A Rambling Forage at Lulworth Cove (Plus Lacto-Fermented Pickle Part 1)

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  • Опубліковано 22 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 308

  • @DevinMoorhead
    @DevinMoorhead Рік тому +120

    That 3 cornered leek is slowly hunting Mr. Shrimp down

    • @p-__
      @p-__ Рік тому +3

      My farts are better than Atomic Shrimp’s farts

    • @SheyD78
      @SheyD78 Рік тому +8

      Place your bets on how long his garden remains clear of them...

    • @pixie706
      @pixie706 Рік тому +1

      A bit like a triffid

    • @happybunny1329
      @happybunny1329 Рік тому +6

      3 cornered leek.... the onion of evil

    • @thestrangegreenman
      @thestrangegreenman Рік тому +1

      My leek has three corners
      Three corners has my leek
      If my leek didn't have three corners
      It wouldn't be my leeks!

  • @Ultrazaubererger
    @Ultrazaubererger Рік тому +11

    I love how you always put in the botanical names of plants on screen!
    Especially for people from another country it makes it really easy to translate since different plants can have the same name and the same plant can have different names but the botanical name is always easy to accurately translate.

  • @critterjon4061
    @critterjon4061 Рік тому +84

    Note about Alexander seeds they where historically used as a pepper substitute during the Tudor and medieval periods

    • @AtomicShrimp
      @AtomicShrimp  Рік тому +37

      Definitely going to try it

    • @gwenmorse8059
      @gwenmorse8059 Рік тому +9

      Now you've done it - Mike's going to cover everything in pepper and Alexander seeds !!!

    • @AtomicShrimp
      @AtomicShrimp  Рік тому +18

      @@gwenmorse8059 also I learned that the best part of the plant is the roots, so I will collect some seeds and grow a couple of plants at home next year

    • @xander1052
      @xander1052 Рік тому +13

      @@AtomicShrimp Hopefully this doesn't lead to a 3 cornered leek situation.

    • @karara5532
      @karara5532 Рік тому +1

      @@xander1052 Knowing alexanders, it likely will

  • @greenbean1467
    @greenbean1467 Рік тому +128

    This kind of video that you make is so lovely. It makes me feel like I’m on vacation, leisurely walking around with an incredibly knowledgeable forager, and then going over to a friend’s house to learn how to cook with the goods.

  • @SilverDragonJay
    @SilverDragonJay Рік тому +2

    I started watching this days ago, but felt that I couldn't pay attention to it at the time (because I was playing video games, of course) so I decided to set it aside for later. Very glad I did, as I sat down to eat tonight and remembered that I had this to watch while I enjoyed my big ol salad. These sorts of videos are excellent for meal entertainment as they're always so cozy and chill.

  • @thecatherd
    @thecatherd Рік тому +38

    I know I've commented this in past videos but I can't overstate how much I love these nature videos. I used to love taking walks like these but I've become wheelchair bound in adulthood. It's so nice to be able to feel like I'm out there again. 😊

  • @hollyr.2846
    @hollyr.2846 Рік тому +11

    Your videos are, without any doubt whatsoever, THE most relaxing, interesting, enjoyable, educational and variable (by that I mean all encompassing) than any others on the internet. You outperform any other by a country mile. Always fresh and surprising where others signally fail. There are only so many comparisons one can perform without becoming stale and you avoid this by being so varied in your content and I might add, your videos are longer too.
    So Mike, a very sincere THANK YOU for yet another brilliant offering which I will watch several times.
    Thanks also to your ever patient wife Jenny, for encouraging and supporting you in this 'career' change. Best wishes to you and your family. 😁💐

  • @bigscarysteve
    @bigscarysteve Рік тому +96

    Mr. Shrimp's warning about his videos not providing enough information to make one a reliable forager is well taken. I figured that out long ago because I live in the USA, and I realized the difference between the flora here and that in the UK is far greater than I would have imagined.
    A little story on that point: My father grew up in the 1920's in a small town that was packed with recently arrived immigrants from many countries. The Italians (who were probably all from the same village in Italy) all became excited at one point because they had heard that an Italian man (whom they all knew by name) was coming to America. They were excited because he was an expert mushroom-picker, and they thought they would all have tons of mushrooms with him in the neighborhood. My father concluded the story by pointing at a hilltop and saying, "He's buried over there on that hill." As it turned out, this man's mushroom expertise was only valid in Italy. He died after eating some of his haul from his first mushroom-gathering trip in America.

