Growing up in Romania we always made syrup, tea, and a huge summer favorite, elbderflower infused lemonade, which is left to naturally ferment for a bit. The elder flower lemonade is like a natural fizzy drink, super refreshing. It was so popular in the Balkans that Fanta produced their own version of Elderflower Lemonade.
Where I live in germany there's so many wild elderberry bushes in the forests, the smell of the flowers always brings back memories of playing in the forest when I was still a kid😃 love your videos, so interesting and informative
@@TheKiwiGrower Another German here: Since elderberries grow here in wild hegdes it is not very common to plant them in gardens. Though people use the flowers and berries here. The flowers are often made into syrup used to flavor fuzzy drinks or popular "Hugo" cocktail with sparkling wine. The berries are made into jelly or into a warm soup with sweet semolina dumplings floating in it.
My grandma used to dip the flowers in a kind of thick pancake batter (without baking powder) and fry them in a pan. That recipe is one of my favourite childhood memories! It tastes great, but is obviously very filling. It's a really popular way to eat them here in Germany.
@@mermer6160 I've never eaten it so far. But to form the pancake you have to leave the stems on the flower. By making syrup I've noticed it's better to get rid of most of the stems: they bring a bitter note.
I remember, the old man in Bavaria, when I was a child, tipped their hats to the Elderberry, as it is said, from the roots to the leaves it is healing.
I made elderflower champagne and fermented Elderberry honey last year... so delicious! I've also made Elderberry jelly. Because elderberries lack acidity, the addition of lemon juice along with sweetener really brings out the flavor, especially in desserts.
Hi Kalem! Elderberry is such an amazing plant! That beautiful scent of its flowers remind me of a hot Polish summer. In my homecountry we use it a lot. My mum always have some dried flowers stored in paper bags to use it as a medicinal tea for the flu and colds [most of the time she mixes it with dried linden (Tilia) flowers and wild primrose (Primula officinalis or elatior) flowers]. Nature is the best source of medicines. We also use fresh flowers to make this absolutely delicious slightly fizzy cordial which is a must on a hot summer day, can be also used as a base for a cocktail. I think one of your viewers from Romania mentioned it aswell. I will add the recipe at the end of my comment, you should really try it, you'll love it! 🙂 Those fritters you mentioned are actually very, very tasty, you should try it yourself, just dip the flowers in a pancake batter, put them on a frying pan, cut all the stems with scissors (they can give you a REALLY bad diarhorrea😂) sprinkle them with a bit of a sugar powder and taa daa you got yourself a light, healthy and tasty summer meal. I used to always pick my elderberry flowers and fruits in mountain forests of southern Poland where Im from but at the moment I live in Ireland so I get those from a local woodland park, where they grow in abundance. I get strange looks sometimes though from the people passing by😂 Just wanted to mention that from what I know it is good to boil your elderberry fruits with no lid on as some cyanid compounds can evaporate then from your syrup. Also it is a good idea to press your fruits through a sieve if you are making a jam, that way you remove all the seeds which contain the most of the cyanide. I would love to be able to plant at least one elderberry bush in my garden but I dont have enough space, I squeezed as many plants in it as I possibly could but elderberry is quite big. Maybe someday when I buy more land. You are lucky to have so much space which you use so efficiently. At the end of my looong comment😄 just want to say that you are doing an amazing job with your videos and passion for plants, animals and nature. Im a regular viewer and I share your videos with friends. Also you are a man of so many talents, you can built a house, establish a farm and bake tiny tarts aaand you look like a male model. Your wife is a lucky, lucky lady🙂 all the best! PS: New Zealand is such an amazing place, so exotic and unique, especially for someone coming from Europe, hopefully I'll be able to visit your country someday. For now Im gonna keep watching your videos and listen to Kimbra 😉 •●Elderberry flower cordial●• 40 elderberry flowers (clean but prefferably not washed as by washing you remove all the elderberry pollen) 2kg of sugar (I use around 1,5kg, Im sure it can be substituted with honey aswell) 2 big organic lemons 1 organic orange 2 organic mandarins 2 packets of citric acid powder (20gram each) it works as a natural, safe preservative. 2litres of boiled, cold water Place elderberry flowers on a white paper sheet in a bright place for around 10 minutes, that way you'll make sure all the little critters will safely leave and wont end up in your cordial :) Wash and chop all the citrus fruits with skins on, use a big (around 6litres) preferably glass or stoneware container (you shouldnt use any metal containers or utensils with this cordial). Add all your ingredients in layers: flowers with stems cut off, sugar, citruses, citric acid, repeat until you use all the ingredients. Then use a big wooden spoon or wooden potato masher to press all of it from the top until you see citruses juice coming through. Cover your container with linen or cotton cloth and leave for 48 hours stirring all the ingredients around every 4 hours or so. After 48 hours add 2 liters of cold water and leave for another 48 hours, dont forget about stirring. After 48 hours sieve your liquid through a sieve and a gauze. Pour your cordial into sterilised bottles or jars and store in a fridge. After some time natural CO2 will appear so your cordial would get that nice fizziness. Enjoy with cold soda water and ice 🙂
I wonder if you could grow a compact variety in a large pot. If you keep it pruned, optimise the potting mix, nutrients, seaweed solution and water, it might work.
