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This year’s long, cool spring means that there are still lots of dandelions in full bloom, so now is a good time for harvesting and eating them. Today, ELi brings you some recipes that use the bright yellow flowers.
As a lover of vegetable gardening, I look forward each spring to the first “meals from the garden.” Even with our jerry-rigged greenhouse of three old storm windows laid across a repurposed sandbox, the lettuces, spinach, and arugula planted a month ago aren’t yet anywhere near ready to pick this early in the spring.
So, three years ago, I started harvesting dandelions that are abundant at this time of year – not only the leaves for various mixed-greens recipes throughout the growing season, but the flowers during their peak season in April, weeks before anything in our planted garden is ready.
I harvest dandelion flowers from our back yard, where I know chemicals haven’t been applied and dogs probably haven’t preceded me.
Dandelion flowers open on sunny days and last only until about dusk, so picking is best done midday. Dandelions produce flowers for several weeks fairly prolifically, so if you miss one day’s flowers, there should be others to pick soon. I had not noticed the many different varieties of dandelions until I started picking the flowers. Concentrate on ones with the fullest, largest blossoms.
The flowers will close in a few hours once picked, so it’s best to move to the next step within a short time. Leaving the flowers in a colander in the sink for a little while gives a few small ants that may have clung to the blossoms a chance to climb out.
Picking flowers is the quickest part of preparing dishes with dandelion petals. Separating the yellow petals from the bitter green sepals that hold the flowers together takes a lot of time. I use a scissors to cut across the flower a little above the stem and then pull off the sepals; this works best if you cut low enough that some of the sepals are still connected to each other, looking something like fat false eyelashes as they are pulled off.
Don’t expect to stand at a kitchen counter to prep enough flowers to fill a cup of petals. This task may be made more bearable by doing it while watching TV, listening to music, or conversing with a friend.
If you don’t pick enough flowers in one day to make a full recipe, separate the petals from the flowers you pick, mix them with a little bit of white flour to keep them from matting together, and put them a jar in the refrigerator.
Below: The author preparing her garden beds yesterday. (She doesn't plant dandelions. They just volunteer.)

I have two favorite recipes using dandelion petals – one savory and one sweet. The first is a dandelion petal and chickpea veggie burger. This recipe freezes well. One weekend, I picked dandelion flowers on four days in succession and then quadrupled the recipe; after enjoying burgers for two meals, eighteen burgers went in the freezer for the fall and winter.
The second recipe is for pancakes made with fresh lemon juice and zest. The zest and dandelion petals add a nice yellow color in the pancakes, and the fresh lemon juice, added both before and after cooking, makes the flavor pop. Both of these recipes are adapted from versions I found online, with an emphasis on whole-grain flours.
Dandelion Petal and Chickpea Burgers
Directions:
Serve on half a bagel or inside half a pita. Good with mustard, dill pickles, or melted Swiss cheese and lettuce or peppers. Cooked burgers freeze well and can be warmed up in the microwave.
Dandelion Petal Pancakes
Directions:
Googling “dandelion flower recipes” yields recipes for lots of other dishes, including fried whole flowers, soups, fritters, cookies, bread, and even dandelion flower syrup and wine. Enjoy a taste of spring!
Editor’s note: A slightly different version of this report was published by ELi in 2015. The author updated the first paragraph and the recipes, improving them based on experience.
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