    • @panikoszulowa
      @panikoszulowa Рік тому +3

      nick well deserved ;) little grisly story but so true :)

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Рік тому +8

      Foraging knowledge is very specific to where you learned it, especially when it comes to look-alikes you need to avoid. I wouldn't even dare to pick chanterelles or hedgehog mushrooms abroad without confirming with a local expert first, because I have no idea whether there are things I might confuse them with elsewhere in the world.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Рік тому

      Damn. Poor guy.

    • @Ray.Norrish
      @Ray.Norrish Рік тому +2

      I saw a bunch of Asian people picking (what looked like) abundant wild spinach around our local river here in UK. My wife asked them about it and they said, "yea, it's edible", but I wasn't sure enough to take some as recently some Asian people in this region bought and ate young daffodils thinking they were something edible. Just not worth the risk unless you are absolutely certain.

    • @johanneswerner1140
      @johanneswerner1140 Рік тому +1

      We had a guest scientist doing that. It was really a close thing, hospital for a week or so... Yeah, dangerous.

  • @kateblack6406
    @kateblack6406 Рік тому +22

    I grew up in Dorset but now live in Ireland. Your videos all over Dorset have taken me back years down memory lane, so lovely to explore again through your videos. We lived Lulworth Cove as kids but our favourite beach in the area was Beer because we were kids and thought it was a hilarious name

  • @mobiusyellow
    @mobiusyellow Рік тому +15

    Didn't know you were such a geologist! A man of many talents!

    • @AtomicShrimp
      @AtomicShrimp  Рік тому +20

      Generally it's just the skill of pointing at stuff and wittering on!

    • @ricos1497
      @ricos1497 Рік тому +5

      ​@@AtomicShrimpit's all nonsense anyway. Those cliffs were formed from plastic in the seventies.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Рік тому

      He's definitely a bit of a polymath!

  • @theguyishere16
    @theguyishere16 Рік тому +20

    "I have an interesting theory...well I think it's interesting"
    That quote so perfectly defines so many things that are interesting to me but then I share it with friends and family and it very obviously was not as interesting to them as it was to me 😂

    • @johanneswerner1140
      @johanneswerner1140 Рік тому +1

      Other weird things to discover: making cheese with rennet, which is made from the inside lining of calf's stomach.

  • @storkk
    @storkk Рік тому +12

    While I'm a big advocate of weighing in general cooking, lacto-ferments are very, very forgiving. That's a 2L Kilner jar, and you're pickling stuff that's very similar in density to water, so instead of faffing separating and weighing around once you'd already added the water, I'd just have assumed 2%*2kg = 40g. And because I'm generally eyeballing when I lacto-ferment, I'd probably throw in another pinch to be on the safe side. I generally aim for 2.2-2.5% though, so it'd probably end up being more like 50g for that jar if I were doing it. Anyway, big fan of your videos! Thanks for what you do :-)

    • @AtomicShrimp
      @AtomicShrimp  Рік тому +8

      Good point. I was definitely overcomplicating it

  • @dk439911
    @dk439911 Рік тому +4

    Love the video! These slower exploration videos are scratching an itch I didn't know I had.

  • @g8rchick663
    @g8rchick663 Рік тому +16

    Your videos are always interesting to watch. What a beautiful place to walk and so much to see. Thank you for uploading this. Eva is so cute, love to see her in your videos 😊 even if we only hear her bark 😊

    • @gwenmorse8059
      @gwenmorse8059 Рік тому +2

      I love to see/hear Eva in videos. I love when she barnks at rocks "Dad...DAAAD...I found a *rock*"

    • @g8rchick663
      @g8rchick663 Рік тому +1

      @@gwenmorse8059 I know it's so cute. She absolutely gorgeous 😍

  • @GrandadsOtherChannel
    @GrandadsOtherChannel Рік тому +5

    You can certainly see how the many feet have worn down the path. A beautiful location on a beautiful day 👍

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja Рік тому +7

    I just did my first “foraging” (in my lawn) of ground elder today, to make pesto. I personally thinks it can be even better than basil pesto, and unlike basil, ground elder _thrives_ up here (thanks monks for introducing it, I guess, because now it’s practically impossible to get rid of so I’m definitely not afraid of over harvesting).

