FLAVOUR IS A FRONTIER
Natoora Wild Garlic Leaves
- Wild Garlic is more subtle and delicate in flavour than the dried, cultivated
bulbs but retains a potency characteristic of all wild plants.
- In season from February to May, the plants flourish in damp undergrowth near
streams, ditches and rivers.
- From mid-April, the plants go to flower - use these delicate white leaves and
seed pods as a powerful garnish. Stem, leaf and flower are all edible.
Take it further
- Finely chopped, folded into mayonnaise.
- Blend with pine nuts and parmesan as pesto.
Our packaging is plastic-free
- We have developed our own revolutionary packaging which is entirely
plastic-free and home disposable. Each of our recyclable cardboard punnets is
flow-wrapped with home-compostable film which, unlike traditional plastic
flow-wrap, disintegrates within 180 days. Dispose of the black punnet in your
normal recycling and the clear film in your food waste bin.
- Each punnet bears the ‘Plastic Free’ mark of A Plastic Planet, a grassroots
movement which aims to turn off the plastic tap.
Natoora's radical approach to seasonal sourcing is shaping the future of food
- We are revolutionising the food system.
- We work direct with growers who value flavour, biodiversity and heritage over
yield.
- We give them the support they need to build a better future for food, rooted
in small scale, sustainable agriculture that gives back to our planet.
'There are many people who are lucky enough to see wild garlic a-plenty growing
freely all around them during its season from March to June, but if you (like
me) don’t have fields to forage from, then you can at least treat yourself to
these! There are so many possible uses for these pungent leaves: wild garlic
butter; wild garlic mayo; wild garlic risotto; and smaller, tender leaves can be
left whole (though I’d chop the larger ones, and the stem, too) and used as any
other herb, wherever you want. And the flowers are lovely dropped into a salad.
But the first thing I always do each year is make wild garlic pesto: just blitz
together (I use a stick blender) 50g of wild garlic (weigh once you’ve trimmed
away the coarse muddy bits of stems), 4 tablespoons grated parmesan, 100ml of
olive oil and a spritz of lemon juice, then salt to taste, adding more lemon
juice as needed. Obviously, this is great as a pasta sauce (when I toast a few
pinenuts and scatter them on top once pesto and pasta have been tossed together)
but it’s wonderful in so many dishes: stirred into soup; dolloped over tomatoes,
charred red peppers, or a platter of roast vegetables; stirred into a baked
potato or tossed through a bowl of new potatoes; and you can add a little to
some oil and vinegar to make a gorgeous, garlicky green dressing!' Nigella
Lawson
Retail Availability
Prices shown below are available online and may not reflect in store.