This episode is a conversation with Nick of North, a wild food chef, forager, and educator from Prince Edward Island who works at the intersection of cooking, ecology, and landscape literacy. Nick has built a unique career teaching chefs how to understand the landscapes around them and translate wild ingredients into meaningful food. His work focuses on flavor, aromatics, fermentation, and developing a deeper relationship with the land through cooking.In this conversation, we explore Nick’s journey from working as a line cook in restaurants t...
This episode is a conversation with Nick of North, a wild food chef, forager, and educator from Prince Edward Island who works at the intersection of cooking, ecology, and landscape literacy. Nick has built a unique career teaching chefs how to understand the landscapes around them and translate wild ingredients into meaningful food. His work focuses on flavor, aromatics, fermentation, and developing a deeper relationship with the land through cooking.
In this conversation, we explore Nick’s journey from working as a line cook in restaurants to becoming a forager who now teaches chefs around the world how to work with wild ingredients. We also dive into how landscape literacy can transform the way we cook, why many wild foods are misunderstood, and how learning to work with flavor, aroma, and seasonal timing can unlock entirely new possibilities in the kitchen.
Episode Overview:
- How wild ingredients often enter restaurant kitchens — and the surprising problems chefs face when working with them
- What landscape literacy actually means and why learning to read ecosystems changes the way you cook
- Why understanding the environments plants grow in can make you a better forager and a more attentive cook
- Nick’s method for learning plant identification by studying ecosystems instead of relying entirely on field guides
- Why wild greens taste bitter — and how harvest timing and time of day can dramatically change flavor
- How chefs can use wild aromatics, herbs, and plant materials to elevate dishes beyond basic ingredients
- Creative ways to extract wild flavors into oils, vinegars, fats, and other cooking mediums
- How plants like oak leaves can be used to add tannins for better pickling and food preservation
- Why trusting your senses is one of the most important skills when fermenting and preserving food
- The fear many beginners have about poisonous plants — and how learning just a few dangerous species can unlock confident foraging
- How the same wild plant can taste completely different depending on where it grows
- Why understanding plant families helps chefs cook unfamiliar wild foods more confidently
- Why becoming a great forager is a lifelong process of learning, observation, and patience
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