Watercress: Ancient Flavor

Watercress is an escaped non-native found througout most of North America

Florida is the Winter Watercress Capital of the U.S.

Leaf shape can vary

Nasturtium officinale (nas-STUR-shum oh-fis-in-AY-lee ) is one of the oldest leaf vegetables cultivated by man. It’s naturalized in Florida and in fact all of North America, Europe and Asia, the latter two where it is native. Wild watercress is a short-lived edible in central Florida. January to March and maybe a little of April just about sum up its season, and that’s being generous.  Of course the farther north you go the later in the season it can be found such as in Gainesville in May. Locally Watercress  can also be found in drainage ditches leading to the St. Johns River and occasionally along the banks of the St. Johns River.  No doubt in other agricultural areas such as Lake Apopka it can also be found as well as in canals. The only place I have found it past its season is downstream from natural springs that maintain a 72F temperature year round, such as Wekiva Springs.

And while it can indeed by found throughout North America central Florida is the capital of winter watercress production in the United States. The old winter watercress capital was Huntsville, Alabama, but that city traded the mustard member for aerospace technology. I discovered watercress about 27 years ago in Sanford, Fl., some 15 miles north of here.

Given a chance it will root at the nodes

In 1863 Francis Peyre Porcher in his book the “Resources of the Southern Fields and Forests, Medical, Economical and Agricultural, Medical Botany of the Confederate States” wrote of watercress: “Introduced. Ditches Florida. Northward. This plant came into pretty high favor about a century ago [1776] as a spring salad; and it soon obtained preference to all other spring salads on account of its agreeable, warm, bitter taste, and for sake of its purifying, antiscorbutic and diuretic properties. It was greedily gathered in all of its natural habitats within some miles of London for the supply of the London Market, and eventually became an object of regular, peculiar, and somewhat extensive cultivations.” To read more about Dr. Procher read my article on Smilax.

Toothpick seeds pods are called siliques

Man is not the only consumer of Watercress. It is eaten by ducks, muskrats, and deer who know a good thing when they find it. Watercress contains significant amounts of iron, calcium and folic acid, as well as vitamins A and C. It has a long history of medicinal use and was even popular in Roman times.  The Greeks thought it was good for the brain and thinking. Many benefits have been attributed to eating watercress, such as that it is a mild stimulant, a source of phytochemicals, a diuretic, an expectorant, a digestive aid and anti-cancerous. Research in Iran has shown it to have antioxidant potential as well as able to lower cholesterol and triglycerides. Research in the United States suggest it has a role in preventing or treating cancer.

Typical four-petaled mustard flower

Cultivated since ancient Persian times, watercress may cause cystitis in some people. Its consumption is not advised for those who have a delicate stomach or suffer from acidosis or heartburn. I have a temperamental tummy inherited from one grandmother but cooked Watercress has not bothered me. I like it with salt, pepper, olive oil, a sprinkle of garlic and balsamic vinegar.  (I only eat it raw when I collected immediately downstream from a spring.)  Excessive or prolonged use may lead to kidney problems and some advise against eating it during pregnancy.

Nutritionally, watercress is no lightweight. It’s 19 calories per 100g and is 93.3% water. However, it has: Protein: 2.2g; Fat: 0.3g; Carbohydrate: 3g; Fiber: 0.7g; Ash: 1.2g; Calcium: 151mg; Phosphorus: 54mg; Iron: 1.7mg; Magnesium: 0mg; Sodium: 52mg; Potassium: 282mg;  A: 2940mg; Thiamine (B1): 0.08mg; Riboflavin (B2): 0.16mg; Niacin: 0.9mg; C: 79mg. Recipes below.

There are actually several “watercress” in North America you might want to investigate. They include: Barbarea vulgaris, Barbarea verna, Cardamine bulbosa, Cardamine pensylvanica, and Arabis alpina.

Nasturtium” means literally “twisting nose” and was the Roman name for peppery watercress.  Officinale means it was approved in ancient Rome to be sold as a food or medicine in special stores. The Greek name for watercress, Nerokarthamon, broadly translated, means “able to tame Nero’s mind.” It was thought in ancient Greece Watercress could cure insanity.

