Easy Stinging Nettle Recipes You'll Love • New Life On A Homestead (2024)

Eating wild never tasted so good! If you love spinach, you will love stinging nettles. Even if you hate spinach, like I do, you’ll probably still really enjoy cooking and baking with the foraged medicinal weed!

Stinging nettles boast a decidedly nut and spinach taste, but not to an overwhelming degree. They are poisonous to eat raw, but once the nettles are boiled, they are safe to consume. Boiling nettles also causes them to lose their sting. They make yummy ingredients in paste dishes, casseroles, soups, omelets, and salads.

Picking the nettles requires wearing work gloves, they do sting – and I mean a lot! The tiny little hairs present on the “stingers” on the leaves of the nettles make touching them something you never want to do twice. Stinging nettles grow throughout the vast majority of the United States, and tend to favor ravines and creek beds.

The prime harvesting season of nettles is very short. They taste best when picked first thing in the spring through the early weeks of summer when the plants are 4 – 8 in ( 10 – 20 cm) tall. As the stinging nettles grow older, their fibers become extremely tough and have the consistency of dental floss – making them rather unpleasant to chew.

Do not harvest stinging nettles to cook or bake with after they have flowered. At this point during the growing season, the aging leaves possess cystoliths that often cause an irritation of the kidneys. It is deemed acceptable to use flowered stinging nettles for us in making herbal powders and teas because the cystoliths compounds are eliminated during the drying process required to make the above noted items.

Stinging nettles have long been used by herbalists as a diuretic, and to help restore good gut bacteria to the body and to stem blood loss from woods or after giving birth. Folks suffering from gout, common skin rashes, arthritis, an eczema have found some relief from their conditions by eating stinging nettles or using home remedies made from the foraged weeds.

To help or prevent hay fever and similar allergies, drinking 2 cups of a tea made from stinging nettles on a daily basis has proven useful for some sufferers. Drinking the tea prior to the arrival of the allergy season is often recommended by herbalists.

Want to have beautiful, glossy, and quick-growing hair? Stinging nettles may be able to help with that too. Rinsing your hair in a nettles tea, especially one that also includes rosemary, may stimulate the growth of hair follicles, deter split ends, and produce a luxurious sheen to your locks.

Preparing and Preserving Stinging Nettles

You can freeze, dehydrate, and water bath can stinging nettles so you can enjoy the fresh taste of spring all year long.

• Freezing – Boil or team the stinging nettles to cook them slightly. Then rinse the nettles in cold water and place them in a strainer until they are completely dry. Store them in a freezer bag until ready to use.

• Water Bath Canning – Can stinging nettles as you would spinach.

• Boiling – Put the stinging nettles in a pot and boil for at least five but not more than 15 minutes. Strain the nettles. Now that the stingers have been removed, they can safely be used in your favorite recipes. Some folks use the water strained away from the nettles as a herbal tea. It can taste a little bit bitter, adding honey may make the herbal tea much more tasty.

• Steaming – Put the stinging nettles in a steaming basket or colander and steam for at least five but no more than 10 minutes.

• Sauteing – The stinging nettles must be sautee until they are fully cooked. This take about five to eight minutes for a bout two quarts of the foraged edibles.

#1. Stinging Nettles Dip

Ingredients

• 1 cup of stinging nettles – blanched
• ¾ of a cup of yogurt – Greek yogurt highly recommended
• A pinch of cayenne pepper
• 2 tablespoons of olive oil
• 1 tablespoon of lemon juice
• 1.4 cup of mint leaves
• 5 cloves of roasted garlic or 1 clove of fresh garlic

Instructions

1. Chop the stinging nettles into roughly shape cubes by hand or in a food processor.

2. Pour all of the ingredients into a blender or food processor and pulsate for about 45 seconds or until smooth.

3. Serve on crackers, toast, or chips. If stored in an airtight container the stinging nettles dip should keep for about one week.

#2. Stinging Nettles Beer

It takes approximately 2 pounds of stinging nettles leaves to make a full batch of beer. The top leaves of the weed are the most fresh and are the best ones to pick when making “weed beer.”

