Elder Tree, Elderflower and Elderberry Identification, Edibility and Distribution

Elder – Sambuca negris

Also sometimes known as bourtree in Scotland and Ireland

Elderberries

And elderberry I have learned to call it.
I love its blooms like saucers brimmed with meal,
Its berries a swart caviar of shot,
A buoyant spawn, a light bruised out of purple.
Elderberry? It is shires dreaming wine.

Seamus Heaney
Glanmore Sonnets

  • Edibility – 4/5 – flowers, 5/5 – berries. Elder berries contain a precursor to hydrogen cyanide which can be harmful in high dosage. This compound is volatile,  so boiling elderberries during preparation renders them safe. Elderflowers contain only trace quantities of the compound, so are safe for cold infusion, tinctures etc. Twigs and foliage should be removed as far as practicable, but it would take a patient person to remove every last bit of twig, and a a small amount isn’t a big issue.
  • Identification – 4/5 – beware of carrot family umbelifers, some of which are very toxic, but none of which are woody trunked small trees/large bushes. Can also be confused with wayfaring and rowan trees, which would lead to nothing more than disappointment.
  • Distribution – 5/5 – Very common
  • Season – Flowers May – July, Berries August – November
  • Habitat – fertile ground, hedgerows, parkland, roadsides, often near human settlement

 

Elderflowers are one of natures finest edible treasures and for me, the signature wild food of early summer. Their elegant, sweet, heady fragrance translates into lots of  delicious drinks and desserts. Occasionally, this delightful scent can develop from muscat bananas through musky to cat pee. You should be able to avoid this if you harvest them on dry, bright, sunny mornings. Blossoms harvested in these conditions will also carry many more natural yeasts, which are useful if you are planning to ferment a tasty liquid with them.

Elderflowers – Essence of Summer

Elder is a common low-growing large shrub/small tree that produces a near blanket of creamy-white umbeliferous flower heads from mid may to July,  so you should not find them hard to come by. Do be sure that you are picking them from a substantial woody-stemmed plant or you could be harvesting a member of  the carrot family which all have superficially similar umbels of white flowers. It is this and a passing similarity in leaf shape (pointed ovals with a serrated edge growing from a central stem) that got ground elder its name. This is a painless error as ground elder is edible, but you may be disappointed at how your wine turns out!

The gnarled and lichen-laden trunks of elder are a key feature that differentiates them from rowan and wayfaring trees which also have sprays of off-white flowers. I suspect that these tormented trunks are largely responsible for the wealth of folklore associated with elder. Like many such traditions, some of the myths at first seem contradictory, but on reflection can be seen as different types of reverence. For example, elder was widely refered to as ‘The Witch’s Tree’ and to hang a cradle from its boughs would invite her wrath. Nevertheless, it was considered bad luck not to have one near your house. On no account should you burn elder if you are of a superstitious nature as this will surely curse you for eternity. If, like me, you lean more towards bushcraft, perhaps you might risk it as the hollow stems flare up nicely. Its this that got elder its name – from the Anglo-Saxon word aeld for fire. The stems, twigs and branches  of elder are somewhat toxic, so no wonder myths grew to discourage the inhalation of its smoke. Unless you are seriously patient, you will never remove all the small stems from the florets of berry clusters, but do your best as they aren’t good for you in large dosage. I wouldn’t fret too much about it though.

Beauty…

In the unlikely event that you do have trouble finding it, you are probably looking too far from civilisation. Once, while making a TV program, I fruitlessly trailed two celebrity chefs and a film crew around dense forest for an hour before I remembered this. Sure enough, when we headed back to where we had parked there was a huge elder tree right by a farmhouse.

…and the beast.

When picking saintly, angelic elderflowers, always keep an eye out for their sinister, twisted step-cousin the edible jelly ear fungus (Auricularia auricularia-judae) which only grows on elder trees that are past their prime. This rather dubious looking little mushroom’s latin name comes from its traditional name of “jew’s ear”, which I suspect isn’t considered very PC nowadays, though it actually references the christian tradition that Judas Iscariot hanged himself from an elder tree. Either he was very small, or it was a particularly substantial specimen, or, as I suspect, christianity was trying to enhance its plausability by  ‘cashing in’ on pagan traditions that long predate it. Despite its slippery and somewhat sinister appearance, jelly ear is revered in chinese cookery, lending itself well to miso soups and stir-fries.

Elderflower champagne

As already mentioned, pick the flower heads on bright mornings before the bees have stolen their nectar. Shake free of insects but do not wash them or they will lose their charm and natural yeasts. Flower heads are often used whole, but if a recipe requires you to use the individual blossoms they can be easily stripped with a fork in the comfort of your kitchen.

My very favourite lightly-alcoholic drink is elderflower champagne. It is light, fragrant and if you get it just right, full of naturally fermented effervescence. If you try only one recipe from this site, try this one.

Elderflowers are great in any number of other recipes – wines, sorbets and turkish delight spring to mind. Tonight I am pairing them with their ultimate summer companion, gooseberries, in a fool.

 

Don’t get too carried away with the wonders of elderflowers though. If you strip the trees of reachable blossoms in summer, you will have no elderberries come autumn. Elderberries are one of the richest and most complex tasting of our hedgerow fruits. They make excellent wine, chutneys and jams, fruit leathers, but best of all, a magnificent vinegar. I don’t recommend eating them raw as they contain small amounts of a precursor to hydrogen cyanide. Don’t be unduly alarmed by this – so do apples! But it is good practice (and makes them taste better) to cook them for a short time as part of any recipe.

 

Recipes: elderflower champagne, elderberry vinegar, fruit leathers.

Return to wild plant guide.

4 Comments

  • Cindy White says:

    Hello,
    Thank you for your informative site. I am wondering if you know of any parks or places around Glasgow or not too far that there are elderberry trees from which one can legally forage berries.
    thank you!

    • Mark Williams says:

      Hi Cindy,
      I’m glad you like the website.
      I haven’t been to any park in Glasgow where there aren’t any elder trees. You can forage them legally. Just pick with consideration for other (human and non-human!) species that might appreciate them. On all but the smallest of trees you will be unlikely to be able to reach much more than a quarter of the fruits anyway, so I wouldn’t worry too much. Its easy to give a little back too, by planting a few elder twigs in wild corners – they grow quite readily. You’ll need to wait for next autumn now though…
      Happy foraging,
      Mark.

  • Pauline says:

    Hi,
    I have just bought a Sambucus racemosa ‘Sutherland Gold’ at a reputable garden centre, but am a bit confused as I thought that the flowers came out in flat round bunches, but the information leaflet I obtained from the garden centre says they are small conical head of creamy-white flowers, followed by glossy red berries – can you advise me if the flowerheads can be used in making elderflower cordial and if the berries are a source of food for the birds.
    Many thanks

    • Mark Williams says:

      Hi Pauline, Sorry, you are asking the wrong person – i’m OK with wild stuff, but not very up on the world of gardening and cultivars! But if it is definitely a variant of elder I can’t see why it can’t be used in the same ways.

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