My annual ramp foraging was made insanely easy this year. My uncle was camping nearby for the weekend- he stopped by with his new ATV on Saturday around noon and asked if I wanted a ride. I said I wouldn't say no to a ride up the hill to pick ramps. I grabbed my basket and off we went. I felt so incredibly lazy for not hiking up but it's so steep and I'm also sorrynotsorry.
Up at the top- he had no idea what ramps were and I was like, "Wait until you see. Everything is brown but once we get to the patch- it's a sea of emerald green."
This is just a small area where we picked- the ramp patch extends so far.
My uncle helped me pick and we were done quickly.
And then I got a ride back down. It totally spoiled me and I'm pretty sure I'm going to call him up next year and from now on and ask for a ride.
Another reason I'm not sorry is because it takes about three hours to clean them all. Normally I'd pick on a Saturday, keep the dirty ramps in the garage overnight and wash them on Sunday. It's takes many changes of water and time to strip the slimy outside skin off the bulb, then bundle them all up pretty. I saved so much time from the ride up/down that I cleaned them all as soon as I got home.
So beautiful! Bundles have already gone to my uncle (his reward for the ride and helping me pick!), my mom, sister, mother in law, sister in law... More will go to Wool band member at the next house practice.
During the washing up, I set aside the "seconds"- the lone leaves, broken bulbs, runty-sized ramps. These I keep for me:
Which I'll turn into pesto and compound butter. I'm thinking about pickling bulbs, dehydrating leaves. I have a block of cream cheese I'll mix some into (I can't wait- I'm buying bagels just for this). And a quick chimichurri last night to go with London broil steak:
It's a decidedly Vermont chimichurri- because of the ramps and I used cider vinegar instead of red wine vinegar. It's so good with steak.
Lots of cooking to do this week to process it all but then I can keep a lot of it in my freezer and cupboards to enjoy until next Spring.