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I went seaweed foraging for the first time and hit
the mother lode July 24, 2022
It's cool and foggy when I arrive at Schoolhouse Beach — a
typical morning on this part of California's Pacific Coast. It's these low temperatures that attract most visitors hoping to
escape the summer heat farther inland. But
today's extreme low tide has attracted the group gathered down on the beach.
About 15 students are here to learn how to identify and harvest seaweed. Foraging has grown into a movement over the last few years,
including from your local ocean where it's now peak seaweed season. "There's actually 640 different species [of seaweed]
here on the California coast," she tells us before we dive in.
"They're all edible, too, and that's kind of the big, fun lesson of
today is just let's kind of taste as we go along." for a taste sensation on this foraging trip. Chad Campbell But not everything out here is for eating.
My wife, Elissa Rumsey, joined me, and her main goal is to find something
known as "Turkish towel." I'm told that its rough leaves make a great
exfoliant. First, we find plenty of
Turkish "washcloth" — a version too small to bother with.
But after a few minutes of splashing through shallow tide pools and
making my way over and around huge, slippery rocks, I see it: a single leaf of
Turkish towel chondracanthus
exasperatus. It's about
as- long-as my forearm.
Elissa Rumsey Our fellow forager and friend Eugene Kim drove up from San
Francisco to join us for the forage. He was very excited for me. "Oh! That is the
mother lode right there! That is the
good stuff! Nice," Eugene exclaimed. He tells us that most of what he knows about seaweed, he learned
from taking Heidi's class last year. We are here at low tide so we can get to more of "the good
stuff" — the bladder wrack, the nori, and the kombu; seaweed that just
hours before was under water and inaccessible. You've no doubt seen seaweed washed up on the sand, which
is decomposing and bleached by the sun. That's not what
we're looking for. We need to get to
it while it's still alive and anchored to the rocks — healthy, vibrant, and
full of nutrients. Eugene leads us into that intertidal zone. "So we're gonna grab this Ziploc bag and we're gonna grab a
pair of scissors. And we'll start
heading out into the tide," he tells us. Our first find is bladder wrack, which has lots of little bunches
of dark green leaves. "You'll find this in health food stores," Eugene says.
"It's a really good source of iron and iodine as well.
You could put 'em in salads, right? Give
it a little flavor, a little punch." Elissa is a fan. "I like it. It's salty, just a little hint of sea
salt," she says after nibbling on a small bunch. And it's important to do this sustainably, so we only harvest a
small portion of each individual plant. Eugene's
rule of thumb is no more than 25%. During
this part of its lifecycle, the seaweed is still able to regenerate much of what
we trim away.
Chad Campbell A little farther down the beach we find a huge section of nori,
the raw ingredient for sushi wrappers. "They take this stuff, they dry it out, then they kind of
crush it," Eugene explains. "And
then they turn them into flat sheets and then they roast it.
This is exactly what you would find in any of your sushi places or any
Korean restaurant." We don't recognize every
piece of algae clinging to the rocks, but that doesn't stop Eugene. Remember,
all 640 species we might find out here are edible.
I point to a long, stringy, dark red mass of seaweed hanging from the
side of a rock. "I have no idea what that is.
Let's taste some," Eugene exclaims. After a quick snip and sample he concludes that just because you
can eat it, doesn't mean you should eat it. "This is bitter. It
does not look appetizing, and I would say it doesn't taste appetizing
either," Eugene says.
It's peak seaweed season, and the pickings aren't slim.
This one was not so delicious, however. Chad Campbell Well, they can't all be winners.
But trying new things and sharing what you learn has led to some
wonderful innovations around the world. Eugene gives a couple of examples, like how the tomato is
integral to what we think of as Italian food, but they didn't have tomatoes
before 1492. He goes on to talk about Korean food. "Everyone thinks kimchi is spicy and it's got the chili
peppers and stuff, which it does," he says.
"But chili peppers come from the Americas.
And so prior to the 1400s, Korean kimchi did not have chili peppers in
it. So I think it's incredible how
global the world was even 500 years ago. And
how all these things that we think about, like Asian traditional culture, for
example, they actually come from right here." We pack up our bags of seaweed and head home, feeling just a
little bit closer to nature and to the rest of the world. Chad
Campbell is a producer with NPR's Morning Edition.
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