Creamed Watercress

2   Tbsp  Butter

1   cup chopped onions

2   cloves  garlic, minced

2   Tbsp flour

1   cup  Half and Half

1/4   tsp nutmeg

8 to 16 ounces of watercress, chopped

Salt and pepper to taste

Heat butter in braising pan on medium low. Add onions and garlic; cook about 10 min, until onions are soft and translucent.   Add flour. Cook, stirring occasionally, 2 min.  Stir in half and half and nutmeg; bring to a simmer and cook 2 min.  Add watercress to pan in small batches; cook, stirring frequently, 3-4 min, until watercress is wilted. Season to taste with salt and pepper.  During cooking you make have to add more half & half depending on the consistency you want. For a richer side dish use cream.

Chickpeas and Watercress

1 can chickpeas in water ( also called garbanzo beans) or 1 ½ cups precooked+ ½ cup water

½ onion, diced

3 tbsp olive oil

Juice from of one lemon, ( approx 2 tbsp)

½ tsp curry powder

½ tsp coriander powder

½ tsp cumin

½ tsp gram masala

1 large bunch of watercress or two handfuls, rinsed & trimmed

* In a large skillet or frying pan, saute onions and garlic in olive oil until soft about 3-5 minutes. Add chickpeas straight from the can., including all the water. Add the spices and lemon juice, cover, and simmer about 10-15 minutes, stirring occasionally, adding more water if needed, until chick peas are browned and soft.

* Reduce heat, add spinach and cover. Allow spinach to wilt for 2-4 minutes. Serve immediately.

 Watercress Pesto

2 garlic cloves, chopped

2 tsp grated lemon rind

5 tbs olive oil, plus extra drizzle

400g spaghetti or tagliatelle

12 cherry tomatoes, halved

12 pitted olivesMethod

* Preheat the oven to 180 C

* Roughly chop 80g of watercress, and place in a food processor with half the parmesan, the pine nuts, garlic and lemon rind. Gradually add the oil and process to from a smooth paste. Season with salt and pepper.

* Cook the pasta in a large pot of salted boiling water until al dente.

* Meanwhile, place the tomatoes, cut-side, on a baking tray. Drizzle with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Cook in the oven for 6-8 minutes or until just starting to wilt. Toss the pasta with the pesto, tomatoes, olives and the remaining parmesan and watercress.

 Watercress Tabouleh

1 cup bulgur

2 Tblsp chopped walnuts

6 tsp walnut oil or extra virgin olive-oil, divided

2 shallots, chopped

1 Tblsp finely chopped garlic

12 cups thinly sliced watercress (about 2 bunches), tough stems removed

1/3 cup chopped pitted dates

2-3 Tblsp water

4 tsp white-wine vinegar

½ tsp salt

* Prepare bulgur according to package directions. Transfer to a colander and rinse under cool water; drain. toast walnuts in a small dry skillet over medium low heat.* Cook until the shallots start to brown, 4 to 6 minutes.

* Add garlic and cook stirring, until fragrant, about 15 seconds.

* Add the watercress, dates and two tablespoons of water and cook, stirring occasionally, until the greens are tender and the water evaporates (add another tablespoon of water if the pan is dry before the greens are tender) about 4 minutes.

* Stir in vinegar, salt and the prepared bulgur; cook until heated through, about 1 minute.

* Drizzle with the remaining one teaspoon of oil and sprinkle with the walnuts before serving.

 Watercress Soup

In this recipe, freshly harvested watercress is cooked with potatoes, chicken stock, milk, onions and garlic to make a deliciously light soup.  To ensure the watercress retains its tender crunch, add it to the soup last. If you wish, you could also blend all the ingredients for a smoother soup.

Ingredients:

* 2 bunches of watercress, roughly chopped

* 1 medium potato, cubed

* 1 medium white onion, diced

* 2 cloves of garlic, crushed

* 1 Tbsp of butter & 1 Tbsp of olive oil

* 2 cups of organic chicken or vegetable stock

* 2 cups of milk

* 2 tsp of sea salt

* 1/s tsp of freshly ground black pepper

Preparation:

1. Heat the butter and olive oil in a pot over a medium heat. Add the onions and sauté for 30 seconds. Turn the heat to low and sweat the onions for 15 minutes. Stir them occasionally to ensure they don’t caramelize. 2. Turn the heat back up to medium-high and add the garlic. Fry for 30 seconds. 3. Now add the potato cubes, salt and pepper and fry for 1 minute. Add the milk, the stock and stir. 4. Let the soup simmer for 10 minutes. Add the watercress and stir well. Turn the heat down sightly and simmer for 5 minutes. 5. Add a pinch of black pepper and serve immediately.