@@FrancesHart99 thats a very good idea worth of trying! Thanks Frances :) I know there are different cultivars of Elderberry which have a different growing habits but not sure if they have the same medicinal properites as an original one so your advice is the best option for compact gardeners like me ;)
@@calonlan7561 thank you very much, Im glad you enjoyed reading my very long comment 😄 And I hope you will also enjoy this elderberry cordial, it is worth trying for sure. All the best😊
I live in Denmark where elderberry is a huge part of the culture. Every summer people go out elderflower-picking, and they grow absolutely everywhere (roadsides, parks, forests, etc.). Nowadays people mostly use the flowers to make elderflower cordial, which is just the flavour of summer to me. I feel like the berries are more used by people in the countryside and older generation. Mostly we make a warm berry soup, which is really nice if you like that very distinct elderberry taste. I have hade elderflower fritters, but honestly it mostly tastes of fried batter 😆
You're starting to make me want to become a gardener... It's quite impressive what you can grow if you take properly care of it in the right conditions
Elderberries are honestly so easy to grow. Planted one of these same dark coloured varieties in a pretty poor draining area and it has gone gangbusters with very little maintenance.
I made a syrup with own harvested elderberries from the forest 2 years ago and it tasted very good! In my region in Austria there are also plantations of elderberries for the use of especially the fruits 💚👋
I didn't know there were so many things Elderberry can be used for. Thanks Kalem another great video. I think maybe you should apply for Masterchef NZ😂
I so love watching your videos, so informative! As an Aussie, you look the spitting image of our famous surfer Mick Fanning! I’m sure you’ve been told that before 😊 Your love of plants is epic! So inspiring 💚💚💚
Hi, I'm really excited to see you cultivate a plant native to my area as well! Here they are pretty much ubiquitous and grow everywhere on the edges of woods and along paths in the forest. It's really quite a beautiful sight in may when the elderflowers are in bloom. I've been drinking diluted elderflower infused sirup for pretty much my entire life and can really recommend it. It's made by soaking freshly harvested elderflowers overnight in water, then adding sugar and heating slightly to make it into a sirup. It turns a nice yellow colour and always tastes like early summer :) Cheers from Germany, love your Channel
Thanks for info! I’m definitely keen to try out the syrup next year. Must be amazing walking through the forest during that time. The smell would be intense
Not only is he smart, well-spoken and obviously hard-working, but a total hunk with that New-Zealander/Aussie charm. Keep up the good work, gorgeous! 😀
They grow in the UK like weeds! I like to harvest the flowers in a local park here, I collect 20 heads and add 4.5 litres of hot water, lemon, lime, around 700g sugar and maybe a pinch of yeast if it's not fermenting after a day or so. Leave for a few days loosely covered, then bottle in plastic bottles or strong glass flip top bottles. Wait two weeks maybe and you've got elderflower champagne. It's gorgeous, sparkling and light, tastes like lychee! I also made an elderberry and blackberry wine in 2010 which actually tasted like a really good red, it was unreal! When I've done the syrup before, I've used sugar and boiled it up with it which made more of a syrup than what you ended up with. I've also done pies and crumbles with them but bulked out with blackberries or apples. Both brilliant! Great video, I enjoyed this and didn't know about the ease of propagation, I better go find a stick to get me started, I've always wanted it in my garden!
Great video, but surprised you missed one. Sambucus gaudichaudiana, or the Australian native Elderberry. It's meant to have all the properties of its northern cousins but lacks the bad parts in the berries. So you can eat them to your heart's content. I have a few, they grow to 1.5m and do well in temperate places.
