Episodios

  • Can You Really Live on Wild Food? Robin Greenfield Is! | Food Freedom
    Jan 6 2026

    This episode is a conversation with Robin Greenfield, activist, forager, and author of Food Freedom. Robin has spent years experimenting with what it means to step outside the industrial food system, first by growing and foraging all of his food for a year, and now by eating only wild food. In this conversation, we explore what food freedom actually looks like in practice, the role of community, and why food sits at the center of ecological and personal resilience.

    Episode Overview:

    • Robin’s background and journey away from the industrial food system
    • Why food became the central focus of his activism and life experiments
    • What “food freedom” meant during his year of growing and foraging all of his food
    • The real challenges of food freedom, including time, processing, and preservation
    • Why community support is essential for living closer to the land
    • What motivated Robin to take the next step and eat only wild food for an entire year
    • How he plans calories, protein, fat, and nutrients on a wild food diet
    • Key wild food staples including wild rice, venison, fish, nuts, fruits, greens, and herbs
    • The hardest parts of eating wild food, including fat scarcity and food storage mistakes
    • How seasonality and travel shape his wild food strategy
    • Ethical foraging and reciprocity, including harvesting invasive species
    • Why learning individual plants matters more than following blanket foraging rules
    • How foraging can deepen connection, purpose, and gratitude for the natural world
    • Practical advice for beginner foragers who want to start building food resilience

    Use code “yearofplenty” for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/live/UJ97dq8yVM0?si=huhuFqMRf7BkSs54

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    1 h y 6 m
  • Foragers Roundtable: 2025 Foraging Season in Review | Harvests, Lessons & What’s Next
    Dec 31 2025

    Poldi and Lindey are joined by Orion (Forage Colorado), Tim (Ironwood Foraging Co.), and Bryan (Healing Ecosystems) for a relaxed, end-of-year conversation about wild food. We’ll reflect on how the season unfolded, what the harvest was like, lessons learned from the land, and the traditional food projects and skills we practiced along the way. We’ll also share our foraging goals and intentions for the year ahead.

    Use code “yearofplenty” for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nBzbHWZUhso&t=1407s

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    Support the podcast via Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/yearofplenty

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    2 h y 6 m
  • Forgotten Staples: Foraging Wild Plums & American Lotus with Feral Foraging
    Sep 18 2025

    This episode is a conversation with Jesse from Feral Foraging about two of North America’s most overlooked wild foods — Wild Plums and American Lotus. Jesse is a skilled forager and educator who shares practical tips on plant identification, wild tending, and cooking with these forgotten staples. His work blends deep ecological knowledge with hands-on techniques that help people connect to their food in a meaningful way.

    Episode Overview:

    • Jesse’s background and the mission behind Feral Foraging
    • The Gather Foraging App — features for plant ID, seasonal timing & lookalikes
    • Wild Plum species in North America (American, Chickasaw, Mexican, Pacific, Canada plums)
    • How to identify wild plums vs. Bradford pear or crabapple
    • Why wild plums are disappearing (invasive species, habitat loss, fire suppression)
    • Tips for scouting wild plums in bloom, best harvesting techniques, and seasonal timing
    • Wild plum flavor profile, traditional uses, and recipes (jam, wine, sauces, fruit leather)
    • American Lotus basics — how it compares to Asian lotus and its overlooked history
    • Foraging lotus seeds and tubers: canoe gathering, wading, and digging in mud
    • Lotus recipes & nutrition: porridge, bread, flour alternatives, and long-term seed storage
    • Why American Lotus and Wild Plums are still worth foraging today for resilience and food culture


    Use code “yearofplenty” for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/live/pU2202bP58Q?si=o5_hNZ6Bq7UCNA2k

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    www.theyearofplenty.com/newsletter

    Support the podcast via Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/yearofplenty

    Subscribe to the Youtube Channel:
    https://www.youtube.com/@yearofplentyvideo

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    Connect with Jesse:
    https://www.youtube.com/@FeralForaging

    Download the Gather Foraging App:
    https://gatherapp.co/

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    1 h y 39 m
  • Feed Us With Trees: Ancient Wisdom for a Resilient Food System with Elspeth Hay
    Sep 4 2025

    In this episode of the Year of Plenty Podcast, we’re joined by Elspeth Hay — writer, public radio host, and author of Feed Us With Trees. Elspeth takes us deep into the overlooked world of edible trees, exploring how they’ve sustained humans for millennia and why they hold the key to building a more resilient food system today. From acorns and chestnuts to hazelnuts and maples, this conversation uncovers the ancient wisdom and modern science behind tree-based foods and agroforestry.

