I mentioned the other day our habit of having with us at all times an au cas où bag, foraging for the use of. At this time of year, this bag is a completely necessary accessory. Here’s my haul from last Thursday.

Here we are. Crab apples; cooking apples; windfall pears; red mirabelles. These have become crab apple and chilli jelly; cooked down with previously foraged then frozen blackberries; scrumped; mirabelle frangipane with a good number of them, then … not sure yet. We’ve made quite enough mirabelle jam, thank you.
This is the time of year for mushrooming, but we haven’t been lucky yet. Apart from the obvious field mushrooms (no pictures!) I’m only confident to look for football sized puffballs (which make, apart from other dishes, excellent steak substitutes) …


… and shaggy inkcaps, which need to come home quickly before they deliquesce into inky pools.

Here are some of the other regular finds: crab apples in the feature photo; mirabelles both yellow and red; blackberries; apples of all kinds.



Here’s some of the kitchen activity: Weighing, then straining the juices from simmered-down fruits.


… and some of the results:


In this case, the only photo I had to hand was of jars of marmalade (I even forage Seville oranges when we’re in Spain in winter), and gin which I have made in Seville orange, mulberry, sloe, and mirabelle varieties at different times.
Foraging is some of the best fun to be had in autumn. Just don’t forget your au cas où bag.
For Leanne’s Monochrome Madness.
The photos are lovely. I have never done much foraging myself although I have a friend who lives in the Highlands of Scotland and she does. She makes the most delicious wild mushroom soup.
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My kinda friend then! Thanks James. As I just said to Leanne, I’m really not sure about these in mono. So thanks.
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This makes me want to grab a bag and foraging in the city😄 Your au cas où bag idea is brilliant and I might just start carrying one myself!😉
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Do! You won’t be rewarded every time, but often enough to make it worthwhile.
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I’m officially on the lookout now! 😄
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👍
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I’ve been foraging and trying to find mushrooms have always scared me, especially with the recent murder case here. They do make great monochrome images Margaret.
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Thanks Leanne. I have to say, I felt and feel quite unsure about these images. To me they tell a better tale in colour. And you know I’m a mono fan. You’re right to be wary of mushrooms. I am VERY careful, and only go for the extremely obvious.
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Love your images for au cas ou! You really can be quite the forager
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I only really look for the obvious stuff – I’m not an expert. My first memory is of being got up at 4.00 a.m. by my mother to go mushroom-hunting on an ex-wartime airfield. Great training!
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Brilliant! And where was the airfield ?
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Since we moved back here, I’ve had a few attempts at identifying it. Haven’t a clue.
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Ok, where were you living at the time?
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Sandhutton near Thirsk. But it almost certainly wasn’t a full-blown base. More of an airstrip or two.
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And lost and gone forever….
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😒
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Maybe it’s better not needing war-ready airstrips.
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Maybe
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Great photos. That and your story of foraging are fueling my curiosity and appetite very early in the morning. Sounds like a wonderful way to spend a morning or fall afternoon. Is there one time that’s better than the other?
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For me, as a non-expert, autumn is definitely best. The expert forager does well in every season. If you get a chance, go out and see what you can find. Nuts are often a great place to start. Good luck!
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I am finding walnuts all over the backyard and on the deck. The squirrels are out getting ready. I wonder if that means winter is going to be a beast. Next time I’m out I’ll be looking for nuts and I’ll have my bag.
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I’m amazed at all you can find. Big murder case just ended over here when 3 members of a family were murdered using foraged deathcap mushrooms in a beef wellington dish. So be careful 🫢
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Oh, it was quite the news item here too. Don’t worry, I’m extremely careful. If in any doubt – leave well alone.
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Good idea
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I only forage for blackberries though there are loads of sloes around here, I just don’t like sloe gin. I admire all your activity. And although I love your black and white photos I’m sorry to say that these really do need to be in colour. All those jewel like shades are sorely missed.
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I agree, as I confessed in other comments. I nearly didn’t post this in this form.
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Wonderful monochrome shots. I like how the light fell in all of these photos.
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Thanks Nes. I wasn’t at all sure about them, so now I have a smile on my face!
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I really must get out before everything has gone, but perhaps more importantly I just need to make sure I have my au cas où bag on me at all times!
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You heard it here first!
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show off!
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😊
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Very stylish looking on b&w though I agree the berries etc would be better in colour. And the gin!
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Oh definitely the gin! and everything else. I agree.
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Apart from blackberry picking I’ve never really done much foraging. Opportunities are limited in Ealing and we don’t tend to visit the country at the best time of year – also, I wouldn’t be sure what I was looking for! As for your choice of mono, as always I think there are pluses and minuses. The images do have a pleasing old fashioned look to them which fits the subject of your post, but on the other hand I’m sure the fruit looks wonderful in colour.
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I agree. It was a post I wanted to do, and it was also MM day, so I thought I’d risk combining them. On the whole, not a successful experiment.
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Lovely post and beautiful photos. I also love the French expression “au cas où.”
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Great, isn’t it? Thank you!
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Impressive haul
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Yup!
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You’re much braver than I am – blackberries and elderberries are about the extent of my foraging. I’m far too scared to go looking for mushrooms.
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As you see, I’m highly selective and only go with ones I’m sure of.
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Wow, you stay on your toes. Great windfalls!
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Greediness for free food, there for the sharing with wildlife, is a great motivator.
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Crabapple pirate, matey. 😉
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What a great idea. I don’t think I could forage much in our area but I also wouldn’t be too keen on the work that involves afterwards. LOL But I think it looks great what you could gather.
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The work afterwards is also fun. Non-essential cooking. The best!
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I’ve done so much preserving as a child, I hate it.
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Oh, what a shame.
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Luckily, we don’t have to do that so much anymore, we can buy the stuff. My parents and grandparents couldn’t.
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True. I don’t bottle vegetables and fruits either. Pickles and chutneys is more my style.
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At my parents, we used to preserve everything that you can, mostly in glasses. For a family of six, so a lot of work.
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I get that. Enforced labour is no fun.
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True, especially if you are the only girl and your younger brothers are allowed to play because “this is no work for boys”.
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Aaagh! Nooooooooo. Poor you. All is explained.
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Thanks for understanding.
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good for you! I always have an empty plastic bag with me for unplanned grocery shopping, wet umbrella to store away ‘en route’, or filling it with ‘over the fence unto the street’ flower and greenery gifts for my flower decorations…. used to go foraging too, but now I live in a more urban (if still somewhat quite rural and very beautiful) region.
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I’m surprised how often I forage in a town. Good on you Kiki!
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Ah – now I have found out where you find your Seville oranges! As for mirabelles, I had not heard of them before reading your marmalade and jam post. So have just looked them up to find they are a type of plum.
Congrats on knowing enough to forage fungi. Must be wonderful to forage such edible treasures.
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I’ve just found a treasure trove for shaggy ink caps. So excited! But I only know enough to forage three types of fungi without risk.
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That sounds amazing.
I have only tasted wild mushrooms when with an expert – I don’t have the confidence to forage myself. The taste of the wild mushrooms was incredible. Domesticated commercially grown mushrooms just don’t compare.
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You are so good at identifications in nature, I’m sure you’d be good at it. But yes, proper training wouldn’t come amiss.
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Yes definitely need training from a person rather than from a book or a website!
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So much safer!
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