Hairy Bittercress – Identification, Edibility and Distribution
Hairy Bittercress – Cardamine Hirsuta
Also information on closely related, similar looking tasty cardamine cresses:
- Wood wavy cress – cardamine flexuosa
- Cuckoo flower/Lady’s smock – cardamine pratensis
- Large Cress – cardamine amara
- Giant cuckoo flower – cardamine raphanifolia
See also:
Hairy Bittercress
- Edibility – 4/5 – Tasty light mustard flavour, perfect for salads and garnishes
- Identification – 3/5 – Adhering to classic brassicaceae motif of cruciferous (cross-shaped) white flowers and rosettes of leaf stalks with a paired leaflets and a larger terminal lobe.
- Distribution – 5/5 – Very common, everywhere.
- Season – all year, though at its best March – August. This is a quick-growing annual, or even quicker reproducing plant, often seeding several generations per year.
- Habitat – Exposed/disturbed earth – in gardens, field edges, flower beds, even window boxes
These delicate and beautiful little “weeds” (gardeners loathe them) are a very tasty addition to any salad, though they lose their charm when cooked. They have overtones of rocket and watercress and come in lovely little garnish sized rosettes. Great in a roast beef sandwich or crab salad, or to spice up any salad. Garden pest to some, and with a somewhat unappetising name (it isn’t very hairy or bitter), it did manage to make it onto the queen’s plate as an integral part of the winning main course in “Great British Menu” a couple of years ago. I’ve noticed it getting a bit of a makeover on some menus, being referred to as “land cress”.
Hairy bittercress can appear in window boxes of apparently pristine soil almost magically. The key to their success is their ability to ping their tiny seeds from their casings (seliques). Seeds can then lay dormant for many years until their moment in the sun presents itself.
The cardamines are a sub-family of the brassicaceae, or mustard family of plants. Within clan cardamine there is a lovely hierarchy of similarly flavoured relations. In roughly ascending (they all vary according to stage of growth) order of pepperiness they are:
- Hairy bittercress (c.hirsuita)
- Wood wavy cress (c.flexuosa), distinguished by its preference for shade and wavy leaflets
- Greater cuckoo flower (c.raphanifolia), lager with pink flowers on stream edges and swamps
- Cuckoo flower, aka Lady Smock (c. pratensis), in wet meadows, with pink or white flowers, ladder-like carline leaves and a noticeable mustard kick.
- Large cress (c.amara), with white flowers and a liking for ditches and slow flowing water. This pushes the mustard flavour into almost wasabi, or at least scurvy grass territory.
As gastro-botanists (as opposed to those strange, flavourless botanists), we needn’t distinguish between these – they are all good eating. But it is fun to ID them by taste, once you’ve tuned into the basic leaf structure of the family.
My favourite swamp boasts all five of these varieties, as well as their near relation true watercress, and I love taking my guided walks there and working our way up the mustard hierarchy. Sometime we go to the coast after and continue our ascent through sea radish, scurvy grass, and finishing at the palatte-rippingly piquant sea rocket. Which you’ll probably only taste once.
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5 Comments
Do you know if the seeds are any good of the cardamine family plants and any particularly worth bothering?
The seeds of brassicas (technically “siliques” – we are talking about the full casing here) are generally pretty tasty when still green, becoming hard/tasteless as the ripen. Seeds/siliques often reflect the flavour of the plant, only in concentrated form. For me, they are too fiddly to bother with on HB. But really excellent on other brassicas – notably sea radish, sea kale, wild rocket, scurvy grass, charlock etc- use the search box for info on some of these.
That’s reply helpful, thanks you. I will try giving those ones a nibble. Many thanks
This plant has a noticeably stronger taste if eaten very young, even before a full rosette of leaves has formed. I guess that this is no surprise, given the experience with young plants (micro greens) which have become more widely known recently. The identification is easy once you have become familiar with all stages of its life cycle.
I would guess that the same trait is common to all its relatives, but have not had the courage to try with the more powerful ones yet!
I have a lot of these in my garden, but I’m not actually sure because the rosette is smaller. Are there varieties? I’m getting into native plants and these just want to take over. Should I mow and bag them before the seeds start shooting off everywhere?