This time a year everything is growing at an amazing speed. So does also the weed… Right now, and this year, the predominant plant is probably Queen Anne’s Laces, or wild carrot. In swedish with the strange nickname “Dogs bisquit” (I’ve never actually got the hang of that). It is mostly looked upon as a dreadful weed and not very appreciated. We have come to discovered that it has a fantastic fragrance! It’s a very bloomy and perfumed fragrance that is very nice indeed. It can compete with several domesticated garden-flowers when it comes to the smell. A whole field of them will produce a great and nicely perfumed air.

Wild carrot, bishop’s lace, or Queen Anne’s lace (Daucus carota) is a flowering plant in the family Apiaceae, native to temperate regions of Europe and southwest Asia; domesticated carrots are cultivars of a subspecies, Daucus carota subsp. sativus. Daucus carota is a variable biennial plant, usually growing up to 1 m tall and flowering from June to August. The umbels are claret-coloured or pale pink before they open, then bright white and rounded when in full flower, measuring 3-7cm wide with a festoon of bracts beneath; finally, as they turn to seed, they contract and become concave like a bird’s nest. This has given the plant its British common or vernacular name, Bird’s Nest. Very similar in appearance to the deadly poison hemlock, it is distinguished by a mix of bi-pinnate and tri-pinnate leaves, fine hairs on its stems and leaves, a root that smells like carrots, and occasionally a single dark red flower in its center.

The ministry is totally packed with the Daucus Carota. Ministeriet är nedlusat med Hundkex. Unga blad kan användas som spenat. Hundlokans rot är användbar. Roten bör förvällas och kokas innan den äts. Smaken påminner om besk morot eller palsternacka. Läs mer om hundkex-användning.