks and crannys of the mushroom and literally grow into the flesh, as it continues to grow, especially the pore filled underside of the fronds.

The recipe here is the simplest form. The walnuts are optional and, if you can get some, fresh thyme would be a great addition to the leeks as they cook.

Maitake mushroom roast with frizzled leeks (13)

Roast hen of the woods mushroom with leeks and black walnuts
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Hen of the Woods Roast with Leeks and Black Walnuts 

Servings: 4

Ingredients

  • A large cluster of hen of the woods mushroom (about 1.5 lbs) meticulously cleaned and washed if needed
  • Kosher salt and fresh ground black pepper to taste
  • 1 large leek tender parts only, cut into fine 1 inch julienne
  • 1 tablespoon minced garlic
  • 2 tablespoons toasted black walnuts
  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 2 tablespoons flavorless cooking oil plus extra if needed since very dry mushrooms will soak up more
  • Fresh cut chives to garnish (optional)

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 375. In a large cast iron skillet or heavy saute pan large enough to accomodate the chunk of hen of the woods, heat the 2 tablespoons of oil. Brown the hen gently on the cut sides and as many others as you can manage, seasoning with salt and pepper along the way.
  • When the hen has been browned and caramelized a bit, move the hen to one side of the pan and add the butter to the pan along with the garlic and leeks. Put the pan in the oven and cook for 15-20 minutes, or until the hen is completely cooked and hot throughout.
  • When the hen is cooked through, remove the pan from the oven, stirring a bit to distribute the leeks around the side of the pan, which should be a little browned and caramelized, then remove the hen of the woods to a cutting board and slice into serving pieces.
  • Put the pieces of mushroom into a warmed serving dish or casserole (pictured), then toss the walnuts in with the leeks, double check the seasoning, then spoon the buttery leek-walnut mixture over the hen slices in the dish so diners can help themselves at the table. Garnish with chives and serve immediately.

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Previous Post: « Simple Roasted Hen of the Woods
Next Post: Spring Sochan and Watercress with Venison Ham »

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Comments

  1. Elizabeth Blair

    October 10, 2019 at 10:49 am

    Can’t wait to try this recipe, Alan. But my hen patches are done. Next year!

    Reply

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Toothwort is peaking right now. Makes a great garn Toothwort is peaking right now. Makes a great garnish. Here with @shepherdsongfarm goat tartare, ramp vinaigrette and wild rice sourdough. It adds a nice bitter, mustardy note. 

#cutleaftoothwort #cardamineconcatenata #goat #tartare #normalizegoatmeat
Consider the salad, here, a little mix of ephemera Consider the salad, here, a little mix of ephemerals, and other tender young plants and herbs. 

The instinctual knowledge involved in choosing different plants at their peak to serve together raw, with thought put into how the textures and flavors will work on someone’s palette, to me, is one of the highest forms of culinary artistry. Something most people will never taste in their life. 

A little oil, salt, pepper, acid, a touch of sweetness from maple, maybe few fresh herbs are all you need. Bottled dressing of any kind would be like putting Axe Body spray on food. 

#spring #ephemerals #toothwort #troutlily #springbeauty #foraging
🌱Ephemeral Week🌱 Last entry. I’ve saved t 🌱Ephemeral Week🌱

Last entry. I’ve saved the smallest, fern gulliest plant for last. 

False Mermaid Weed (Floerkea proserpinacoides) is a good little plant Sam Thayer showed me. It’s tiny, as in all the photos are from me on my belly, in a wet ditch. It’s so small it’s hard to get the camera to even focus on it (see pic with my finger for scale). 

Mermaid weed likes wet areas, like ditches and spots that hold a bit of water (perfect mosquito habitat😁). 

Like chickweed, Floerkia greens are like nature’s Microgreens. They’re in the Limnanthaceae, (a new-ish group of brassicas) and like the Toothwort form earlier this week, you’ll taste a strong mustard-family flavor in a mouthful of their tender stems. 