To make a non-alcohol tea instead, simply allow the water remaining in the mix pot after blanching the nettles leave to make the beer, to cool and pour it over ice. Stinging nettles tea has long been believed to improve the milk production of a nursing mother and to heal both mouth sores and scratchy throats due to the common cold and flu. The tea can also be poured into bath water to ease the inflammation and stiffness of sore joints, muscles, and bones.

• 1 large to extra large dandelion root.
• 1 sachet of wine yeast
• 1 tablespoon of ginger – dried is best but powdered will also work.
• ½ teaspoon of squeezing from a fresh lemon, lemon juice, or citric acid
• 3 cup or so, of sugar- white cane sugar works the best.

Directions

1.In a large pot filled about half way up with water, boil the stinging nettles leaves and the dandelion root.

2. Strain the mixture into a fermenting cask or container.

3. Pour in the lemon squeezings, juice, or citric acid and the ginger.

4. Once the stinging nettles mixture has cooled down to at least 90 degrees, sprinkle in the wine years compound. Once it yeast begins to “grow” it will convert the sugar already present in the ethanol, into alcohol. A brown foam should materialize on the surface.

5. After the brown foam sinks down into the mixture, the fermentation process has finished and it is time to pour the stinging nettles beer into bottles.

6. Add about ½ a teaspoon of sugar to each pint bottle of beer. The beer is not ready to drink until the mixture has fully settled and the inside of the bottles appears almost entirely clear.

#3. Stinging Nettles Lasagna

Ingredients

• 3 tablespoons of olive oil
• 2 pinches of oregano
• 1 onion – diced
• 6 cups of stinging nettles
• 2 pinches of oregano
• 6 tablespoons of butter
• 2 pounds of asparagus
• 1 pound of hamburger or sausage
• 4 ounces of your favorite cheese
• 2 cups of peas – optional
• 2 thinly sliced lemons
• ½ cup of flour – all-purpose recommended
• ½ up of Parmesan cheese
• 4 ½ cups of milk
• 12 lasagna noodles – the no boil version makes the prep time easier
• salt and pepper to taste

Instructions

1. Preheat the oven to 350F (176 C).
2. Boil the stinging nettles.
3. Clean and cut the tips off of the asparagus – then cut them into spears about ½ long.
4. Brown the hamburger or sausage then strain the grease.
5. Put the olive oil in a pot and sautee the onion and asparagus until they are crisp yet still tender – about four minutes over medium to medium-high heat.
6. Pour in the stinging nettles and peas and sautee until they are fully cooked, about three minutes.
7. Place the lemon slices in a pot and cover them with water. Bring the mixture to a boil and then turn down the heat and allow the pot to simmer for six to eight minutes. Then remove the lemon slices and allow them to dry on a paper towel.
8. Melt the butter in a pot and pour in the flour. Allow the mixture to cook for two to three minutes.
9. Whisk in the milk and bring the sauce to a boil. Turn down the heat and allow the mixture to simmer for about one minute.
10. Remove the pot from the heat and whisk in the salt, pepper, and cheeses.
11. Layer a 9 X 13 baking dish with the lasagna noodles and cover with the sauce.
12. Add a layer of sauce, half of the meat, another layer of noodles, followed by the rest of the meat, and a final layer of the sauteed nettles sauce.
13. Arrange the lemons on top of the stinging nettles lasagna an then bake the dish for 28 minutes. Allow the lasagna to settle and cool for 10 minutes before eating. Serves about eight people.

#4. Stinging Nettles Pie

Ingredients and Directions

• Your favorite pie dough crust – using a package pasty dough works well also, if you are pressed for time.
• 1 pound of stinging nettles. Rinse them in cold water, blanch, and drain.
• Squeeze out any excess water with your hands and toss like you would salad.
• Chop up the nettles finely by hand or in a food processor.
• Mix the nettles with 1 pound of cottage cheese.
• Mix in 1 teaspoon of lemon zest.
• Add in about 2 teaspoons of nutmeg – or to taste.
• Mix in ¾ of a cup of Parmesan cheese.
• Add a pinch each of salt and pepper
• Add 1 egg and stir.
• Crumble 3 tablespoons of Feta cheese – or to taste.
• Stir or blend until the mixture is smooth.
• Place some olive oil, coconut oil, or butter – bacon fat works great too, into a pot and sautee 1 cup of onion.
• Add a pinch of whole cloves into the pot.
• Add ½ cup of slice mushrooms to the sautee pot – or to taste.
• Optional – add a pinch each of thyme and dill.
• Remove the pot from the heat and add the nettles and cottage cheese.
• Stir and thoroughly warm through the mix.
• Pour into the pie crust and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese – nuts make a great topper as well!
• Bake at 375 degrees for 45 minutes. Allow the stinging nettles pie to cool and settle for 10 minutes before serving.

