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Morgan Botanicals Blog

Herbal Information and Recipes

Jessica Morgan

Jessica Morgan

Jessica Morgan is a Certified Professional Herbalist and Environmental Horticulture and Crop Science Graduate, a Certified CA Master Gardener, Junior Master Gardener Teacher, Entrepreneur, Forager, Wild Foodie, Writer, and Avid Reader. Jessica offers medicine-making workshops, children’s classes, plant walks, garden and crop advice as well as private consultations and custom blends.

Blog entries tagged in seeds

Wild Jewels for your Wild Valentine

Posted by Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan is a Certified Professional Herbalist and Environmental Horticulture and Crop Science Graduate,...
User is currently offline
on January 30, 2012
in Herbal Blog

I've always liked to make my own Valentine love letters....all handwritten and colored with leaves and sticks and twigs and rocks and plant dyed spots, or whipping up my own chocolatey and sticky and sweet confections, and irresistible luscious liqueurs....but this year, I'm stringing wild jewels too. A little something special for my girls. They're easy enough to be a children's project but I'm keeping this one a secret because I'm making these ones for my Valentine girls. I will say though, that my fingertips didn't go without the occasional needle poke so some children my need help with this one.

Personally, I'm not one for store bought jewelry like gold rings or trinket laden necklaces. I have a lustful eye and a heart for the treasures gifted and hidden amongst Nature. I do love sea jewels and shells and seed pods and gems and stones and twigs and precious metals and such and I , especially like to find these treasures myself and make my own jewelery with wild jewels.

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Sweet Rose Hips, It's Soup!

Posted by Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan is a Certified Professional Herbalist and Environmental Horticulture and Crop Science Graduate,...
User is currently offline
on January 17, 2012
in Herbal Blog
"One may live without bread, not without roses."

The rose hip, or rose haw, is the fruit of the rose plant, and typically is red or orangeish, but ranges from dark purple to black in some species. Rose hips begin to form in spring, and ripen in late summer through autumn.  And me, I like to get them while I can, and eat them up!

Rose hips are a very rich source of Vitamin C and are free for the picking. Three average hips have as much Vitamin C as a medium-sized orange so they are definitely a good fruit to incorporate into the diet. The food value is found in their skin and their taste is similar to that of an apple. If you plan on harvesting, pick only the ripe berries that are vivid red and slightly soft. They have a much better flavor if picked after the first frost…preferably late August through October. You can harvest them from your garden, but they’re more plentiful from old-time shrub varieties such as rugosas and wild rose bushes. To collect your own, and to encourage your roses to develop them, don’t trim the blossoms and leave them to naturally fade and fall. Or you can buy dried cut and sifted rose hips ready to use.

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There’s Just Something About Clary

Posted by Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan is a Certified Professional Herbalist and Environmental Horticulture and Crop Science Graduate,...
User is currently offline
on September 11, 2011
in Herbal Info

Clary sage was once thought to make people immortal and many believed that it could clarify the brain, the eyes and even the “inner eye”, and that those who drank a tea of the leaves and flowers could see the future. Today, clary sage is used as a flavoring in everything from cigarettes and omelets to muscatel wine, but it does have many medicinal properties too. In fact, it has a medicinal pedigree going back to the ancient Greeks, but it's probably not the first herb you think of to treat complaints like hot flashes, indigestion and anxiety.

The young tops of Clary were used in soups and as pot herbs. It gives a new lift to omelets, and was used to flavor jellies. The leaves were chopped into salads. Culpeper recommended a 17th century sage dish where the fresh leaves were first dipped in a batter of flour, eggs and a little milk, fried in butter and served as a side dish. The flowers have an aromatic flavor and make a lovely contrast in salads. All sage flowers are edible after removing all greenery and stems.

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Know Your Weeds: Common Mallow

Posted by Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan is a Certified Professional Herbalist and Environmental Horticulture and Crop Science Graduate,...
User is currently offline
on June 15, 2011
in Herbal Info

Mallow is one of the earliest cited plants in recorded literature. Horace mentions it in reference to his own diet, which he describes as very simple: "Me pascunt olivae, me cichorea, me malvae" ("As for me, olives, endives, and mallows provide sustenance")

Know your weeds: Look down, because Common Mallow (Malva neglecta) probably grows around you. The flowers, leaves, young shoots and roots are edible, either raw or cooked and are very nutritious. The seeds alone contain 21% protein and 15.2% fat.

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Are You A Seed Saver?

Posted by Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan
Jessica Morgan is a Certified Professional Herbalist and Environmental Horticulture and Crop Science Graduate,...
User is currently offline
on August 12, 2010
in Herbal Blog

As summer is turning to fall, our gardens are beginning to spill out their seeds in great abundance, insuring us its future generation. Do you save your seeds?

Collecting seeds from your own garden is a great way to preserve your prized beauties and save them for the spring garden or pass them along to family and friends. I find that trading seeds is a fun way to share my own plants and try out someone else's favorites. There are so many seed exchanges available to gardeners, but here are two of my favorite sites for seed swapping and seed giving.

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Tags: seeds
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