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Food For Free (Collins Gem) [Paperback]

Richard Mabey
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (174 customer reviews)
RRP: £4.99
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Book Description

1 Aug 2012 Collins GEM

The ideal portable companion, the world-renowned Collins Gem series returns with a fresh new look and updated material.

This is the perfect pocket guide for aspiring foragers. Over 100 edible plants are listed, fully illustrated and described, together with recipes and other fascinating details on their use throughout the ages.

Practical advice on how to pick along with information on countryside laws and regulations on picking wild plants helps you to plan your foray with a feast in mind.

This is the ideal book for both nature lovers and cooks keen to enjoy what the countryside has to offer.


Frequently Bought Together

Food For Free (Collins Gem) + Mushrooms (Collins Gem) + Knots (Collins Gem)
Price For All Three: £11.22

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Product details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Collins; New edition edition (1 Aug 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0007183038
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007183036
  • Product Dimensions: 11.5 x 1.3 x 8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (174 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 665 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

‘Thirty years after its initial publication, the forager's bible continues to inspire and enthral.’
Scottish Field

‘Still a classic’
The Financial Times

‘Armed with this guide, this month you could be sampling the simple pleasures of eating a fleshy Hottentot fig straight from a Devon clifftop, making elderflower fritters gathered from the hedgerows, or frying fairy-ring champignons picked off your lawn. With its charming painted illustrations, it is a book to savour in itself.’
Devon Life

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

From the Back Cover

Illustrated throughout with stunning colour photographs this fully-revised edition of a Collins bestseller explains the best ways to make use of the foods we can find in the wild.

'Food for Free' by Richard Mabey was first published in 1972, since then it has been reprinted 11 times. An all-colour, revised version produced in 1989 has sold over 30,000 copies in the trade. A guide to over 200 types of food that can be gathered in the wild in Britain, 'Food for Free' explores the history and folklore of the foods as well as explaining how we identify them and the best ways to cook and eat them.

The new edition will bring the subject right up to date. Organized by season rather than food type 'Food for Free' will take us through the year. Richard Mabey’s fully-revised text will be accompanied by stunning photographs, new recipes and a wealth of practical information on collecting, cooking and preparing.

Beautifully illustrated, beautifully written and produced in a new, larger format 'Food for Free' is designed to inspire us to take more notice of what is around us, how we can make use of it and how we can conserve it for future generations.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
124 of 126 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I got this book from my local library but loved it so much that I am going to get my own copy for future reference. After reading this book I went out for a walk and picked some blackberries, elderberries & sloes, which were growing in abundance some 10 minutes from my house! This book opened my eyes to stuff that I usually overlook in the hedgerows and provided me with some useful information about the type of plants, fruits and fungi that are edible (and perhaps not always well known), with recipe ideas too. It encouraged me to venture out into the fresh air and walk in local woodland, along river banks and fields etc. I even found some of the highly recommended Parasol mushrooms! Wonderful book and really, really useful. Worth every penny.
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357 of 367 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent pocket sized guide 5 Feb 2006
Format:Paperback
This is a 2004 version and worthy addition to the very popular and pocket-sized Collins Gem series. ISBN 0-00-718303-8. Food For Free - A Fantastic Feast of Plants and Folklore.

The book starts with an introduction by the author Richard Mabey. It then has short sections titled 'Roots', 'Green Vegetables', 'Herbs', 'Spices', 'Flowers', 'Fruits', 'Making Jellies and Jams' and 'Nuts'. They include general advice, observations and uses. The main section of the book is given over to identification, with at least two pages per entry. An interesting section follows titled ’Picking Rules’ which gives advice on how to pick correctly how to stay safe. The last section before the main body of the book is a summary calendar which groups the picking times for entries into a colour-coded calendar - very useful as a quick reference.

Every entry is accompanied with a drawing. Most of the drawings are excellent, but one or two are a little small and thus less detailed. Fortunately, almost every entry also has a photograph. The combination of colour drawings and colour photographs is what makes this little pocket book a true 'gem'. If the drawing is a little weak, the photo will be excellent and vice-versa. Almost fool proof.

Each entry starts with the common English name (Latin is in small type at the top of the page)a colour illustration and description. Taking Beech (at random), it says: 'Widespread and common throughout the British Isles, especially on chalky soils. A stately deciduous tree, with smooth, grey bark, to 40m (130ft). Leaves: bright green, alternate, oval. Flowers: male drooping, stalked heads; female in pairs. Fruit: four inside a prickly brown husk, Sept-Oct....

The book, in line with its title, covers Plants and Trees, Fungi, Seaweeds and Shellfish. There is a glossary at the end and a page devoted to further reading. There is a List of Recipes and finally an index of entries in common English or Latin.

