Living

UMaine Extension offers facts on seasonal foods like fiddleheads and rhubarb

University of Maine Cooperative Extension offers information and workshops to help consumers find, grow, use, preserve and store in-season fruits and vegetables in Maine. Seasonal favorites for May are featured in several online bulletins and fact sheets, including:

Facts on Fiddleheads

Facts on Edible Wild Greens in Maine

Fruits for Health: Rhubarb  

Spring Refrigerator Pickles

Extension educator Kathy Savoie demonstrates new techniques for cooking, freezing and pickling fiddleheads in an easy-to-follow video. Fiddleheads in particular require exact cooking methods — boiling for at least 15 minutes or steaming for 10–12 minutes — to reduce risk for food-borne illness associated with raw and undercooked fiddleheads. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has investigated a number of outbreaks of food-borne illness associated with fiddleheads. The implicated ferns were eaten either raw or lightly cooked (sautéed, parboiled or microwaved).  

Get ready for the arrival of Maine’s seasonal foods by attending an upcoming food preservation workshop. Read the Spoonful Blog to get bite-sized food and nutrition information that is science-based and applicable to everyday life.

Updated information, and bulletins to download or order, are available on the Extension website (https://extension.umaine.edu/) or by contacting 207-581-3188, 800-287-0274 (in Maine), or extension@maine.edu.

Get the Rest of the Story

Thank you for reading your4 free articles this month. To continue reading, and support local, rural journalism, please subscribe.