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FORAGER | CHEF

Award-winning chef, author and forager Alan Bergo. Food is all around you.

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Milkweed Flowers

 

edible milkweed minnesota

Note: This post only covers milkweed flowers. I’ve collected all of my knowledge on milkweed into a mother guide for you that covers all the edible parts in my Guide to Milkweed. 

Nothing makes a beautiful Midwestern landscape pop quite like the deep purple milkweed flowers of the summer. They also make gardens look great, and will attract bees and butterflies, like the monarch, whose relationship with milkweed is probably the most known, and polarizing.

For this post, I’m referring only to common milkweed: Asclepias syriaca. Eating other milkweed flowers could make you sick, as one of my line cooks found out eating yellow milkweed flowers.

Milkweed Flowers and cordial (1 of 5)

Touching back on polarization, I’m a forager, so I’m interested in eating things. Milkweed is one of the plants that if I post something about, I expect the floodgates to open from people saying that I shouldn’t touch it, and that I’m doing a disservice to the monarch butterfly, and it’s basically going to be all my fault if they are one day extinct.

Edible Milkweed Buds

Milkweed buds, eventually these will become flowers.

However, milkweed has been used as a food for a very long time, and we still have butterflies. Also, milkweed harvesting that could take away food for butterflies I would consider as cutting the shoots. As well, milkweed reproduces not only above ground via seeds through the pods, but also below the ground through rhizomes, so some of the milkweed harvesting nazi’s arguments are on some shaky ground.

Milkweed Flower Sorbet

Milkweed cordial spun into sorbet, it needs to be cut with something to not be overly sweet. I like buttermilk.

Sam Thayer has a great motto about foraging and the conservation and appreciation plants. I’m paraphrasing, but it goes something like this:

People who harvest parts of milkweed to eat aren’t going to be the ones to kill off the monarchs. The poeple who value milkweed as a food source will be the people most vested in preserving paces where milkweed grows, not destroying habitat, which is the real killer of milkweed, and the monarchs.

My favorite field of milkweed flowers. Hoodie courtesy of Rush Order Tees.

So that being said, if you’re worried about the butterflies, maybe just don’t cut every single flower cluster from every plant in your patch. The flowers go a long way too, just a sprinkle onto a salad or a dish is all you need.

Cooking / Eating 

Milkweed flowers are unique for a couple reasons:

  • They smell even better than they taste
  • They have a long shelf life, longer than any other flower I’ve had. Fresh flowers can last for weeks under refrigeration
  • They’ll color liquids (like alcohol or sugar solutions) a deep magenta
Halibut With White Bean Puree, Chickweed, Milkweed, and Flowers

Milkweed flowers make a great garnish, especially for dishes with milkweed, like this halibut.

What do you exactly do with the flowers? Can you actually cook them? Can you eat them raw? 

Like most other flowers sans day lilies, you won’t exactly want to cook them, in my opinion.

When I use milkweed flowers, generally I’m just going to sprinkle them on a salad, or an entree, typically fish. There is one way you can harvest their scent though, that I’ve tried. Like other flowers, milkweed has a strong, wonderfully sweet smell.

Cooking will destroy that scent, but their are some mediums that will absorb it, especially water, alcohol, and sugar based infusions. I have never had a problem serving raw sprinkles of milkweed flowers to guests at restaurants, or eating them myself in small amounts.

Milkweed Flower Cordial

This was taken after 2 days, the color will get even richer as it goes on.

Recipes 

My favorite thing to do, besides sprinkling these on things, is to make a deep colored, sweet or sweet and sour infusion, I use it to make drinks, flavor sorbet and ice cream bases, or, maybe my favorite: drizzle over fresh strawberries and vanilla ice cream when using the shrub base that includes vinegar.

Milkweed Flower Cordial 

A recipe to use to flavor drinks and desserts like ice cream, sorbet, etc.

Milkweed Flower Shrub 

A vinegar based recipe, primarily for drinks, but also great drizzled over ice cream and fresh berries. Honey can be substitued for the sugar.

