The Encyclopedia of Edible Plants of North America
Nature's Green Feast
by Francois Couplan
Recommended by Tamarack Song
This book is the only one that lists all edible species (about 4,000 plants) that have been used as food by humans on the vast North American continent. The Encyclopedia of Edible Plants contains a comprehensive account of each species, including etymology, geographical location, uses of each part, history of the uses, composition, medicinal uses, possible toxicity, endangered species, and much more.
Research for the book included first-hand "grazing" conducted over ten years on this continent by eminent European enthobotanist Francis Couplan, Ph.D. The book also includes traditional Native American cooking techniques and uses for plants which the author recorded while living with various tribes around the country.
The Encyclopedia of Edible Plants reflects a complimentary blend of the author's scientific expertise and thirty-five years of personal experience with edible plants. By relating to the senses and to the pleasure of discovering amazing new tastes and flavors, the book encourages the reader to develop new relationships with nature.
Francis Couplan, Ph.D. has been teaching about the uses of plants in the United States and Europe since 1975. He has written 17 books in French and German, including The Encyclopedia of the Edible Plants of Europe in three volumes. A regular contributor to European health and nature magazines, Couplan is popularizing the use of wild palnts in cooking by working with several top chiefs in France, Germany, Switzerland and the United States. He lives on a farm in Switzerland when's he's not traveling around the world in search of new plants and new experiences with them. Paperback, 583 pages.

See also
Botany in a Day: The Patterns Method of Plant Identification
Wild Edible Plants: From Dirt to Plate
Forager's Harvest & Nature's Garden
Return to Wildflowers and Edibles
Return to Granny's Country Store
Return to the Wildflowers & Weeds Home Page