The culinary do-it-yourself era is in full swing! Many chefs and cooks are seeking a deeper connection with their food through foraging, farming, and hunting, leading many to cast aside the casserole for modern spins on...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

The culinary do-it-yourself era is in full swing! Many chefs and cooks are seeking a deeper connection with their food through foraging, farming, and hunting, leading many to cast aside the casserole for modern spins on familiar foods.

In Acorns & Cattails, nationally acclaimed chef Rob Connoley offers more than one hundred recipes featuring ingredients that any home cook can forage, grow, or hunt. Each recipe shares modern flavor and texture pairings that will excite professional chef and home cook alike. The comforting mesquite chocolate chip cookie, the indulgent pork belly poppers, and the haute hackberry rabbit paté launch homespun do-it-yourself dishes into modern classics.

In addition to learning to cook foraged and farmed foods, readers will explore the basics of wild plant harvesting (including identification and ethical best practices) while enjoying humorous anecdotes from Connoley’s years of remote gathering. Photographer Jay Hemphill also presents stunning images that capture the bounty of North America.


Similar Products

The New Wildcrafted Cuisine: Exploring the Exotic Gastronomy of Local TerroirUgly Little Greens: Gourmet Dishes Crafted From Foraged IngredientsIncredible Wild EdiblesThe Forager's Feast: How to Identify, Gather, and Prepare Wild Edibles (Countryman Know How)The Book of Greens: A Cook's Compendium of 40 Varieties, from Arugula to Watercress, with More Than 175 RecipesThe Forager's Harvest: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting, and Preparing Edible Wild PlantsThe Wildcrafting Brewer: Creating Unique Drinks and Boozy Concoctions from Nature's IngredientsThe Sioux Chef's Indigenous KitchenAcorn: Recipes for the Forgotten Food: 25 Nutritious, Delicious & Easy Recipes to Bring Acorn  Back into Your KitchenNopalito: A Mexican Kitchen