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You are here: Home / Foraging / Foraging Dock Seeds ~ Wild Foraged Flour

Foraging Dock Seeds ~ Wild Foraged Flour

March 10, 2019 by Ashley Adamant 23 Comments

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Dock seeds are readily available in the wild, and they can be ground into a wild foraged flour with minimal preparation.

While some of the foraged “flour” you can make seems a bit of a stretch, yellow dock is actually a distant relative of buckwheat.  The seeds have a similar taste, can be toasted and ground into a wild foraged gluten-free flour.

Foraged Yellow Dock Seed for Wild Foraged Flour

With two toddlers in the house, this year’s foraging often meant crafting wild foraged treats to peak a little one’s excitement.  Foraging with kids can be a challenge, but there’s nothing like bringing back a haul and then spending a bit of quality time in the kitchen making wild foraged cookies as a family.  

Often the “flour” you can harvest in the wild isn’t exactly what we’d call flour in the grocery store.  Red clover flour, for example, is made from a blossom rather than a grain, so it’ll cook very differently.  Similarly, pine bark flour or birch bark flour are made from tree bark, not grain.

If you want real “flour” you need to harvest seed and dock seeds fit the bill nicely. 

Urban Yellow Dock

The plants themselves are cosmopolitan, growing just about everywhere in the world.  They’re considered a noxious invasive in many places, and for good reason. 

Once dock plants get established they really take over.  Prolific seed production, combined with a weedy persistence that just needs the smallest crack to thrive. 

Add in a perennial growth habit, and you’ve got a recipe for a persistent weed…that just happens to be a good wild food source in both the country and city. 

Dock seeds are abundant much of the year, which is especially convenient when you’re foraging in the winter or late fall when other foods are scarce.  The seed stalks persist through the winter months, and since they’re quite tall they’ll remain available above the snow. 

Foraging Dock Seed in Winter

Harvesting Dock Seed Mid-Winter

Dock plants are perennials, which means they re-sprout from the same spot year after year.  In the very late winter and early spring, the new dock plants will sprout and begin to form leaves right under last year’s seed stalks.  As that new green growth begins, last year’s seeds are often still clinging to the stalk.

Since dock seeds persist all the way until spring greens sprout, their form allows you to keep foraging during an otherwise bleak early spring mud season.  They’ll bring a smile to my face in the spring landscape, long before the first dandelion blossoms.

Dock Seed in Early Spring

Harvesting dock seed in the early spring. Last year’s stalk is still standing, and this year’s greens have already sprouted.

The individual seeds are inside of a papery husk, and it can be difficult to winnow the seeds from the chaff.  I’ve read about multiple methods, none of which seem to be very effective. 

The general conclusion seems to be…skip it.  Grind the whole seed and chaff into flour, and get a bit of extra fiber in your diet.

The chaff of dock seed doesn’t have much in the way of nutrition, but it won’t hurt you and it’ll help add bulk to your diet.  Dock seeds can be used whole to make dock seed crackers, but for most purposes, it’s better to grind it into flour.

To make dock seed flour, start by collecting as much dock seed as you can.  The seeds come off the stalk easily once they’re dried, and in an area full of dock seed you should be able to collect several cups in just a few minutes.

Attempting to grind the raw seeds is difficult since while they seem dry in hand, the husks are still quite supple.  To really grind easily, the seeds need to be very dry.  I’ve found the best method is to toast them on a tray in the oven for about 8-10 minutes. 

Be careful to just toast them, not allowing them to burn.  Let the dock seeds cool completely before grinding them in a food processor.  (or mortar and pestle if you prefer)

Grinding Dock Seed Flour

The flour can be substituted into your recipes for about up to 1/4 of the flour in the recipe.  Keep in mind that it doesn’t have gluten, so the bread won’t rise as high and the texture will be heavier.  It’s best to use it in things like crackers or brownies where a heavy texture works well.

How Does Dock Seed Flour Taste?

For an all wild foraged cookie, we mixed dock seed flour with a bit of pine bark flour to make these bark cookies. The kids really enjoyed them, but to me, they mostly tasted like what they were…bark.  The flavor of these had more to do with the bark than the dock seeds, and in general, the seeds of yellow dock taste good, a bit like buckwheat. 

The main difference?  Dock seeds have quite a bit of bitterness that you don’t generally find in supermarket flours.

Pine Bark Cookies

Samuel Thayer describes many different preparations for dock in his book Nature’s Garden.  After going through different ways to cook dock shoots, greens, and roots, he moves on to the seeds noting that “This is the last and perhaps least edible part of this incredibly versatile food plant. 

Dock is in the same family as buckwheat, and its seed resembles those of buckwheat in miniature…The seeds themselves are unpleasantly bitter.”

I’ll grant they are bitter, but to my palate, they’re actually the most edible part of the plant.  The roots of yellow dock, which many people describe eating, caused me to spend 10 minutes trying to scrub the taste off my tongue. 

The leaves are only slightly better.  The seeds though aren’t half bad in my book, and they’re readily available.  To each his own I guess?