More 

Forager’s Guide to Milkweed

Milkweed Flowers and cordial (1 of 5)

Related

Previous Post: « Pan Roasted Chicken Breast with Duxelles Sauce
Next Post: Milkweed Flower Cordial »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Robert

    May 18, 2021 at 6:10 pm

    5 stars
    Good article thanks, I will also subscribe have a great day 🙂

    Reply
  2. Maria

    July 2, 2021 at 8:30 pm

    5 stars
    Can I sue it for a perfume?

    Reply
    • Alan Bergo

      July 4, 2021 at 11:56 am

      Probably.

      Reply
  3. 4Winner Sports

    August 24, 2021 at 1:37 am

    Good article thanks, Thank you for sharing

    Reply
  4. Clifton Christon

    July 1, 2022 at 11:45 am

    I pick the green buds plus a few leaves before they flower, and boil them with salt pork and add chicken broth .

    Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Eat Milkweed, Help Save the Monarchs says:
    June 11, 2019 at 7:27 am

    […] can be eaten just like any edible flower.  This is a really creative and detailed guide on cooking milkweed flowers, along with sorbet, cordial and a number of other fun […]

    Reply
  2. Common Milkweed and Its Many Uses - Think Outside The Lawn says:
    August 28, 2020 at 7:56 am

    […] Milkweed Flowers […]

    Reply

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FORAGER | CHEF®
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Author: The Forager Chef’s Book of Flora
James Beard Award ‘22
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Alan Bergo
I liked the staff meal I made for Mondays shoot so I liked the staff meal I made for Mondays shoot so much we filmed it instead of the original dish I’d planned. 

Cooked natural wild rice (not the black shiny stuff) is great hot, cold, sweet or savory. It’s a perfect, filling lunch for a long day of berry picking. 

I make them with whatever I have on hand. Mushrooms will fade into the background a little here, so I use a bunch of them, along with lots of herbs and hickory nut oil + dill flowers. 

I’m eating the leftovers today back up in the barrens (hopefully) getting some more bluebs for another shoot this week w @wild.fed 

#wilwilwice #wildrice #chanterelles #campfood #castironcooking
Baby’s first homegrown mushrooms! Backyard wine Baby’s first homegrown mushrooms! Backyard wine caps on hardwood sawdust from my lumberjack buddy.

Next up blewits. Spawn from @northsporemushrooms

#winecaps #strophariaaeruginosa #allthemushroomtags
It’s wild cherry season. I’ll be picking from It’s wild cherry season. I’ll be picking from my favorite spot tomorrow a.m. and have room for a couple helpers. It’s at an event on a farm just south of St. Cloud. 

If you’re interested send me a message and I’ll raffle off the spots. Plenty of cherries to go around. I’ll be leading a short plant walk around the farm too. 

#chokecherries #foraging #prunusvirginiana #summervibes
Special thanks to the beach in Ashland for hooking Special thanks to the beach in Ashland for hooking it up with on-site garnishes. Beach pea flowers taste strong and leguminous, similar to vetch, or like a rich tasting pea shoot. 

#lathyrusjaponicus #beachpeas #peaflower #foraging #northshore #bts
Great, long day of filming in near the south shore Great, long day of filming in near the south shore of Lake Superior yesterday. 

Blueberries were sparse, and some kind of blight seems to be affecting the serviceberries. Chanterelles weren’t as good as 2020, but they were there. 

Quick dip in the Lake Superior after we broke set was a bonus. 

W/ @barebonesliving  @misterberndt @jesseroesler

#barebonesliving #foraging #lakesuperiorrocks #serviceberries #chanterelles #bts
Green ramp seed make a great lactoferment. Just pu Green ramp seed make a great lactoferment. Just put the green seeds in brine in a jar, leave for 2 weeks. 

After they’re sour they can be water bath processed, although I’ve stored them at room temp without an issue too. 

Finished product is great minced or puréed into places where you’d like garlic, capers, or both. 

Makes a great tzatziki with a little crumbled, dried bee balm. 

#tzatziki #ramps #rampseeds #foraging #fermentation
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