Get To Know: Elderflower

🌿 Identification of Elderflower

  • Botanical Name: Sambucus nigra (European elder)
  • Family: Adoxaceae (formerly Caprifoliaceae)
  • Tree/Shrub:
    • Height: 10–30 feet (3–9 meters)
    • Leaves: Pinnately compound with 5–9 serrated leaflets
    • Flowers: Creamy-white, flat-topped clusters (umbels) 5–10 inches wide, blooming in late spring to early summer
    • Scent: Sweet, floral, slightly musky
    • Berries: Small, dark purple-black, ripen later in the season (used separately from flowers)

⚠️ Lookalikes:

  • Beware of poisonous lookalikes such as red elderberry (Sambucus racemosa) and water hemlock—make sure you’re harvesting the right plant!

📜 Historical Uses of Elderflower

🏺 Ancient Europe

  • Regarded as a sacred tree in Celtic and Germanic cultures.
  • Elder was thought to ward off evil and was called the “tree of witches.”
  • In Norse mythology, associated with Freyja, the goddess of love and beauty.

🧙 Medieval Herbalism

  • Used for fevers, wounds, colds, and skin eruptions.
  • Elderflower water was a common beauty tonic for brightening and softening the skin.
  • Featured in folk charms, particularly in rural Europe, as protection against illness and lightning.

🏡 Folk Medicine

  • “The medicine chest of the common people.” All parts (flowers, berries, bark) were used.
  • Flowers were used in syrups, cordials, and infusions for colds, flu, and hay fever.

🧪 Medicinal Benefits of Elderflower (Modern Uses)

✅ 1. Respiratory Relief

  • Elderflowers act as a diaphoretic—they promote sweating and help break fevers.
  • Useful in treating cold, flu, sinus infections, and hay fever.
  • Often used in combination with yarrow and peppermint for cold and flu blends.

✅ 2. Anti-Inflammatory & Antioxidant

  • Contains flavonoids (like quercetin and rutin) that reduce inflammation and support immunity.
  • Traditionally used to calm swollen sinuses and relieve arthritic pain.

✅ 3. Diuretic & Detoxifying

  • Helps flush toxins through the urinary system and supports lymphatic drainage.

✅ 4. Skin Care

  • Elderflower water or infusions are applied to acne, eczema, burns, and sunburn.
  • Historically used in lotions and toners for whitening the skin and soothing irritations.

✅ 5. Digestive Support

  • Mildly carminative and can help with gas, bloating, and indigestion, especially when caused by colds or stress.

Get some dried elderflower by Frontier Co-op from my Amazon Affiliate link to make your own herbal medicines.


🧉 How to Use Elderflower

🌿 Forms of Use

  • Tea/Infusion: Dried or fresh elderflowers steeped in hot water.
  • Tincture: Alcohol-based extract.
  • Syrup: Combined with honey or sugar; excellent for colds and flu.
  • Cordials: Sweet herbal drinks, often carbonated or diluted.
  • Elderflower water: For skin care or mild perfumery.
  • Culinary: Used in jams, champagne, sorbets, pancake batter, and desserts.

💊 Suggested Dosage (General Guidance)

  • Tea: 1–2 tsp dried flowers per cup of water, steep 10–15 min. Up to 3x daily.
  • Tincture: 2–4 ml up to 3x daily.
  • Syrup: 1–2 tsp as needed for cold symptoms.

🧼 Elderflower Cold & Flu Tea Recipe

Ingredients:

  • 1 tsp dried elderflower
  • 1 tsp dried peppermint
  • 1 tsp dried yarrow

Instructions:
Steep in 1 cup boiling water for 10–15 minutes. Drink warm 2–3 times daily at onset of cold or flu.


⚠️ Safety & Precautions

  • Flowers are generally safe and well-tolerated.
  • Only use flowers, not raw stems, leaves, or unripe berries—they contain cyanogenic glycosides (mildly toxic).
  • Use caution if pregnant or nursing—consult an herbalist or physician.
  • May interact with diuretics or diabetes medications—monitor usage accordingly.
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