    • @AtomicShrimp
      @AtomicShrimp  Рік тому +6

      I've just today discovered ground elder in a corner of the garden here at Shrimp Cottage. I love eating it, but I will probably try to eradicate from this garden. It's in a fairly contained area, so I might win

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Рік тому +1

      @@AtomicShrimp
      Good luck!

  • @merlinathrawes6191
    @merlinathrawes6191 Рік тому +3

    I was down there, and Durdle door, last Saturday foraging. Got some good nosh, lovely rocks and seaweed for the allotment. I was impressed by the lack of visible plastics on the beach. I found one piece of nylon rope. That was it. Lovely.

  • @rachelstauter
    @rachelstauter Рік тому +9

    Your videos are so comforting on a rainy day like today. Thanks for all you do!

    • @p-__
      @p-__ Рік тому +2

      My farts are better than Atomic Shrimp’s farts

  • @mursalinmosaddeque8999
    @mursalinmosaddeque8999 11 місяців тому

    Your curiosity and sense of wonder for the world is very inspiring. Thank you.

  • @SheyD78
    @SheyD78 Рік тому +4

    A wonderful video, and what a beautiful day to be at the seaside, especially from the hill just before picking the veggies. Cheers!

  • @ariannamarie7778
    @ariannamarie7778 Рік тому +2

    I was just watching a scam baiting video when I got the notification for a new vid! Yipeee! This channel is my comfort channel. All I been watching while stuck in bed sick.

  • @samwurzelson2309
    @samwurzelson2309 Рік тому +5

    Haven't been down to Lulworth in donkey's years, which is mad since we're only over in Swanage! If you're after ramsons there's a couple of acres of it near Old Harry. Picked a great bunch (responsibly of course) a couple of weeks ago that's just gone in the jar as our year's supply of wild garlic salt. Great sprinkled on just about anything savoury, and the best way to preserve the flavour in my view.😄

  • @celebrantmarc
    @celebrantmarc Рік тому +3

    Lovely video as always. We went to Lulworth in August on a dank misty day.
    But we were mad enough to go down to Durdle Door, up and over to Lulworth and then back to the door. A whole week's worth of fitness points in a day!!

  • @gefingyi
    @gefingyi Рік тому

    Great minds think alike! I found out that coffee jar lid / weight trick a few years ago, it’s revolutionised my sauerkraut. Also when I pickle and ferment hogweed shoots I weigh them after preparation and add the correct weight of salt directly to the veg,leave for an hour to draw out the excess liquid, pop the veg in the jar and then top up with fresh water. I’ve never had a batch of any fermented veg go bad- Just an idea to speed things up. Enjoy all of you videos immensely, we share a similar knowledge base when it comes to the outdoors, I however do not possess the technical ability to turn that knowledge in videos. Keep up the good work!

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Рік тому

      I was taught to massage the shredded cabbage with the salt to draw out the moisture, but also to break down the tough fibers a little bit. Makes it a little easier for the bacteria to do their work, afterwards.
      Makes for a somewhat quicker ferment, I think. Of course, the whole process still takes some time, but I do think, it speeds things up a little bit.

  • @kbjerke
    @kbjerke Рік тому +2

    I live in Canada (Ontario) but I'm addicted to your videos! Some of the plants you forage I have been able to find and enjoy.
    Thank you!

  • @Moewenfels
    @Moewenfels Рік тому +3

    I'm 110% a person who LOVES the warm time of year. And i become really difficult to handle (to myself aswell as others) when its cold.
    So i'm over the MOOOOOON today, now that i had the first wonderful sunshine and warm weather.
    I redid a planter of thyme and oregano and had a long, nice walk.
    And on TOP of ALL that wonderfulness, it also means the start of another packed outdoor season of videos from Mr. Shrimp and i could barely be any happier right now

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 Рік тому +1

    I visited Lulworth as a teenager (about 40 years ago) and hired a row boat (there were none of those private boats in the cove back then). That day the water was crystal clear and perfectly calm, a forest of beautiful, different coloured seaweeds below.
    Since I was a teen and had a lot more energy, I walked to Durdle Door and beyond. I remember there were hardly any people around back then, despite it being prime holiday season. How things change.

  • @mudsky
    @mudsky Рік тому +1

    you sound well! I'm endlessly fascinated by your channel, it's this special little comfort I've had for years and years now. thank you, wish you the best!!

