Superfood From The Black Forest
Blueberries Love Poor Soils and Lots of Sun
And now, not far from the deer reserve, which is also quite close to Enzklösterle, Lars and Nils hold a splashing party and see how far they can get the water jet from the fountain to splash when they try to stop it with their hands. Meanwhile, the adults quench their thirst with the drinks stored in the fountain. There’s an honesty box for payment. As they rest and recuperate, forester Stefan Waidelich tells them about how blueberries got their big break, approximately 300 years ago, in the forests around Enzklösterle. Back then, a large number of fir trees were chopped down and the wood was sold to the Netherlands. The Black Forest pine species called forchen coped best with the poor Bunter sandstone soils that remained. And, of course, blueberries, which need sun, water, and poor soils to flourish. Waidelich tells them that, when he was a child, he and his five brothers and sisters were sent to pick blueberries every summer – the forest berries were an important source of vitamins, and indeed of income for local families in earlier times. Money from blueberry sales financed life’s essentials, such as shoes, or school supplies for the children. Every family also had their own traditions for how they ate the blueberries. Forester Waidelich’s family always make blueberry pancakes with the first berries, even today, then they make cakes, then ice-cream. The wild berries are also bottled, or turned into jam or blueberry schnapps to preserve them for the winter.
Meanwhile, the family’s baskets are now full of berries. They finish off their day by visiting the Blueberry House in the village below. First and foremost, this is a shop selling many delicious blueberry specialities. However, owner Angelika Schmal makes an exception for the Blueberry Festival, and indeed for today’s tour: she and her assistants serve non-alcoholic punch with a few of the purple fruits swimming in it, along with bread and homemade herb cream cheese and salmon pâté. Once upon a time, many families needed blueberries in order to survive. Since then, the village in the north of the Black Forest has specialised as a climatic health resort for relaxing holidays in the middle of the forest. As well as the Blueberry Trail, there is also, for example, the Bärlochkar Forest Adventure Trail, a forest climbing park, and the high moor area at Kaltenbronn. In summer, you should never be without a small container for berries, because the berries play a starring role almost everywhere in the forest, not just along the trail named after them. You’re at risk of blue lips at any time in July and August here. Without your teeth chattering...