    Topics We Cover

    • The inspiration behind Elspeth’s book Feed Us With Trees and why she believes trees belong at the center of our food future.
    • Acorns as a staple food: how they’ve been processed, eaten, and valued across cultures.
    • Chestnuts and their importance across Europe and North America, including their culinary revival.
    • Hazelnuts as both a wild foraged nut and a promising perennial crop.
    • Differences between perennial tree foods and annual crops — and what that means for resilience.
    • The role of trees in storing carbon and sustaining long-term food supplies.
    • Why many tree-based foods disappeared from mainstream diets and what it takes to bring them back.
    • Indigenous knowledge and cultural traditions surrounding oaks, chestnuts, and other nut trees.
    • Stories of modern farmers and projects reintroducing edible tree systems into agriculture.

    Use code “yearofplenty” for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/live/HXgxNj72rGc?si=92eG2Bi5iqd3HHEX

    Sign up for the newsletter:
    www.theyearofplenty.com/newsletter

    Support the podcast via Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/yearofplenty

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    https://www.youtube.com/@yearofplentyvideo

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    Connect with Elspeth Hay:

    https://elspethhay.com/

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    1 h y 17 m
  • Foraging for Huckleberries, Ground Cherries, and Tumbleweeds | Tips from Wild Food Girl
    Aug 22 2025

    In this episode of the Year of Plenty Podcast, we sit down with Erica Davis — better known as Wild Food Girl — to explore the fascinating world of wild edible plants. Erica has spent more than a decade teaching, writing, and foraging across the Rocky Mountains and beyond, and she shares her deep knowledge on identification, harvesting, and cooking techniques for some of the most interesting wild foods in North America

    Topics We Cover

    • How Erica became “Wild Food Girl” and built her online school.
    • Dandelion soup (manest), including how to blanch greens to reduce bitterness, recipe variations, and pairing ideas.
    • Huckleberry foraging with seasonal timing, elevation tips, species differences, and the regional naming confusion between blueberries and huckleberries.
    • Oregon grape, with tips on safe identification, its tart flavor, and how to use it in jelly, wine, and other recipes.
    • Tumbleweed (Salsola), how to harvest young shoots, different cooking methods, and the ethics of foraging invasives.
    • Kochia “land caviar” (tonburi), including seed processing, rinsing to remove saponins, and creative flavor pairings.
    • Ground cherries (Physalis), how to identify species, clear up toxicity myths, know the best harvest times, and find their favorite habitats.
    • Foraging safety tips, from avoiding lookalikes to harvesting ethically and steering clear of beginner mistakes.
    • The unique challenges and opportunities of foraging in the Intermountain West.


    Use code “yearofplenty” for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/live/lH80VIp2b4A?si=yQO1XqW46Dyad8kM

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    www.theyearofplenty.com/newsletter

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    https://www.patreon.com/yearofplenty

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    Connect with Wild Food Girl:
    https://wildfoodgirl.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/wild.food.girl/?hl=en

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    1 h y 27 m
  • Mayapples, Wild Coffee & the Foraging Onion Approach with Hoosier Forager
    Aug 6 2025

    Hoosier Forager joins us for a thoughtful conversation about how we approach foraging, why it matters, and how to build confidence with new wild foods. We also dig into two standout plants: chicory, one of the best wild coffee substitutes, and mayapple, a native fruit with a short, tricky harvest window. Plus, we talk about a surprising fungal shift with Golden Oyster Mushrooms happening across the U.S.

