Dactyloctenium aegyptium

Non-native Crow-Foot grass is easy to identify. Photo by Green Deane

Non-native Crow-Foot grass is easy to identify. Photo by Green Deane

Dactyloctenium aegyptium: Staple Grain

Grasses can be a pain in the …ah… grass…

First, books about grasses are few and incredibly expensive. Next, grasses are hard to identify, often minute differences tells one species from another, and the language can be a bit of a challenge. Here is a partial description of the Crowfoot Grass:

FLORETS: Fertile florets appressed to rhachilla. Fertile lemma gibbous; ovate in profile; 2.6–4 mm long; membranous; keeled; three-veined. Lemma midvein scaberulous. Lemma lateral veins obscure. Lemma apex acute, or cuspidate; muticous, or mucronate. Palea one length of lemma; two-veined. Palea keels wingless, or winged; narrowly winged. Apical sterile florets resembling fertile though underdeveloped.

Did you get that?  I call it Helicopter Grass, all the “fingers” are on the same plane like a helicopter’s rotor. The seeds are on the underside, like teeth on a comb.

Crowfoot grass, Dactyloctenium aegyptium (dak-tie-lok-TEE-nee-um ee-YIP-tee-um) is a

Crowfoot Grass Seed Heads

traditional food in Africa and highly nutritional. I like it as a trail side nibble but in season it is not difficult to collect enough for a side dish for one or two people or larger amounts for storage. It’s about the size of table salt grains though golden in color. I eat it raw or cooked. It has the texture of sand, but tasty, edible sand.  It is an extremely versatile grain and can be cooked as it, roasted, milled et cetera. I eat it raw on the trail but I also like to mix it with some water and olive oil, cook for about 10 minutes or until the water is evaporated and enjoy. Raw or cooked it has about the same flavor and texture.  I suspect it is not a popular food because of its size and texture, which of course is significantly changed if milled into flour.  As flour is by far its best use, in my opinion

The only problem I’ve had with Crowfoot Grass is that while long it grows “up” only about a foot and can get dirt in with the grains. To harvest, I simply tug at the seed heads. If they let go, they

Crush by hand

are ready, if not leave them because when green the seeds are not ready to eat. I separate the grain from the hulls by rubbing the seed heads in my hand. Rub them a lot. I pick  or screen away the larger chaff and then gently blow away the rest, leaving a pile of gold/orange grain. Do not eat the grass itself (as opposed to the seeds.) In hot weather the grass itself can be toxic like Sorghum.  Also it is reported that its roots can be chewed like sugar cane. I do not know. I have not tried it. You’re on your own with that one. I would not try the root in hot weather.

Dactyloctenium is from Greek and means finger and little comb, referring to the “flower”

Sift seeds through a screen

spreading like fingers and the seeds lining up like teeth on a comb.  Aegyptium, of Egypt.  Greeks would say it with one more syllable than the Latin: ah-ee-YIP-tee-um. There are 14 members in the genus.

On the plus side there are few toxic grasses in North American, though Sorghum is one (the leaves, not the seeds or the sap.)  Some grasses are distinct, however, and crowfoot grass is one of them. It’s easy to spot and there are no look alikes.

In my video about Crowfoot Grass I mixed one ounce of seed flour with one ounce of white flour, a teaspoon of sugar, a quarter teaspoon of salt, half a teaspoon of baking powder, tea teaspoons of olive oil and about a quarter cup of water.

Green Deane’s “Itemized” Plant Profile

IDENTIFICATION: Spreading, creeping and mat-forming grass, roots at the lower nodes. The flower head has two to seven spikelets — usually five or six — on the tip of the stem. Seed head looks like a crow’s foot, each plant can have 60,000 seeds.

TIME OF YEAR: Fall in all areas, when the top separates easily from the stem. Ranges from Maine to California. While seeds can be collected when ripe never eat the grass itself in hot weather.

ENVIRONMENT: Heavy, damp soil to dry, sandy arid soil

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Used like any grain, but because of its size and texture better used as a flour.  I eat them raw on the trail or boil them for a few minutes.  Green seeds are not edible but can be bruised and used as a fish stupefier. Do not eat unripe seeds.

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