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    Spruce Tea with Honey & Lime

    Published on January 18, 2017 ᛫ Updated on December 12, 2024 by Chef Markus

    A simple wild foraged herbal tea, spruce tea can be enjoyed year round, and is a great natural source of Vitamin C. Learn how to identify various evergreen trees, and how to use them in teas with this simple guide.

    Jump to Recipe
    A glass teapot surrounded by various ingredients and filed with spruce tea

    Being able to use the resources the Earth provides us is a big part of what the Earth, Food, and Fire website is all about. Everything we need to survive and thrive is naturally provided to us... if we know where to look of course. Being able to grow a garden for your own produce or grow herbs indoors is a great skill to have. On the other hand, foraging for wild food can be just as rewarding, and in certain situations even important.

    It's an aspect of cooking that seems to have been forgotten along the path to modernization, yet it plays such an important role in food security for so many different cultures and communities worldwide. With new types of fruits, vegetables, and other plants being hybridized and created through horticulture every year, it's easy to forget about the edible plants growing right in your own backyard. This spruce tea recipe is an ideal example of using what the natural world provides for us right at home.

    Table of Contents

    • Conifer Trees As Food
    • Foraging For Your Spruce Tea
      • Identifying Spruce Trees
    • Brewing Spruce Tea
    • Other Wild Foraged Herbal Teas

    Conifer Trees As Food

    Spruce, Fir, and even Pine trees are all edible plants and have a long history of being used as medicinal ingredients in traditional medicine. All of these conifers are exceptionally high in vitamin C and even contain some vitamin A as well as other beneficial compounds. Drinking tea made from the needles and twigs will prevent scurvy in survival situations and was regularly used by Native Americans as a decongestant, remedy for bronchial infections, and even rheumatic ailments.

    The inner bark of the trees can be dried and ground into flour and used to thicken soups or incorporated into various breads. While all three types of conifers may be used to brew tea, they all differ slightly in flavor and woodsiness, with Pine being the strongest in flavor and Fir the mildest.

    I find Spruce tea to be the ideal middle ground with a light citrusy earthy note. With a teaspoon of honey and a wedge of lime, Spruce tea really is quite delicious.

    Foraging For Your Spruce Tea

    The most important aspect of foraging and eating wild foods is being able to tell the different species apart. Spruce, Pine, and Fir are all fairly similar and you don't need to fear being poisoned picking one over the other when making your own tea.

    While the evergreen needles do make a delicious woodsy beverage and may be consumed with no ill effect, pregnant and breastfeeding mothers should avoid drinking it, as it can induce miscarriages and early labor. Eating the needles raw can also cause stomach cramps and indigestion and is not encouraged.

    Examples of spruce, fir, and pine tree needles and tips how to identify them

    Identifying Spruce Trees

    The easiest way to identify and differentiate between Pine, Spruce, and Fir is by the needles. One of the biggest differences from pine is that Spruce and Fir trees have short needles that are pointy and are attached individually to the branch.

    • Pine needles are long and grow in clumps of 2 to 5 needles a bunch
    • Fir needles are softer, flat, and do not grow out from all sides of the branch as spruce needles do.
    • Spruce needles are short and pointy, but are stiffer then Fir and four sided. Spruce needles also grow from all sides of the branch creating a round star shaped effect.

    An easy way to tell the needles apart is to pick one off and try rolling it between your thumb and index finger. Spruce needles being four-sided will roll quite easily while Fir needles which are flat and only have two sides will not roll so well. - Chef Markus

    Evergreen needles can be harvested any time of the year, much like rose hips and chaga are available year round, but the most tender sprigs are harvested in the spring. During Winter when wild foraged food is scarce, older needles will do, though they will have a stronger and more bitter taste.

    In the spring when trees start producing new growth you can pick the little bright green buds of needles and use them to make tea as well. This new growth will have the highest concentration of vitamin C and can be almost sweet in flavor. Spruce and Fir tips can be blanched (and even pickled) to be enjoyed as an addition to salads. 

    Related:  Wild Rose Hip Tea

    Brewing Spruce Tea

    Once you have your Spruce needles harvested, take them home or back to your campsite and rinse them with some clear water. This removes any insects that may be hiding in between the needles. Trim the twigs to a manageable size appropriate for your teapot and set them aside.

    You can even pick the needles themselves off the branch for an even milder tea, as the woody, sap filled branch can add a bitter flavor. The choice is yours.

    Bring a pot of water to a boil in a kettle or over the fire and once boiling pour over the Spruce needles. You will immediately smell the light woodsy aroma coming from the pot. It's important to avoid boiling the spruce directly in the pot and instead steep the twigs and needles as the extreme heat created through boiling will destroy the vitamin C.

    Spruce needles steeping ion a glass teapot

    Let the tea steep for 10 to 15 minutes and then adjust the flavor with a little raw honey and some lime.

    It's the perfect beverage to enjoy out in the woods while on a hike or inside on a cold Winter day. The high concentrations of vitamins, (particularly Vitamin C) make this the ideal tea to help beat colds and flu.