    Episode Overview:

    • The Foraging Onion framework: how to build confidence with new wild foods
    • How to safely identify and harvest mayapples (Podophyllum peltatum)
    • When mayapples are edible — and what parts to avoid
    • Foraging for chicory (Cichorium intybus): ID tips, uses, and wild coffee
    • The spread of golden oyster mushrooms across the U.S
    • Why golden oysters may reduce native fungal diversity
    • How to deepen your foraging practice beyond just identification

    Use code “yearofplenty” (all lower case) for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/live/n5Ni_hTKhmo?si=5gpfBCBU4L7r-FTl

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    www.theyearofplenty.com/newsletter

    Support the podcast via Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/yearofplenty

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    https://www.youtube.com/@yearofplentyvideo

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    Connect with Hoosier Forager:
    https://linktr.ee/hoosierforager

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    1 h y 27 m
  • Guerrilla Grafting, Wild Carbs & Foraging Japanese Knotweed with Healing Ecosystems
    Jul 10 2025

    In this episode, I’m joined by my friend Bryan from Healing Ecosystems. He’s someone who’s not just talking about food resilience—he’s living it, experimenting with wild foods, and creating abundance on the land in ways most people haven’t even considered.

    Episode Overview:

    • Guerrilla grafting edible pear varieties onto ornamental Bradford pears in public spaces
    • How to grow and forage wild carbohydrates like turnips, sweet potatoes, Jerusalem artichokes, and groundnuts
    • Traditional acorn processing through cold water leaching and how Indigenous peoples did it at scale
    • Foraging Japanese knotweed: why it’s invasive, how to harvest it, and what it tastes like
    • Practical strategies for building food resilience with wild and perennial calorie crops

    Use code “yearofplenty” (all lower case) for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/live/ZwbSdmZfjdY?si=aaKO6bVHfTf1zcE-

    Sign up for the newsletter:
    www.theyearofplenty.com/newsletter

    Support the podcast via Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/yearofplenty

    Subscribe to the Youtube Channel:
    https://www.youtube.com/@yearofplentyvideo

    Do you follow the podcast on social media yet?
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    Connect with Healing Ecosystems:
    https://www.instagram.com/healingecosystems/

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    1 h y 43 m
  • Pawpaw Foraging Secrets | Discover America’s Largest Edible Indigenous Fruit
    Jun 18 2025

    This episode is a conversation with Shane Edwards, also known as Wild Dryad—a self-taught botanist, illustrator, and foraging educator. We explore the lost legacy of the pawpaw, America’s largest edible indigenous fruit, and how reconnecting with this tropical-flavored wild food is also a path to cultural restoration, land stewardship, and ancestral knowledge. If you’ve ever wondered what pawpaws taste like, where they grow, or why they vanished from our food system—this is the deep dive you've been waiting for.

    EPISODE OVERVIEW:

    • What makes pawpaw fruit so unique—and why most people have never heard of it
    • How Shane started foraging and built his knowledge from backyard weeds to edible landscapes
    • The cultural importance of pawpaw in Indigenous, African American, and rural traditions
    • Why pawpaws disappeared from modern food systems (and how we’re bringing them back)
    • Pawpaw identification tips: habitat, leaves, flowers, bark, and fruiting season
    • How to ethically harvest, hand-pollinate, and propagate pawpaw trees
    • The growing cultural movement to reclaim wild food access
    • The risks of overharvesting and why wild tending is crucial for future abundance of wild edible plants
    • What ancestral eating teaches us about ecology, resilience, and food sovereignty

    Use code “yearofplenty” (all lower case) for 15% OFF at www.mtblock.com

    MY
    ULTIMATE FORAGING GEAR LIST - Check it out

    Leave a review on Apple or Spotify and send a screenshot to theyearofplenty@gmail.com to receive a FREE EBOOK with my favorite food preservation recipes.

    Watch the Video Episode on Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/live/kJtoCvhWNQ0?si=85bZbRQRYpNSmbZh

    Support the podcast via Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/yearofplenty

    Sign up for the newsletter:
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    Subscribe to the Youtube Channel:
    https://www.youtube.com/@yearofplentyvideo

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    X: https://x.com/yearofplentypod

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    Connect with Shane:
    https://www.instagram.com/the_wild_dryad/

    Más Menos
    1 h y 31 m
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