  • @daylanerea8735
    @daylanerea8735 Рік тому

    Thank you so much for this video! Loved hearing about the stones. We went to lulworth cove and durdle door last year. Such stunning places! Really worth a visit. But the way down to durdle door beach can be a bit of a bother. Still both are absolute beautiful.

  • @evelinharmannfan7191
    @evelinharmannfan7191 Рік тому +1

    Lovely walk and foraging and cooking video all rolled into one, all my favorites! Thank you, Mr. Shrimp! 🌼🍤

  • @alexandrastevens8892
    @alexandrastevens8892 Рік тому +6

    That definitely looks like an excellent place to visit, not many coves anywhere in the UK that are as pretty.
    Thank you for taking us on the walk because some of us can't manage it, especially in wheelchairs 😅😅

  • @LovelyRuthie
    @LovelyRuthie Рік тому +2

    I got a lactose-fermenting kit for my birthday & a couple of months on, I'm still yet to use it. I'm keen to watch part 2 before I start my own (I'll probably use some more conventional vegetables as I'm not a confident forager), as watching your process makes me feel more confident to give it a go.

  • @Fairyslash
    @Fairyslash Рік тому +13

    I recently named a Scyther in Pokemon Alexanders. (I'm naming all my Pokemon after edible herbs from a wikipedia page) So it's neat to see how Alexanders is actually eaten!

  • @prieten49
    @prieten49 Рік тому

    That was very interesting. Thanks for taking us along on your outing. That pickling process takes time and we didn't want to wait for it to finish to see this video..

  • @writeordie5452
    @writeordie5452 Рік тому +1

    Good haul! I didn't see the whole harvesting process, but from the very first harvested one it made me think that it could be worth thinking about from which angle you're harvesting from in a public area like that.
    The bees and the plants themselves probably don't care, but since you were clear about other people visiting the area also, it could be worth keeping in mind to harvest the flowers and such at angles that will still preserve the beauty of the plant as much as possible for those who just want to spectate. Of course it's not something you need to think about during casual foraging, and as you explained you foraged in an area where it hardly even made a dent. But again, in such a well-visited area, it could well be worth thinking about such harvesting angles, especially when the plants grow in abundance.
    Loved the video anyway! Always nice to see your explorations into the countryside (and sometimes the wild).

  • @jessierosiewinedevine5120
    @jessierosiewinedevine5120 Рік тому +1

    Around 7:32-7:36 minutes into the video it looks like a face made out of the cottage and hill, funny how humans can depict faces out of anything!
    Love the videos as usual 🙌🏼

  • @applegal3058
    @applegal3058 Рік тому

    Your weather at this time of the year is amazing. We're still getting snow in the mornings and only now getting a little grass sprouting up. I figure I need to wait another month before planting my garden. Last year I almost lost my potato plants when we had a bad frost and snow May 24th. Luckily they sprouted new leaves and the dead leaves I just cut away.
    I should say, I live in Central Newfoundland.

  • @ParniaSh
    @ParniaSh Рік тому

    Not only is this video entertaining, but I also learn so much from you. Thank you, Mr. Shrimp!

  • @jansumner4222
    @jansumner4222 Рік тому

    Very informative, thank you 😊 beautiful country side.

  • @PlanetZhooZhoo
    @PlanetZhooZhoo Рік тому +2

    A three-cornered leek appeared in my front garden last year. This year I've already had several clumps dug up, but it's even growing in the cracks in the footpath now. So invasive!

  • @d.awdreygore
    @d.awdreygore Рік тому +6

    I'm starting to enjoy Eva's comments in the background of your videos.

  • @tristanturner2782
    @tristanturner2782 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely gorgeous day there. First time I’ve been envious of English weather I think.

  • @pheart2381
    @pheart2381 Рік тому +3

    Ive ordered some costmary plants. I think costmary deserves a renaissance in the u.k.

  • @deejayk5939
    @deejayk5939 Рік тому

    Watching whole video even though I’m in the U.S. and never pickled anything ever..just find them interesting and soothing.

  • @sheilathompson1684
    @sheilathompson1684 Рік тому

    Thank you for a wonderful video, and probably not for the usual reasons.
    As a South London school child of the 50's, my parents scraped together the money to send me on a school trip to Lulworth Cove. I didn't want to go but the money was paid (at a huge sacrifice) so I went sobbing. We stayed in a hut which was freezing.
    But my overriding memory (apart from being homesick and cold) is of climbing over barbed wire to get down to the beach. We were told it was mined and definitely out of bounds. Thinking now I guess it was the MOD firing range. My childhood memories are sketchy, but I have the scar to this day so it must be half right.
    Thank you for transporting me back there.

