Eating Wild Japan: Tracking the Culture of Foraged Foods, with a Guide to Plants and Recipes


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From bracken to butterbur to „princess” bamboo, some of Japan’s most iconic foods are foraged, not grown, in its forests, fields, and coastal waters–yet most Westerners have never heard of them.

In this book, journalist Winifred Bird eats her way from one end of the country to the other in search of the hidden stories of Japan’s wild foods, the people who pick them, and the places whose histories they’ve shaped.

„A beautiful and thoughtful exploration of the deep relationship–past and present–between people and wild plants in one of the world’s richest foraging regions.”—Samuel Thayer, author of Incredible Wild Edibles and The Forager’s Harvest



From the Publisher

Eating Wild Japan, Tracking the Culture of Foraged Food. Illustrated images of people foragingEating Wild Japan, Tracking the Culture of Foraged Food. Illustrated images of people foraging

Praise from the Japan Times

Praise from the Japan Times

Images from the inside of the book Eating Wild Japan

Images from the inside of the book Eating Wild Japan

Praise from Elizabeth Andoh

Praise from Elizabeth Andoh

About the author Winifred Bird, with an illustration from the inside the book Eating Wild JapanAbout the author Winifred Bird, with an illustration from the inside the book Eating Wild Japan

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