Green Deane’s “Itemized” Plant Profile

IDENTIFICATION: A coarse, many branched pungent member of the mustard family with deeply divided compound leaves, low-growing, dense in suitable small waterways. It has the customary four-petaled flower of the Brassica family, white petals, and seed pods on stems. It grows in the same location and time of year of young water hemlock. Pick carefully.

TIME OF YEAR: January to April in Florida, spring though fall in some temperate climates.

ENVIRONMENT: Likes to grow in clean, running water but not rapids.

METHOD OF PREPARATION: Raw or cooked. Wholesome water is hard to find so cooked is the preferred way. Prepare like any mustard green.

HERB BLURB

Research supports traditional views that watercress has medicinal applications. Herbalist use it as a stimulant and diuretic, research suggests it has antioxidants, the ability to lower some blood lipids, and to prevent or treat cancer, particularly that of the lungs.

 

{ 7 comments… add one }
  • Jeff Roy August 15, 2012, 8:43 pm

    Hello Dean, I’m a beginning forager who is learning the ropes. I live in New Hampshire, and recently noticed a common plant in the area. At first, thinking it might be watercress or a relative, or possibly in the wort family.. but I can’t seem to find a match. This is a low plant, less than a foot, grows in clusters in moist areas, seems to have a single branchless stem terminating at a single leaf. See link for picture. Stem seems hairless and round. Has a mild green/earthy smell. Leaf has small teeth, deeply veined, most veins eminating from center of leaf. Are you familiar with this plant by chance?

    http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=3679832514456&set=o.293813447392966&type=1&relevant_count=1&ref=nf

    Reply
    • Jeff Roy August 16, 2012, 7:27 am

      I think I might have identified my mystery plant as Centella erecta. A cousin of the pennywort. Thanks again for all your info Dean.

      Reply
    • Green Deane August 18, 2012, 11:02 pm

      Does it have an aroma when crushed?

      Reply
      • Jeff Roy August 19, 2012, 8:07 am

        Just a deep, green, earthy smell

        Reply
  • sue|theviewfromgreatisland May 28, 2015, 12:04 pm

    I adore watercress, and the tabouleh sounds fantastic. I’m so glad to have discovered your wonderful site!

    Reply
  • Jim Barg January 18, 2017, 9:34 pm

    I have found another plant growing along with watercress in one of my favored spots. In the early spring, the plants look nearly identical, but as the summer goes on, one plant matures into a tall woody-stemmed weed with very small blue flowers near the leaf axils. The true watercress looks just as Dean has pictured here with the four-petaled white flowers. Does anyone have any idea what this other plant is? I grows right in the water as the watercress does, but it does not “vine over” like mature watercress does. I live in northern NJ. (By the way, it’s January as I write this, and both plants are beginning to push greenery up, even in the cold!) I just want to be sure, if I accidentally pick and eat some of the foreign plant along with the real watercress, that it isn’t poisonous. It’s hard to tell them apart in the late winter/early spring!

    Reply
  • Rebecca Cody April 23, 2019, 1:09 pm

    I just discovered your Youtube channel and website. Thank you for all the information and recipes. I eat a diet of whole natural plants only, without any animal products or added fat, but I see that I can adapt many of your recipes to suit my needs. I’ve long been interested in foraging, though I don’t do a lot of it. I have Euell Gibbons’ books and others from the 1970s, still on my library shelf.

    I would like to clarify a small point. When referring to the B vitamin, folic acid, you refer to the man-made, chemical variety that is added to white flour and many vitamin formulas. However, many of us don’t tolerate the artificial folic acid well, and research shows it even contributes to cancer in some situations because the body cannot use it in the same way as the vitamin coming from plants. When you’re talking about natural vitamins, as in plants, that vitamin is actually folate. It’s a confusing thing, because some dictionaries actually say they are the same. They aren’t, and I’d love to see you refer to it as folate in the plants you forage.

    Thank you again for all your great information.

    Reply

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.