There aren't that many books devoted to 'British' wild foods so to find one which lists over 100 edible plants, berries, mushrooms, seaweed and shellfish is most welcome. Given the true pocket size measurements of the Collins Gem series of books, the price of a fiver (£4-99) and the quality of each entry, this is as good as it gets. Obviously not a benchmark reference work or field-guide, but at least this fits in the pocket - which is the main purpose of such books, isn't it? Five stars! Read more ›

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147 of 151 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Handy Pocket Volume 13 Aug 2007
By J. Chippindale TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Richard Mabey is the author of several books on flora and fauna so he is well qualified to write a book such as this. Over one hundred edible plants are featured together with recipes and other culinary information. There is also information on how to pick and when to pick and the regulations on picking which are very important. As I come from farming stock I have to say that food for free does not mean going into a field and digging up a few potato plants or for that matter cabbages.

There are plenty of hedgerow plants available for free, if you are prepared to look for them and suffer the odd few scratches. There is nothing better than a bowl of freshly picked blackberries or raspberries, if you can get them home before they are all eaten.

Plants that are edible are fully illustrated and described and the recipes are both old and new. Other fascinating information is how the plants have been used through the ages. An ideal book for all those who are nature lovers and like the idea of something for nothing. I think the last part covers 99.9% of the population.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply fantastic! 2 Oct 2009
Format:Paperback
This is one incredible little book, as long as one does not take it for what it isn't.

It is a short guide to wild food, a kind of introduction to basic principles of foraging, picking and cooking wild food. It is more specifically about food found in the British Isles, but most of these plants are very common throughout Northern and Western Europe (I have found more than 30 of the plants and mushrooms mentioned in the book as far north as central Finland).

It is very precious in that, it gives concise descriptions along with drawings and/or photos, which make for everything you need to carry in your pocket when taking a walk in the woods.

As a word of caution, always double-check what you've picked with a proper field guide when you return home (Mabey mentions that himself in the book). This book is not a replacement for field guides, and it should not be used as one.

This applies especially to mushrooms, and if you do not own a guide on mushroom identification, double-check online (spore-prints can be very useful). Although the mushrooms he has selected are relatively easy to find and hard to mistake for others, you don't want to find out you need a liver transplant because you made a mistake!

Great great great book, I can't really say anything else! This little book how opened my eyes to a world I didn't know existed before, and has lead me to buy more books about foraging and mushroom picking.
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128 of 136 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars FOOD FOR FREE BY RICHARD MABEY 15 Sep 2003
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
A delightful, colourful book that is full of the countryside with amazing recipes of the wild flowers and weeds that have been photographed and inset on every page. He has created a new space for the English seasonal climate and the accompanying display of wild, ornate colourful flowers that have all got there culinary uses, some known like chicory others not so well known like Bladder Wrack Popweed. There are 21 daring recipes for you to try each containing somekind of wild flower or herb. The overall review of this book is that if you are in love with the countryside you will definetely find this book very interesting.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars Too small
I suppose it is intended as a pocket book - hence how physically small it is - Trouble is you need to make sure you have your reading glasses / magnifying glass with you. Read more
Published 1 day ago by S. R. Jenkins
4.0 out of 5 stars A classic
An inspiring book from way back, originally published in the seventies, still sound advice. Could benefit form more pictures to assist identification.
Published 1 day ago by R Allen
5.0 out of 5 stars Food For Free (Collins Gem) Richard Mabey
Perfect for all you Foragers , Bushcrafters or preppers this is just simply a Brilliant wee book :) Highly recommended.
Published 14 days ago by David Surman
5.0 out of 5 stars Great little book.
I wanted this little book to carry with me when I was walking. It is ideal, not heavy and fits in my pocket. I am now able to identify edible plants.
Published 15 days ago by S. E. A. Brooks
3.0 out of 5 stars Side order
This is what it says. Free food. However, most of the food mentioned is for use as a supplement with something else or for just small meals. Read more
Published 15 days ago by Simon Boi
5.0 out of 5 stars A useful little guide
While this can't cover the range of hedgerow foods that Mabey's original book gave, it's very useful and has a good introduction that sets the scene for gathering wild grown / sown... Read more
Published 15 days ago by kandl
5.0 out of 5 stars Free food book
Brought as a gift, for a friend who was camping in Dartmoor. The book was used, and tasting wild free for is a fantastic thing to do if you are confidant in trying foods, if unsure... Read more
Published 16 days ago by sophia kelly
5.0 out of 5 stars nice compact
all you need to know about foraging. easy to read and understand. nice and copact so you can easily take it with you
Published 17 days ago by herman defoe
3.0 out of 5 stars Flying in the face of other reviews
This is a neat little reference manual...but it does depend heavily on having done alot of independent research (to the point where you wonder why someone who had done the... Read more
Published 17 days ago by AndyG
5.0 out of 5 stars THE book of choice for food foragers
An excellent little book which is kept in my pocket at all times. A vast improvement on the original volume as it is so easy to carry.
Published 20 days ago by roy french
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