#5. Stinging Nettles Ravioli

Ingredients and Directions

• Boil, rinse in cold water, and strain 1 cup of nettles.
• Put a second pot of water on to boil – add a pinch of salt to the water.
• Squeeze the nettles and toss.
• In a bowl, combine the nettles with ½ cup of ricotta cheese – or your favorite cheese.
• Add ¼ cup of Parmesan cheese to the pot.
• Squeeze in the juice from one lemon or about 2 tablespoons of lemon juice.
• Add a pinch of two of salt and pepper.
• Use your favorite paste recipe, or store bought ravioli shells or pastry dough to make a housing for the stinging nettles mixture.
• Fill the pasta with the mixture and pinch all sides close thoroughly.
• Drop the stinging nettles raviolis into the pot of boiling water.
• Remove each ravioli when it floats to the top of the pot. Use a slotted spoon and allow the ravioli pockets to dry before placing in a casserole dish.
• Warm a little bit of butter in a small bowl, toss in a pinch of oregano, sage, basil, or your favorite spices, and baste the ravioli – optional. You can also cover with your favorite pasta sauce before serving.

#6. Stinging Nettles Smoothie

Ingredients

• 1 cup of boiled, rinsed, and cooled stinging nettles
• ½ cup of strawberries
• 3 tablespoon of honey
• 1 stick of rhubarb – optional
• 1 teaspoon of cinnamon – optional
• ½ cup or orange or pineapple juice
• 3 cups of ice – more if you would like a thicker smoothie
Directions
Pour all of the ingredients into a blender, add more ice if needed, pour into a cup and enjoy!
Sauteed Stinging Nettles

Ingredients

• 3 cups of boiled, rinsed, and strained stinging nettles
• 1 tablespoon of garlic
• 2 tablespoons of olive oil – more if necessary
• A pinch each of salt, pepper, onion powder, bacon bits, and turmeric

Directions

1. Pour the olive oil into a skillet on medium-high heat.
2. Pour in all of the other ingredients and sautee for about five minutes.
3. You can eat the dish alone after it has cooled enough to taste, or pour over pasta.

#6. Stinging Nettles Cake and Blackberry Cake

Ingredients

• 2 cups of stinging nettles
• ¾ cup of sugar
• ¾ cup of softened butter
• 2 teaspoons of baking powder
• 3 eggs
• 2 cups of all-purpose flour
• 1 to 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract
• ½ teaspoon of salt
• ½ teaspoon of lemon zest or lemon juice

Directions

1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees
2. Grease two 7-inch baking pans
3. Boil, rinse, and strain the stinging nettles
4. Cream together the sugar and butter in a large bowl
5. Add in the eggs then beat thoroughly
6. Mix in the lemon zest or lemon juice and vanilla extract
7. Sift in the baking powder and the flour and beat again
8. Add in the sat and mix thoroughly
9. Pour the mixture into the baking pans
10. Bake for 24 minutes and then allow to cool on baking racks for 10 minutes
11. Ice the cake with your favorite icing – buttercream or lemon buttercream is highly recommended
12. Top with 1 cup (or so) of blackberries and a sprinkling of lemon zest – optional

#7. Stinging Nettle Soup

Ingredients

• 1 pound of boiled, rinsed, and strained stinging nettles
• 2 chopped carrots
• 1 large cauliflower – chopped finely
• ½ cup of mint leaves – optional, basil leaves work well also
• 2 to 3 finely chopped leaks – optional but recommended
• 4 finely chopped whole cloves
• 4 cups of liquid vegetables stock
• Salt and pepper to taste – 2 pinches recommended
• 2 to 3 tablespoons of either coconut oil or olive oil

Directions

1. When boiling the stinging nettles, the mint or basil leaves can be added to the same pot for boiling, as well.

2. Blend the mixture after blanching but putting it into a food processor or blender with ¼ cup of cold water. It should have a smoothie type consistency when finished.

