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Monday, December 6, 2010

Of gorse! (Why didn't I think of that?)













Nigel Olsen writing on his Curious Kai blog, describes his method for making gorseflower cordial.
It sounds and looks lovely!

"First, you'll need to pick approximately eleventy million of these: gorse flowers, plucked from one of the near countless numbers of gorse that dot the New Zealand countryside. They have the unique scent of coconut and when handled, have a keen sweet smell, not unlike freshly mown grass."

3 comments:

Marty Mars said...

Yes gorse is a wonderful plant - the flowers are nice to eat, it fixes nitrogen and is prickly - a pity that it was treated poorly here.

Why exactly is gorse a pest - creating pasture spings to mind.

I've got rid of a lot of gorse and I am constantly amazed at it's tenacity for life.

Anonymous said...

I seem to remember reading of a recipie for gorse beer
Any hints on how to pick all those flowers
RayF

robertguyton said...

I've a friend who'd spent time planting it somewhere in Scotland where it's a threatened plant!
It amazes me that there are still roadside gorse hedges in Southland, with rules that say you mustn't have gorse within 10 metres of your boundary!

Ray - Hint#1 - gently does it!
I'm keen to sample gorse beer, with it's blowsy coconut flavour ... mmmm....