    Now you may be wondering why is the tea so clear. This is normal, since as the tea steeps you are extracting vitamins and minerals from the needles. The needles have very little pigment in them and do not color the tea. If you let the tea sit for any amount of time it will start to turn a deep amber color as it begins to react with the air around it.

    Other Wild Foraged Herbal Teas

    • Wild Rose Hip Tea
    • Chaga Tea

    Made the recipe? Comment & Rate it below, then take a picture and tag me on Facebook. For more from scratch recipes, follow me on Facebook & Pinterest.

    Recipe

    Let spruce tea steep for 10 to 15 minutes before adding the honey and lime for a delicious and healthy beverage.

    Spruce Tea with Honey & Lime

    Chef Markus
    A simple wild foraged herbal tea, spruce tea is loaded with Vitamin C and is a great drink to enjoy on a cold winters day.
    4 from 2 votes
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe Save Recipe Saved!
    Prep Time 10 minutes mins
    Cook Time 5 minutes mins
    Total Time 15 minutes mins
    Course Beverage
    Cuisine Asian, Canadian, European
    Servings 1 pot of spruce tea
    Calories 22.7 kcal
    Prevent your screen from going dark

    Ingredients
      

    • 1 cup of spruce twigs or needles rinsed
    • 1 teaspoon raw honey
    • 1 wedge lime
    • 3 cups boiling water

    Instructions
     

    • Steep the spruce needles in hot water for 10 to 15 minutes. Adjust flavoring to taste with the honey and fresh lime.

    Nutrition

    Calories: 22.7kcal

    Nutrition info is auto-generated. This information is an estimate; if you are on a special diet, please use your own calculations.

    Keyword are spruce needles edible?, foraging in winter
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!
    Spruce Tea Recipe - Earth, Food and Fire

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    Reader Interactions

    Comments

    1. Michele

      January 05, 2023 at 10:03 pm

      How can you be sure the tree doesn't have spider mites?

      Reply
      • Chef Markus Mueller

        January 09, 2023 at 9:35 am

        I am not really sure this would be a concern honestly. As a rule though you should be washing any foraged plant material before cooking with, or consuming it anyways. (Same as you would as if you were harvesting plants from the garden or bringing vegetables home from the grocery store).

        Reply
    2. Phil

      March 27, 2020 at 4:40 pm

      Surprisingly tasty! Thank you!

      Reply
      • Chef Markus Mueller

        March 29, 2020 at 8:26 am

        You're welcome Phil! A great free source of vitamin C at this time!

        Reply
    3. Sara Stone

      December 31, 2019 at 10:44 pm

      Oh wow! Thanks for sharing that. I am really interested in natural remedies , and just read that most Vitamin C supplements are only Ascorbic Acid, not the complete compound. So I am looking for other and natural sources of complete Vitamin C. I can't wait to try this.

      Reply
      • Chef Markus Mueller

        January 02, 2020 at 9:03 pm

        You're welcome Sara! I'd love to hear what other natural remedies you have tried! I hope to do more if this type of content this year!

        Reply
    4. Hilary

      January 21, 2017 at 9:45 am

      This is such a cool idea- thank you for posting about this!! I've been wanting to explore the world of wild harvesting, but didn't have the knowledge or the location (I live in Montreal) to do that. I definitely think this is a good start 🙂 Also, could you please share your knowledge sources? I would like to read more on this!

      Reply
      • Markus Mueller

        January 21, 2017 at 12:38 pm

        Your welcome! It really is an easy and safe recipe to start your foraging adventures with! Mushroom picking in comparison is a whole different ball game where you can get seriously sick if you make a mistake. The 'Field Guide to Edible North American Plants' is a great start as referance material. You can find a link to the amazon listing for the book at the bottom of the post! Alot of the information in this post in regards to identifying the various conifers, is my own knowladge I learned spending countless hours in the woods of Nova Scotia with my father.

        Reply
    5. Vicky Chin

      January 20, 2017 at 6:15 pm

      Wow, I have learned something new today ! I would love to give this a try ! I have a friend who is really into natural remedy and loves tea at the same time. I will for sure share this with her. I think it's a good Science lesson for my kids too !

      Reply
    6. Amanda from Peppers & Pennies

      January 19, 2017 at 9:20 pm

      Wow! These are thing my little brother would talk about at length growing-up. He obsessed over Survivor Man, Into the Wild and the other brave souls who said goodbye to community and lived off the land. When backwoods camping, he, even at 10 would boil up a concoction that we just KNEW was safe from him triple checking all the guides and books he brought along. I will be sending him this post and get his thoughts on it.

      I love seeing and sharing recipes that break the mold 🙂

      Reply
    7. Annika

      January 19, 2017 at 12:14 pm

      I'm an avid tea drinker so I must try this out (as well as the pine and fir versions. Thank you for the history and botany lessons as well!

      Reply
      • Markus Mueller

        January 19, 2017 at 12:33 pm

        I'd love to know what you think of the different variations once you try them!

        Reply
    4 from 2 votes (2 ratings without comment)

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