I have a food story from this year's D&D gathering in Santa Fe. It involves foraging and culinary technique!
Among other things, we bought some heirloom carrots -- yellow, orange-red, and purple -- which we planned to trim, rub with olive oil, and roast on the gas-grill. We wanted a green herb to go on it, too, and a friend's daughter suggested that we use some of the wild sage growing around the rental house. Sounds good, right?
A few minutes later, she's back with the wild sage: very narrow, almost blade-like leaves, the right pale green but hardly any sage flavor at all -- just bitter. My friend Bruce decided he was not going to let this get in his way, so he began a series of preps on the sage, bringing them to me to judge. (Lucky me.)
First, he tried sauteeing the leaves in a pan with a little oil. Nope, still bitter.
Then he tried pounding and toasting them dry. Worse! I had to rinse my mouth it was so bitter.
Then he blanched some. Better. Still bitter but showing a little mintiness now. He steeped it for 15 minutes longer. Still kinda lean and sinewy but recognizably sage. Green light.
So, on the carrots it went, along with a little s+p. It was good and we were proud.