Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
this reminds me, though, of a question i had while picking some of these poisonous berries--should i be worried about handling poisonous berries with my bare hands? both the juicy picking stage, and this messy cleaning stage....
... I was cutting off old over-wintered stems of Euphorbia myrsinites on Saturday evening. The sap ... doesn't bother my hands, but I must have brushed my hand across my jawline at some point, since I woke up Sunday with redness and swelling, and something that felt like prickly heat along my jaw and chin... no big deal, but some caution is in order, and I will be more careful in the future,
Well, that is one way of doing it...
any tips/shortcuts on cleaning cornus canadensis berries? there is an almost wooly pulp thats very hard to get rid of...
Quote from: cohan on September 29, 2009, 08:23:53 AMany tips/shortcuts on cleaning cornus canadensis berries? there is an almost wooly pulp thats very hard to get rid of...A method to try: take your food processor and use the plastic dough mixing blade to bash them around (in water), then allow the mess to ferment for a week or two. The key feature is to damage the exterior so as to give bacteria and yeasts access to the pulp. No food processor? Then run a rolling pin over them to break the skins and crush the pulp somewhat.Or even pour them out on a concrete surface and using the sole of your shoe roll them back and forth to achieve the same end.If you try this, please report back on the results.[When I first read your message, I misread "wooly" as "woody".]