Samphire, a.k.a seabeans, sea asparagus, salicornia, or picklewort, thrives in the marshy, sandy shores of Three Mile Harbor in East Hampton. It’s also abundant in other pebbly places around Gardiner’s Bay where there the tides flow gently. Look for a flat strip of land at water’s edge that’s flooded at high tide.
They clusters proliferate in these tidal zones. Samphire looks like tiny seguaro cacti, 8″ tall, very slender, with very light branching. They’re a land plant, not a seaweed, so they don’t like to be drowned. The tops of the plants always clear the top of the water.
I use scissors to gather it. Grab a clump and cut it off near the base. This method does require picking through when you rinse it to remove marsh grasses and other small beach weeds that might have gotten entangled. If you’re not gathering a lot you can break the stalks off one by one, with your fingers.
(Unlike truffles, dogs aren’t particularly helpful on samphire gathering expeditions but Croce, our Chesapeake Bay Retriever, age 11, looks the part of happy participant so I couldn’t help including this photo.)
Lightly steamed samphire is wonderful enhancement to salads and fish dishes. Makes a great pickle too.
SAMPHIRE AND ASPARAGUS SALAD
Recipe
1 lb. asparagus
1 c. fresh samphire, washed, brown ends trimmed off
2 T. olive oil
1 t. cider vinegar
1 T. lemon juice
1/2 shallot, finely chopped (1 T.)
salt and pepper
Blanch the samphire 3 minutes, refresh in cold water, drain well, pat dry
Peel asparagus if thick. Blanch until al dente, depending on size and if peeled, 2 – 5 minutes. Refresh in cold water, drain, pat dry.
Make vinaigrette,whisk. Toss the asparagus and samphire. garnish with lemon slices.
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