  • @aquakittykat
    @aquakittykat Рік тому

    Lactofermentation is REALLY easy and very tasty! The main thing is keeping everything other then the vegge clean and making sure you're using the right amount of salt, buy some cheap kombucha pH strips (test 0-6 pH very cheap!) and maybe, maybe a decent kitchen scale but that is definitely optional.
    If you already vinegar pickle things its definitely worth trying lacto-fermenting.
    Lactic acid is sour without the sharpness of acetic (vinegar) acid and the fermentation adds a bunch of other fun flavors!

  • @nahtanha
    @nahtanha Рік тому +2

    oh so THAT'S why the UK has so many pebble beaches! I've always been curious because they're very rare here. Only just thought to check if I can get alexander seeds, have been interesting in trying them for years and it looks like I can - thanks for the reminder :D

  • @al3k
    @al3k Рік тому

    19:54 oh dear.. i had a few of these last year.. they're now all over the place.. but my aunt says it's the variety you can't eat.. :((( small weird bulbs.. watery and tasteless but look the same.. not sure what to do.. it just looks like grass at the start and digging it out is a pain.. nice flowers though.. I like how they open and close during different times of the day... but that's about it..

  • @pennykafai4645
    @pennykafai4645 Рік тому

    What an amazing cove, it’s so pretty. Definitely would be a wonder front cover of a holiday destination brochure.

  • @dontfencemein.6125
    @dontfencemein.6125 Рік тому

    What,s interesting is your spectrum of knowledge.. Thanks for another very entertaining upload.

  • @julescaru8591
    @julescaru8591 Рік тому

    Always interesting Mike, I love watching what you do, thanks 😘
    All the best Jules

  • @soulieobelissevan
    @soulieobelissevan Рік тому +4

    Yayyy! Inspo! Thank you ☺️… I started red cabbage sauerkraut two days ago and am making beetroot ferment tomorrow! 🎉 wanna do ginger one soon too!

    • @theclumsyprepper
      @theclumsyprepper Рік тому +3

      If you like garlic try fermented one as well.
      I do mine in salt brine - it turns a beautiful golden colour and fermentation takes some of the heat away, but not too much. It's amazing.
      Oh, and fermented tomatoes - a must in my house.

    • @soulieobelissevan
      @soulieobelissevan Рік тому +2

      @@theclumsyprepper ohh, thanks!! Yes, love garlic…. We get a lot of cucumbers coming through the kitchen…. I have planted dill to accompany them!!

  • @samhenwood5746
    @samhenwood5746 Рік тому

    I miss the coast, so thanks for sharing 🤗 Love these foraging videos & thanks Atomic shrimp 🦐👍

  • @anonuser9367
    @anonuser9367 Рік тому

    A great video to watch while I relax in the bath. The weekly stress just fades away. Liked the improvised weight, perhaps add a small screw 'handle' into the plastic part to help extract if it sinks too far down

  • @jackcameback
    @jackcameback Рік тому +1

    This was brilliant - thank you sir for your time!

  • @basilbrush9075
    @basilbrush9075 Рік тому

    The mudstone looks like it could be part of the strata there. As you mention the watercourse there's a phenomenon where rivers and streams may gollow the course of a stream first formed millions of years ago, as the mudstones and sands deposited there are often a less resistant route than the surrpunding more consolidated rocks!

  • @MichelleLWhitney
    @MichelleLWhitney Рік тому

    If you leave your tap water sit out overnight/24 hrs in an open-top container, the chlorine will off-gas and then you can then use that water for fermentation without any issues. I live in the US and the water in my state is heavily chlorinated/treated. I am an avid fermenter for health reasons and I’ve never had an issue doing this. No special spring water required.

  • @jhumberstone6452
    @jhumberstone6452 Рік тому +1

    Three cornered leeks are indeed invasive, but I prefer them to the bindweed that was in my garden before and which they managed to smother! At least I can eat these.
    Re. tap water, I haven't had a problem using it in my ferments, though it might be interesting to do a side by side comparison.