3. Heat the olive oil in a cook pot and then add in the carrots and garlic and leeks. Steam or “sweat” the mixture for approximately 15 minutes on low heat.

4. Ad in the cauliflower and vegetable stock and bring to a boil. Simmer the mixture for 15 to 20 minutes.

5. Once the mixture has cooled to about room temperature, puree or pulse it in a blender or food processor. Then mix together with the stinging nettles smoothie mixture.

6. Add in the salt and pepper.

7. Warm the combined mixture through on low to low-medium heat and serve.

#8. Stinging Nettles Tea

Ingredients

• 2 cups of boiled, rinsed, and drained stinging nettles
• 2 tablespoon of peppermint leaves or oil
• 2 teaspoons of honey
• 2 tablespoons of chamomile
• 1 teaspoon of thyme
• 1 teaspoon of sage
• ½ teaspoon of basil
• 1 teaspoon of lemon – zest, powder, or balm
• Pinch of coconut oil – optional

Directions

1. Pulse all of the ingredients in a food processor or blender

2. Brew the stinging nettles tea by combining about 3 teaspoons of dried ingredients per pot of water. If making just a single cup of the tea at a time, use teaspoon of dried ingredients per cup of water.

#9. Stinging Nettles Omelet

Ingredients

• 1 ½ cups of boiled, rinsed, and strained stinging nettles
• 7 ounces of your favorite cheese
• 5 eggs
• 2 teaspoon of baking powder
• ¾ cup of flour
• 7 ounces of your favorite yogurt
• Salt and pepper to taste

Directions

1. Preheat over to 350 degrees.
2. Grease or line small to medium sized baking dish.
3. Crack the eggs into a bowl and mix thoroughly.
4. Mix in the cheese and yogurt.
5. Add in the stinging nettles followed by the baking powder and mix thoroughly again.
6. Mix in the salt and pepper and optional seasonings like bacon bits, green onions, and salsa.
7. Pour into dish and bake for 45 to 50 minutes. Allow to cool and settle for about five minutes before serving.

#10. Stinging Nettles Wraps

Ingredients

  • 3 cups of boiled, rinsed, and strained stinging nettles – allow the nettles to wilt for several minutes in the rinse water before straining
  • 4 cups of flour – and more if needed
  • 2 eggs
  • ¼ to ½ teaspoon of salt

Directions

1. Put the wilted stinging nettles into a blender and pulsate until smooth.
2. Put the nettles in a bowl and whisk in the salt and flout.
3. Mix in the eggs – you can add a spoonful of water if the mixture is to dry to stir thoroughly.
4. Divide the dough in half and knead completely.
5. Roll each half of the dough into a ball and chill for about 15 minutes in the refrigerator.
6. Remove the chilled dough from the refrigerator and divide each ball into about 5 smaller balls.
7. Roll each ball out so that is resembles a wrap, burrito, or tortilla shape and thickness.
8. Place each wrap into a skilled and brown over medium-high heat for about two minutes per size – or until brown spots appear.
9. Fill with your favorite taco mix or sandwich spread, and enjoy!

Wrap-Up

These are just a few of the tasty recipes you can make with foraged stinging nettles. They can be substituted for spinach, kale, and lettuce – or in addition to, in about any dish you routinely make around the homestead.

Have a stinging nettles recipe or experience of your own? Please share it with our homesteading community in the comments section.

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Easy Stinging Nettle Recipes You'll Love • New Life On A Homestead (2024)

FAQs

What can I mix with stinging nettle? ›

Studies in people suggest that stinging nettle, in combination with other herbs (especially saw palmetto), may be effective at relieving symptoms such as reduced urinary flow, incomplete emptying of the bladder, post urination dripping, and the constant urge to urinate.

What to do with fresh stinging nettles? ›

What kinds of foods can I make with Stinging Nettle? Steam on veggie stir fry or mix in like spinach. Stinging nettle can substitute for spinach in any cooked recipe (they lose their sting when cooked). You can add them to lasagna, make pasta with them, throw them in soups or stews, etc.

