History

Fiddleheads are the tightly curled shoots of the ostrich fern (Matteuccia struthiopteris), one of the few wild ferns safe to eat. They are foraged from late April to late May in Vermont, often on commercial scale by the Abenaki community and by independent foragers selling to Burlington restaurants and the Burlington Farmers Market. The dish is the Vermont equivalent of asparagus season: a 3 to 4 week window when fiddleheads appear on farm-to-table menus across the city. Hen of the Wood, Misery Loves Co. and Honey Road put them on the spring menu; the canonical preparation is the simplest. They must always be cooked, never raw.

Common allergens: Dairy

Make it at home

Yield 4Hands-on 15 minTotal 25 minDifficulty Easy

Ingredients

  • 500g fresh ostrich-fern fiddleheads, foraged or sourced from a Vermont farmers market (in season late April to late May only; substitute with fresh asparagus tips out of season, though the texture differs significantly)
  • 2 tbsp coarse sea salt for blanching water
  • 60g Vermont unsalted butter (Cabot, Vermont Creamery, or Cellars at Jasper Hill)
  • 3 garlic cloves, finely sliced
  • 1 small shallot, finely diced
  • Zest and juice of 1 lemon
  • Maldon sea salt, freshly cracked black pepper
  • A few flakes of dried red chilli (optional)
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped flat-leaf parsley
  • 30g grated parmesan or Vermont aged cheddar, for finishing

Method

  1. Clean the fiddleheads thoroughly: trim any brown ends, rub off any papery brown sheath, and rinse in three changes of cold water until all grit is gone.
  2. Bring a large pot of generously salted water to a hard boil. Drop in the fiddleheads and boil for 10 minutes (this is critical; raw fiddleheads must be cooked through to neutralise mild toxins).
  3. Drain immediately and refresh in a large bowl of ice water for 2 minutes to stop the cooking and lock in the green; drain well, pat dry.
  4. Melt the butter in a wide heavy frying pan over medium heat until it just starts to foam and turn pale gold.
  5. Add the shallots, cook 90 seconds; add the sliced garlic and cook a further 30 seconds without browning.
  6. Tip in the dry blanched fiddleheads and toss to coat in the butter; saute 3 to 4 minutes, turning often, until lightly caramelised at the edges.
  7. Off the heat, finish with lemon zest, a generous squeeze of lemon juice, Maldon salt, black pepper, and the optional chilli flakes.
  8. Plate immediately, scatter chopped parsley and grated cheese over the top. Serve as a side to grilled trout, roast chicken or as a starter on toast.

Tip from the editors. Fiddleheads must always be cooked; never serve raw or undercooked. The 10-minute blanch is non-negotiable. Forage with a knowledgeable guide if you do not know how to identify ostrich fern (other fern species are toxic and look similar in the shoot stage).

Where to eat vermont fiddleheads

Vermont Fiddleheads in Burlington

Hen of the Wood ★ 4.8

Modern EuropeanChef Eric Warnstedt$$$$$70-95 per head a la carteDaily 17:00-22:00Book 3-4 weeks ahead

Burlington's flagship farm-to-table room. James Beard nominations across multiple years; chef Eric Warnstedt opened the Waterbury original in 2005.

Misery Loves Co. ★ 4.5

New American Sandwiches and Market$$winooskiTue-Thu 15:00-21:00, Fri-Sat 17:00-21:00

Aaron Josinsky and Laura Wade's market-cum-restaurant in Winooski. Lunches, grab-and-go, natural wine and cocktails; daytime only and closes at 19:00.

Signature: Pastrami sandwich, Market plates, Wine flights

Order: The pastrami sandwich and a glass of natural orange wine.

Tip: Daytime only; closes at 19:00. Cold-case market alongside the kitchen.

Honey Road ★ 4.6

Middle EasternChef Cara Chigazola Tobin$$$$$65-90 per head a la carte mezzeMon-Thu 17:00-21:00, Fri-Sat 17:00-22:00, Sun 17:00-21:00Book 4 weeks ahead

Cara Chigazola Tobin (formerly chef de cuisine at Ana Sortun's Oleana in Cambridge MA) and Allison Gibson have been finalists for multiple James Beard Awards.

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