  • @silva7493
    @silva7493 Рік тому +2

    Oh yes, I did find this interesting for a number of things. I'm on a Pacific coast (California), and I'd never heard of Alexanders or Sea beets, and I do enjoy learning about stuff people eat. For a long time I have wondered where all of the pebbles on 'shingles' come from! I'm used to seeing mostly fine grained sand on 'beaches' with the occasional rock or pebble, shell, and/or litter,🤥 etc.. I used to wonder if it was trucked in. I don't recall seeing iron ore in situ (and I'd like to see the video of you smelting some!). For a good little while I've been thinking about trying to make my own sauerkraut (it costs a FORTUNE for what it is, and I could use a large quantity at times) and maybe even other pickles, but I haven't yet bothered. I think getting the salt level right will be the hard part for me. Anyway, I always really enjoy all of your videos but thank you very much for this, and I look forward to the continuation of this project and whatever else you do. BTW, I too was once invaded by three cornered leeks in a grassy area, and before we knew what was happening we had a very large mass of them. We had to move away too!😆 When we mowed the grass the whole neighborhood smelled delicious! It's too bad I never thought of cooking and eating them. It was pre-internet, and no one I asked had any idea.

  • @sarahstrong7174
    @sarahstrong7174 Рік тому +1

    Looks like a lovely place.

  • @ZeroPlayerGame
    @ZeroPlayerGame Рік тому +1

    One small comment - the saltwater is actually really important because Lactobacillus are one of the few bacteria that are not only acid-tolerant, but are also quite salt-loving. While most bacteria have trouble with the kind of osmotic pressure that saltwater created, Lactobacillus thrives in such conditions, and that's what allows it to outcompete others initially and drive the acidity up.

    • @ZeroPlayerGame
      @ZeroPlayerGame Рік тому +1

      Oh, nevermind me, you did mention that! Really interested in Alexanders, I wonder why it fell out of favor as a garden plant. Seems lovely. Not native to here, I wonder if I can get some seeds somewhere.

    • @PandemoniumMeltDown
      @PandemoniumMeltDown Рік тому

      @@ZeroPlayerGame Check local regulation regarding specie introduction... Justin Case.

  • @Marijuanajoseph
    @Marijuanajoseph Рік тому

    i never get motion sick from videos but something about the motion smoothing of the beach footage really got me.

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 Рік тому

    Ooh, looks worth trying.
    I have Alexanders in my garden (grown in the shade, it behaves itself and doesn't try to take over). Also, I have Ransoms, Common Hemlock, Walking Onions, Welsh Onions, Dandelions aplenty (inc 2 cultivated versions), and maybe a few springs of Oregano would go nice in there.
    I did grow the Alexanders from seed, understanding that future seed can be used as a substitute for pepper.
    Understand this - it is not a great substitute.
    I used it once for this purpose and never again. It's too bitter. However, the plants look so lovely and healthy, it's one of the few garden plants that are not attacked by pests or diseases, and the occasional leaf in a cheese sandwich is welcome.

    • @raraavis7782
      @raraavis7782 Рік тому

      Ah. I was wondering about the exact taste. Considering, that pepper used to be so expensive once upon a time, I was wondering why something like these seeds would have been replaced by it.
      I wonder, if people ever made an attempt, to improve the taste by deliberate breeding.

  • @donnagray9579
    @donnagray9579 Рік тому

    I have good memories of Lulworth. I had to do a mapping project for my geology degree about 40yrs ago. Beautiful coastline.

  • @raebooker5452
    @raebooker5452 Рік тому

    The noise of you chopping the three cornered leeks is so goooood!

  • @invictus_delta
    @invictus_delta Рік тому +4

    i don't think i've ever seen somewhere where there's supposed to be a pirate ship, shrimp is completely right

  • @cynthiajohnson6747
    @cynthiajohnson6747 Рік тому +1

    It’s 8:40 am where I am. Now I will spend the entire day making myself wait until evening to watch this

  • @Clipeuh
    @Clipeuh Рік тому +1

    subscribed for the cheap cooking but wow that is a gorgeous place. amazing video

  • @thunderhead180
    @thunderhead180 Рік тому

    Awesome pickle! If I could add to your theory.... during periods of extreme drougt wetlands near the sea will still have green meterial that is edible by people and animals. Research done in south america had animals graze on the grasses and marsh plants near the sea. They found that the plants sequestered lots of salt. The cows consumed way more water than they otherwise would. Here's what I think. The people would soak the plants to get rid of the salt. I think someone put some soaking plants aside and forgot. Being drought conbitions with food scarcity, they ate it anyway.

