FabulousFusionFood's Cook's Guide for Dulse Home Page

Fronds of dulse Fronds of dulse Palmaria palmata.
Welcome to the summary page for FabulousFusionFood's Cook's Guide entry for Dulse along with all the Dulse containing recipes presented on this site, with 39 recipes in total.

This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Dulse recipes added to this site.

These recipes, all contain Dulse as a major wild food ingredient.

Dulse, (also known as Purple Laver, Dillisk, Dilysg or Creathnach) Palmaria palmata is is a red alga that grows along the northern coasts of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, where it is a traditional food. It grows attached attached to rocks by a holdfast and is commonly used in Ireland and Atlantic Canada both as food and medicinally.

Dulse grows from the mid-tide portion of the intertidal zone (the area between the high tide and low tide) and into deep water. Fronds may vary from rose to reddish-purple, and range from about 20 to 40 cm. From June through September, it is picked by hand at low water, brought to drying fields (or spreading grounds) and put through a shaker to remove snails, shell pieces, etc. The fronds are spread thinly on netting and left to dry, turned once and rolled into large bales to be packaged or ground later. Sun-dried dulse is eaten as is or is ground to flakes or a powder. It can also be pan fried quickly into chips, baked in the oven covered with cheese with salsa, or simply microwaved briefly. It can also be used in soups, chowders, sandwiches and salads, or added to bread/pizza dough. Fresh dulse can be eaten directly off the rocks before sun-drying.

Dulse (known in Welsh as dilysg) occurs in the Mabinogi of Math mab Mathnowy as one of the things that the enchanter, Math uses to construct a boat.




The alphabetical list of all Dulse recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 39 recipes in total:

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Barra Dulse
     Origin: Scotland
Dulse Slaw
     Origin: Britain
Pickled Dulse
     Origin: Britain
Buttered Dulse
     Origin: Britain
Dulse Soda Bread
     Origin: Ireland
Pork and Wild Food Curry
     Origin: Britain
Buttered Petalonia
     Origin: Britain
Dulse Soda Scones
     Origin: Ireland
Potato Pancakes with Dulse
     Origin: Ireland
Cawl Cennin a Dilysg
(cawl-cennin-dilysg)
     Origin: Welsh
Dulse-dressed Prawns
     Origin: Ireland
Quatre Algues
(Four-seaweed blend)
     Origin: France
Caws Pob Dilysg
(Dulse Welsh Rarebit)
     Origin: Welsh
Fish Pie with Dulse
     Origin: Scotland
Salad Gwydrwymon gyda Ffenigl ac Oren
(Gutweed Salad with Fennel and Orange)
     Origin: Welsh
Dried Dulse
     Origin: Ireland
Fisherman's Brewis
     Origin: Ireland
Salmon and Dulse Fishcakes
     Origin: Scotland
Dried Pepper Dulse
     Origin: Scotland
Goosegrass and Wild Greens Soup
     Origin: Britain
Salutiamoci
(Courgette and Onion Lacto-fermented
Pickles with Dulse)
     Origin: Italy
Dulse and Beans
     Origin: Britain
Gutweed Salad with Fennel and Orange
     Origin: Britain
Scotch Broth with Pepper Dulse
     Origin: Scotland
Dulse and Chocolate Bouchons
     Origin: France
Hebridean Dulse Broth
     Origin: Scotland
Seaweed Salt
     Origin: Britain
Dulse Croquettes
     Origin: Scotland
Honey-roasted Sea Lettuce
     Origin: Britain
Seaweed Seasoning
     Origin: Britain
Dulse Muffins
     Origin: Britain
Irish Soda Bread with Dulse and
Guinness

     Origin: Ireland
Seaweed Vinegar
     Origin: Canada
Dulse Potato Cakes
     Origin: Ireland
Mackerel Tartare with Pickled Dulse
     Origin: Britain
Soupe à l'oignon
à la dulse

(French Onion Soup with Dulse)
     Origin: France
Dulse Quiche
     Origin: Britain
Pesto Gwymon
(Seaweed Pesto)
     Origin: Welsh
Tartare d'algues
fraîches

(Tartare of Fresh Seaweed)
     Origin: France

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