I spent the past 5 years or so making our own organic wine and jam from scratch - all from what I grew myself or foraged from the adjacent forest/fields. We love it, although I don't make it much now without the equipment and we don't drink much in our new lifestyle. It is a very healthy way to preserve the pure juice of nature's bounty. I made: wild grape, raspberry, rhubarb, strawberry, blackberry, chocolate mint, dandelion, crab apple, apple, ground cherry, rose petal, lilac, hibiscus, pea pod (sugar snap). I had plans and recipes worked out to make many others too, just never got to it. Some of them I made in one gallon batches and some in 5 gallon batches. I sold everything I had to make it before we left our house.<br><br>Before we moved into our camper, we were living in an old farmhouse in the country. I had installed many large garden areas and we were surrounded by wild fields and forest. I foraged all the time. The house and out buildings have all been torn down now and it's just an empty lot but I hope people will forage there. I left so much growing: a large strawberry bed gone wild, large domestic raspberries, apples, large blackberries, wild grapes, and many, many herbs, including choc mint. You can see some of the wines I made here:<br><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a href="
http://providence-acres.blogspot.ca/2012/06/finishing-wines.html" rel="nofollow">"Finishing the Wines"</a></em></span><br><br>I wrote a book on the subject of making your own organic wine at home. (Another free e-book). I also wrote a small book on foraging but it is geared to what grows in southern Ontario, although will probably apply across the mid north eastern US as well. There are a few other books there, as well. One on making your own soap. You can get them here, if interested: <br><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a href="
http://providence-acres.blogspot.ca/p/free-books-for-download.html" rel="nofollow">Free E-Books</a></em></span><br><br>I love to forage! Since we have been up here I have picked and used wild strawberries and wild low bush highland blueberries. Very good! I am always on the lookout for things to forage, medicinal herbs included. Many good medicinal herbs grow by the roadside! You can get a lot of info from Google and books. <em>I am not an herbalist and do not give out information about what to do with them. <br><br></em>I have been told that the wild <em><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="
http://www.gov.mb.ca/agriculture/crops/medicinal/bkq00s05.html" rel="nofollow">fireweed</a></span></em> that grows everywhere here is edible and I know campers that have made jam from it. If we are still up here next summer, I might give that a try! (after doing my own research on it, of course.) I also want to make dandelion syrup. <em><br><br><br></em>