  • @wendyfernley
    @wendyfernley Рік тому

    I love your videos, such a tonic.

  • @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
    @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley Рік тому

    The beginning with the deep green grass, blue sky and clouds gave me strong memories of the classic Gateway computer desktop!

  • @jmt7676
    @jmt7676 Рік тому

    Thank you for this. Tried to visit a good few years back but was closed off by military for exercise.

  • @az55544
    @az55544 Рік тому

    An oak or grape leaf - high in tannin- makes a good top layer under the weight, and the tannin will help keep things keep crunchy.

  • @maggielyall811
    @maggielyall811 Рік тому

    I really like the walk-around videos it's very meditative to follow you about 🙂

  • @TheRattyBiker
    @TheRattyBiker Рік тому

    I'm not going to try it anytime soon - but I also really appreciate you publishing the video now so others can 👍👍 hopefully in a couple of weeks you can do a taste test when using it with one of your wicked recipes.

  • @theamericanpsycho9992
    @theamericanpsycho9992 Рік тому +8

    You should do a collab with John Warosa. He makes great content. Again would really love to see a collab with John Barosa.

    • @p-__
      @p-__ Рік тому +1

      My farts are better than Atomic Shrimp’s farts

  • @thewuurm
    @thewuurm Рік тому

    For what its worth, I home lacto-ferment with Canadian municipal tap water and I've had a lot of success. Last year I did a 9 jars of garden grape tomatoes with only one failure (which I think was for unrelated reasons)

  • @mike_jwoww
    @mike_jwoww Рік тому

    Yaay I love beach days with Mike, they're my favourite!

  • @pixelfingers
    @pixelfingers Рік тому

    Very interested to see how this turns out, after watching this I went out and bought a massive jar of sauerkraut which I had with frankfurters and a bit of sriracha, beans and mash, with some crispy onion bits. I’d never really noticed that the tang of sauerkraut wasn’t caused by vinegar, no mention of it on the ingredients, must be the same fermentation process.

  • @Szlater
    @Szlater Рік тому +1

    You’re right to be wary of the pH indicator paper, some of the chemicals used as the indicator are ferocious laxatives. Phenolphthalein is the one that comes to mind, a single drop or two in a big punch bowl can absolutely ruin a party.

  • @cbrooke879
    @cbrooke879 Рік тому +1

    Now spring is here....are you exited as to what your garden will produce for foraging?

  • @barbaravoneitzen7367
    @barbaravoneitzen7367 Рік тому +2

    What a pretty park

  • @ruthsmith2367
    @ruthsmith2367 Рік тому

    Lovely video, thanks for showing us around beautiful place ❤️ Wish I liked Alexander’s they are everywhere. Never tried fermenting them though. Thanks for the video. I might try fermenting some veg from the fridge 😊

  • @jljljl1820
    @jljljl1820 Рік тому

    i always do my lacto fermenting in those douwe egberts coffee jars. i remove the plastic thing from the lid and let it push the liquid in the plate the jat is in. i top the water up every day with some salt. im not a fan of the closed lid fermentation personally. i have a large jug of cauliflower that finished fermenting just the other day, super super good. if you havent tried it i can recommend cauliflower, and swede is very good too! i flavour my cauliflower with fresh garlic and dill, the swede with fresh garlic and tarragon. the swede has a very interesting almost radish flavour, goes really well with asian style food

  • @Sean_Shaun_Shawn
    @Sean_Shaun_Shawn Рік тому

    Three cornered leek was plant that got me into foraging for the first time- I noticed a patch by the river I walk past to the gym and the smell made me curious enough to take some and do some research. Over the next couple years it's spread and taken over at least 1km of the river and I've noticed huge stretches of it in multiple local woodlands where I've no doubt it's killed a ton of local natives so it's now, like you, very much a love-hate thing. On the plus side I don't need to feel concerned about eating too much and it's essentially pointless to buy spring onions here, at least during Spring.

  • @ProfittNoel77
    @ProfittNoel77 Рік тому

    This has just reminded me to watch “nuts in may” thanks Shrimp!