They’re literally wild mustard sprouts, and, unlike other wild sprouts (garlic mustard 🤬) they stay sprouts, and, they actually taste good. 

It has a wide range over much of the eastern and western U.S., and is listed as secure globally, but is endangered in some states and shouldn’t be disturbed in those places. 

I’m lucky enough to have some large colonies near me so I do clip a few handfuls each year-my annual reward for removing some of the garlic mustard nearby, that, along with atvs, dirt bikes, and contamination from local water pollution, is one of the biggest threats to this tiny green. 

#floerkiaproserpinacoides 
#wildsprouts #mustardsprouts #ferngully #tiny #foraging #mermaid #🧜‍♀️
🌱Ephemeral Week🌱 Virginia Bluebells (Merten 🌱Ephemeral Week🌱

Virginia Bluebells (Mertensia virginica) are one of the most beautiful harbingers of spring I know, as well as one of the most delicious. 

They’re in the Borage family, along with the namesake plant, Comfrey (which I only eat a few flowers of occasionally) and Honeywort. 

The flavor of the greens, like borage, has a rich flavor some people might describe as mushroomy or fishy, but after a just a few moments of cooking (30-60 seconds) they get mild and delicious, with a subtle bitterness. It’s a good bitter though-nothing like dandelions or garlic mustard that aren’t fit to be in the same basket, let alone on the same plate. 

The shoots are sweet and delicious, much more mild than the greens. As they can grow to be over a foot long, they’re almost more of a vegetable than a leafy green, depending on when you harvest them. 

Bluebells love moist, rich soil, but you don’t have to go to the woods to get them. Many people know Virginia Bluebells as a garden plant, and they can make a great edible addition to your landscape.

#virginiabluebells #foraging #ephemerals #springwildflowers #wildfoodlove #mertensiavirginica
🌱Ephemeral Week🌱 Narrow-leaved Wild Leek / 🌱Ephemeral Week🌱

Narrow-leaved Wild Leek / White Ramp (Allium burdickii) 

If you’re in a ramp patch you might occasionally see some with white stems (pic 1,2). These are a cousin to the more common variety with much larger leaves and red stems (pic 3,4,5)

Allium burdickii is not as common as the red-stemmed variety, and in every ramp patch I’ve been in, the white ramp is heavily outnumbered. 

Where I harvest, I like to leave them alone, and mark the areas where they grow with sticks or middens on the ground so I can go back in the fall and help them spread their seeds. I also try and remove garlic mustard when I see it-a much more imminent threat in my mind to ramps than foragers out to gather some leaves. 

2020 was a banner year for ramp seeds, and you can still help the plants right now (pic 7) as some seed heads are still full and would love for you to give them a shake as you walk by. 

#alliumburdickii #ramps #ephemerals #foraging #spring
🌱Ephemeral Week🌱 #4: Erythronium leaves E 🌱Ephemeral Week🌱

#4: Erythronium leaves 

Erythronium (Trout Lily) are another ephemeral that I see widespread in my ramp patches, there’s at least 32 species world-wide, with at least one endangered species in MN (Dwarf Trout Lily). 

They’re a beautiful, delicious plant I eat every year, but I can’t recommend serving them to the general public. Plenty of people say these are edible, but also emetic if eaten in “quantity”. 

I can tell you, at least with E. albidum and E. americanum I’ve eaten, that some people are much more sensitive than others, so if you want to make a salad to serve people, make sure they’re comfortable eating it, and use a few leaves as a garnish. 

Funny enough, I didn’t learn about these from a foraging book. Like knotweed, I learned about them from one of my favorite chefs: Michel Bras, one of the most influential chefs of the turn of the 21 century. 

Any chef that works with wild plants owes a debt to Bras. His book, although a little dated now, still teaches me new things all the time. While flipping through the book I also caught a recipe using tansy flowers 😳 that I’d probably pass on. 

The whitefish crusted with sunflower seeds is a dish of mine from 2012, and an example of how I eat the leaves: a few at a time, as a garnish. 

#troutlily #erythronium #michelbras #ephemerals #foraging
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