Galium boreale is edible, with a sweet smell and taste, and can be eaten as a wild salad green. Varieties such as
Galium boreale which do not contain the small hooks on the stem are not as palatable as the hooked varieties of
Galium, like
Galium aparine, but are important plants to remember for survival purposes.
Galium boreale is known as "bedstraw" because it is used as fragrant stuffing for mattresses. There is also chemical evidence for its roots use in red textile dyes during the "Viking age" (year 800 to 1066). ==References==