  • @steammachine3061
    @steammachine3061 Рік тому +1

    Iv always got heavy floral flavours on the rare occasion iv tried Alexander seeds. It's personally not a flavour that appeals to me as I'm not a massive fan of overpowering floral. I am however lucky enough to have mustard growing along the clifftop near me and the leaves of those are lovely and sweet with a mild mustard heat. I could Imagine those fermenting very well as part of a sauerkraut

  • @brianartillery
    @brianartillery Рік тому

    Funny you should post this today - I collected a load of beautiful Alexanders on the way home from work. There's a lot about this year; far more than last year. I might take some cuttings and see if I can get them to take in the damp part of my garden - I wonder if it 'wanders' like mint or lemon balm? I like the idea of pickling it though. Thank you!

    • @AtomicShrimp
      @AtomicShrimp  Рік тому +1

      I doubt cuttings will root. Umbellifers don't generally do that - probably better to wait for seeds and collect a few.
      The plant seems only to grow prolifically within a half mile or so of the coast. I don't know exactly why it doesn't spread further inland.

    • @brianartillery
      @brianartillery Рік тому

      ​@@AtomicShrimp - I picked mine from a bridleway about three miles west of Ipswich. There are vast swathes of the stuff on roadside verges here, that are nowhere near the coast. Troublingly, there is also a lot of Hemlock and Hemlock Water Dropwort on the roadsides. I cooked and ate my Alexanders stems like asparagus, with melted butter. Possibly even nicer than asparagus. Probably because it was free. I did get some odd looks from dog-walkers whilst I was collecting it. Lovely video, yet again. Thanks!

  • @susancheveralllong7694
    @susancheveralllong7694 Рік тому

    You may enjoy "Arne" village and civil parish in Dorset, England, situated 4 miles east of Wareham.

  • @lalaalalala
    @lalaalalala Рік тому

    love your videos that have foraging the most

  • @JosephSchmidtfan
    @JosephSchmidtfan Рік тому

    What a beautiful spot! Would you consider a walk through Tyneham one day? Viewers might find the story interesting. I have a vested interest because my ancestors came from there.

  • @lwoods507
    @lwoods507 Рік тому

    I'm up in Scotland and the Forth and Clyde Canal has vast swathes of three-cornered leek just coming into bloom that was not there in anything like that quantity last year. It is quite staggeringly swift-spreading and invasive, isn't it!

  • @sandywools2655
    @sandywools2655 Рік тому

    Beautiful cove. Love the video

  • @justheretoblab
    @justheretoblab Рік тому

    I always thought about fermenting directly with sea water ( obviously boiled once ), but 1st I don't live next to the sea, 2nd no idea if it's possible. Maybe that would be a interesting video idea / experiment , oh yeah and nice relaxing video. I really enjoy all of your content if I want to have a chill evening

    • @AtomicShrimp
      @AtomicShrimp  Рік тому +1

      I initially dismissed the idea because seawater is teeming with life of all sorts, but if the salinity is right for the lactobacilli on the plant material, the acidity will start to build and they will outcompete (or probably consume) the other micro organisms.
      I'd have given it a try, except for the sea being awash with microplastics now

    • @justheretoblab
      @justheretoblab Рік тому

      @@AtomicShrimp Thank you kind sir, at least I have some clarity now. Still wonder if the taste would differ though

  • @shoelesshobo7744
    @shoelesshobo7744 Рік тому

    Depending on how your tap water is treated i.e they do not use Chloramine you can boil the tap water for roughly 15 mins and it would remove any of the free chlorine that would interfere with growth.

  • @kathimorrical9912
    @kathimorrical9912 3 місяці тому

    You should keep that roll of pH test paper in zip bag, open only away from the soon-to-be-pickle, cause the stuff is sensitive to changes. Just being open for 24° not in airtight container can cause a change.
    Otherwise fascinating content! As always, thanks for sharing your knowledge!

  • @maecarpenter6735
    @maecarpenter6735 Рік тому

    Awesome video! Thank you!

  • @leonhar13
    @leonhar13 Рік тому

    For people who ferment a lot, you can get proper glass fermentation weights. Worth getting.

  • @maiabones
    @maiabones Рік тому

    11:13 this makes me wonder if it's related to fennel. i will look it up after i type this.
    time has passed. i have learned: yes. it is.

  • @y3rbat3ra
    @y3rbat3ra Рік тому

    Cilantro/coriander is also in the Apiaceae family, so this may be the source of the slight soapy taste.