How do you prepare stinging nettle for eating? ›

Once the nettles have been washed, pick the leaves off the stalk. At this point, it's best to think of stinging nettles in a similar fashion to spinach in terms of cooking the leaves. Quickly blanching them in a pot of boiling water will deaden the sting.

What kills stinging nettles but not grass? ›

To kill nettles in grazed paddocks or agricultural grassland we would recommend a selective weed killer which would tackle the problem of the nettles but will not harm the grassland surrounding them. For knapsack application, Grazon Pro is the best solution for the problem.

When should you not eat stinging nettles? ›

Nettles should not be eaten once they have flowered but can be cut back to produce young flowerless nettles in no time. A very abundant and under used superfood that is very easy to identify if a little painful to collect without gloves.

Who should avoid stinging nettle? ›

Avoid stinging nettle if you're allergic or sensitive to nettle or plants in the same family. Avoid if you're pregnant or breastfeeding because there isn't enough information on its safety. Use with caution if you're elderly because of the potential of causing low blood pressure.

Can you eat stinging nettle leaves? ›

They can be used medicinally, ceremonially and as a highly nutritious food source. Roots, seeds, stems and young, tender leaves are all edible. Native Indigenous people use stinging nettle for medicine, ceremony and as a food source. Mature fibrous stems have been used to make rope, cloth and fishing net.

How do you use stinging nettle for arthritis? ›

You can apply stinging nettle to the skin around the painful area. Common side-effects include itching and a tingling sensation. Because it can be applied to the skin, it's unlikely that it'll affect other medications.

Can you eat stinging nettle stems? ›

For being so prickly, stinging nettle offers a surprising assortment of food! People pick the roots, seeds, stems, young shoots and leaves of stinging nettle for food or medicinal use. Tall, mature plants can even be harvested for their long fibres which are ideal for making textiles or ropes.

What does cooked stinging nettle taste like? ›

What Does Nettle Taste Like? Nettle tastes like spinach, but a bit punchier. "It's a distinctive taste, characteristic of edible wild plants in general: a bright green note that makes you sit up and pay attention, with a peppery zing.

Why do people eat stinging nettle? ›

Young nettle leaves blanched to draw their sting may serve as an alternative to spinach or chard, and dieticians recognise that cooked nettle leaves contain vitamins A and C, iron, potassium, manganese and calcium, with those gathered in peak spring and summer condition boasting 25% protein.

Is there a difference between stinging nettles and nettles? ›

The only “difference” is that the leaf is merely a part of the whole plant. Stinging nettle can be divided into six subspecies, and five of them have stinging hairs called trichomes, which will inject chemicals that produce a stinging sensation upon contact.

Do dead stinging nettles still sting? ›

White dead-nettle is a common plant of roadside verges, waste grounds and grassy banks - anywhere the ground has been disturbed. Like yellow archangel, and other members of the dead-nettle family, it doesn't have stinging leaves.

Are stinging nettles good for the soil? ›

If you choose to remove or cut back stinging nettles, use the shoots to make a free, natural, environmentally-friendly liquid fertiliser. For information on making and using natural plant feeds, including nettle liquid feed, see our page on fertilisers.

What herbs can you mix with stinging nettle? ›

Infusions are an excellent way to enjoy nettle's nutritional benefits, and they can be surprisingly refreshing as well! For a brighter flavor, combine with mint, lemon balm, or lemon verbena, or for a warmer and more stimulating brew, add a few sprigs of rosemary or thyme.

Can you mix nettle with other herbs? ›

Pairing it with other herbs is a way to emphasize specific aspects of its medicine. For instance, nettle and rosehips are each nourishing herbs, and when taken together they cover more bases than either one could do alone.

Can you take turmeric and stinging nettle together? ›

Turmeric also helps to increase circulation as well as proctect the liver. If you combine Indian turmeric and ginger with nettle and artichoke, you will get a powerful herbal combination, which has dual action as both anti-inflammatory and a detoxifying complex for supple joints.

Can I blend stinging nettle? ›

Eating raw nettle leaves is normally not recommended, as the stinging hairs will cause a reaction – but blending the nettles in this smoothie recipe breaks the stinging hairs. However, make sure to take care when picking and handling the nettles beforehand.

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