Dock Seed Flour Recipes

While you can try substituting dock seed flour into your own recipes, here are a few ideas to try with your wild foraged grain:

  • Dock Seed Brownies – Learning and Yearning
  • Double Chocolate Curly Dock Seed Cake – Gather Victoria
  • Dock Seed Berry Cake – North West Forager
  • Dock Seed Crackers – Homegrown and Hand Gathered
  • 100% Dock Seed Bread – Sparrow Chef
  • Dock and Lambs Quarter Crackers – Edible Wild Food (These also require foraging lambs quarter seed, also known as wild quinoa, which is just as common as the wild dock.

Foraging Dock Seeds for Wild Foraged Flour ~ Yellow dock produces tiny seeds, similar to buckwheat, which can be ground into flour for baking. Since dock plants are common around the world, this is an easily accessible source of wild foraged flour. #yellowdock #herbs #uses #foraged #flour #recipe

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Comments

  1. Mary

    April 1, 2018 at 3:41 am

    What does the plant look like?

    Reply
    • Ashley Adamant

      April 2, 2018 at 12:09 am

      Good question. I need to add some summer plant pictures, all those seed stalk pictures were taken in late March, after the stalks had overwintered. I’ll add in some plant photos when they pop up in the summer. Here’s some pictures (and a way to eat the leaves) in the meantime: https://honest-food.net/curly-dock-edible/

      Reply
  2. Cheryl

    April 8, 2018 at 9:05 pm

    Very interesting. Thanks for sharing. I would love to see what the flour looks like after it’s ground.

    Reply
  3. Milla Ezman

    November 7, 2018 at 3:46 pm

    what is the seeds nutritional and medicinal value? constituents? do you know?

    Reply
    • Ashley Adamant

      December 20, 2018 at 3:43 pm

      A good question, but I don’t have the answer. I did a bit of research but didn’t come up with anything.

      Reply
  4. Lindsey

    March 19, 2019 at 8:05 pm

    Before I attempt to grind the seeds in my flour mill, I’m going to ask if anyone else has tried this and if their mill survived?

    Reply
    • Ashley Adamant

      March 20, 2019 at 1:13 am

      Ha…I haven’t tried it, but I wish you luck. Let me know how it goes!

      Reply
  5. Carlisle

    June 9, 2019 at 1:51 pm

    The greens are amazing and my favorite salad ingredient. (If they are harvested from plants that grow away from traffic and, most importantly, in a shady area.)

    Reply
  6. Isabelle Spence-Legault

    October 2, 2019 at 10:46 am

    Thanks for this! I was just wondering how long I should expect the flour to last? I am assuming that the freezer in a tightly sealed container is my best bet (I do this with my flour too)…

    Reply
  7. Janice Christie

    August 17, 2020 at 4:49 pm

    I looked at these recipes and some specify yellow dock and others curly dock. Does it matter which dock is used? If so, what is the difference in the taste? Thanks!

    Reply
    • Administrator

      March 9, 2021 at 8:34 pm

      Yellow dock and curly dock are both common names for the same rumex species, Rumex crispus.

      Reply
  8. Donna R Crews

    March 11, 2021 at 3:15 pm

    I wonder if the bitterness could be removed by boiling/rinsing, the way folks do with bitter acorns to leach out tannins. Burdock does contain tannins. Then dry the seed and process into flour.

    Reply
    • lisa

      June 22, 2021 at 2:58 pm

      Burdock (Arctium) and dock (Rumex) aren’t the same plant, but they both contain tannins.

      Reply
  9. Wren

    June 22, 2021 at 3:40 pm

    Haha, we seem to fall on opposite sides of the dock spectrum! I feast on the leaves all spring, but I just…can’t…stand the seeds, no matter how hard I’ve tried. Perhaps the bitterness just hits me in a different way? Or, I wonder if it’s my particular strain of local curly dock that makes it taste so unpleasant, or if some of us are genetically disposed to taste different flavors differently? No one will research it, of course, but it’s a curious thing to ponder. Thanks for your write up–I enjoy comparing foraging notes with you.

    Reply
    • Administrator

      July 1, 2021 at 5:35 pm

      You’re welcome. So glad you enjoyed the post.

      Reply
  10. Emilee

    June 13, 2022 at 2:11 pm

    Must we wait for fall and winter to harvest? Here in Pennsylvania in mid-June our curly dock plants are loaded with green seeds. Can I dry, roast then grind these green seeds?

    Reply
    • Administrator

      June 14, 2022 at 6:34 pm

      You can forage dock seeds any time of the year.

      Reply
      • Emilee

        June 15, 2022 at 1:12 am

        Thanks so much for your knowledge! Igot some drying in the oven right now : )

        Reply
        • Administrator

          June 20, 2022 at 7:52 pm

          You’re very welcome.

          Reply
  11. Mirjam

    July 25, 2022 at 10:40 am

    I’ve just ground my first batch and will use some in my sourdough loaf. Do you have any information on the nutritional profile of the seeds? Thank you!

    Reply
    • Administrator

      August 23, 2022 at 4:23 pm

      I’m sorry I don’t have that information but if you find out let us know.

      Reply

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I’m an off-grid homesteader in rural Vermont and the author of Practical Self Reliance, a blog that helps people find practical ways to become more self-reliant. Read More…

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