Wow, that’s First Nations medicine. What a fabulous project to do with children. I wonder where I could source seeds. I notice some First Nations cultural centres have plantings of bushes and trees with berries in their gardens. On the guided tour they didn’t go near them or tell us what they were.
Checked it out, they’re white berries, it’s a compact shrub, it can be purchased from a nursery in Victoria. I wonder if the medicinal properties are comparable. Thank you for your comment.
I watched this video when you first posted it and this year finally got to picking my own elderberries. Thanks for the inspiration! I decided to make jam. For those interested you need to add pectic or combine your elderberry with another fruit (like blackberries) which are richer in pectin otherwise your jam won't set... I learnt the hard way...
I love elderberries, they grow wild in our hedgerows and every year we used to gather bucketfuls of the berries. Now we have our own elderberry trees to harvest from. Lovely video!
It’s amazing how widespread elderberries are. I live in northern Minnesota (zone 3) and they grow wild all over the place. God has blessed us with this tree!
Mn here. My woods have thousands of of them growing..... unfortunately the red variety. I have the black variety planted in my berry patch and will be propagating them for planting around the property.
speaking of not growing them in a hot dry location. We grow them in Las Vegas, US - a very hot very dry climate. The plants flower and produce fruit in the spring. Then the heat of the summer burns off the foliage, but in the late summer they will re-leaf, bloom and fruit again before winter. We love this plant!
Living in California's mountain's, elder grows wild. Made jam and loved the tartness on everything! Put it on steaks and even chicken and of course toast and pancakes love it.
Also there was wild choke cherries and I made jam from that too, both grow wild in abundance all over the mountain but you have beat the bears to get them lol. Thanks for replying peace out brother.
Hi, in Czech Republic we cook sirup for regular drinking out of the flowers. Just mix the sirup with water and you have tasty flavoured glass of water.
Elderflower wine is my favourite wine of all, to me it's the true taste of summer. I have never eaten the elderberries, but I have used them as a bait additive for freshwater fishing with great success.
It grows everywhere in Sweden we use the flowers for lemonade it's probably the most popular lemonade here. And the Berries we salt like capers for food :)
Elderberries grow wild here in Oregon so it's nice to see other people try them. I usually make a cordial with honey and drink it when I feel a cold coming on. The cordial also goes great in seltzer water for a cocktail.
Here in slovenia the batter covered and fried flowers used to be quite a popular food in the past, I haven't seen it outside my grandmas house though. It's really good, an interesting taste that I just can't really put into words. What is more popular nowadays is to make a syrup for diluting out of the flowers, almost every (rural) household makes their own lol. Oddly, I have never tasted the fruit of them I think, which is weird since they grow everywhere here.
My Grandfather had a Elderberry tree growing on the curb/berm/sidewalk of his property in the South Island. He use to make Elderberry Wine and it was a "blow your mind experience" drinking it LOL
This was great timing as I just planted elderberry last week!! I was told that two varieties would pollinate each other to produce more fruit, so I planted a “York” and a “Nova”.Are you familiar with these varieties? I didn’t think it would produce berries the first year but seeing your cutting take off so fast, I will know to remove them if so and let the plants grow. I am so excited to try making the medicinal beverage for cold and flu season! Your tart looks delicious!! Thank you from Washington State USA
i love drinking fizzy water with white elderberry syrup 😋it's also common to find white or black elderberry lemonade in german supermarkets. one of my favourite drinks ever 🥰i have yet to try the berries by themselves though 😊
I am from Austria and we have tons of elderberry trees growing in our forests. My grandmother always made elderberry flowers dipped in batter and fried. It's my favourite way to eat them. Btw did you know that the wood ear mushroom loves to grow on elderberry wood?
I just planted two elderberry plants in my backyard, so I'm really excited to see how they'll be next year. I really appreciate your video on this, I learned so much
I'm British and these are everywhere - I've never used them myself to make anything, but I've drank elderflower cordial and elderberry wine. I've also just eaten the berries straight off or the tree, too.
They grow all over in Florida! Love them. A friend's husband would make poultice of the leaves to treat his hemorrhoids. Claimed it works great! *just putting that out there in case someone needs it. Happy to find your channel. Great stuff!
Where I used to live had many places to gather the berries and I would dry them out on a clean window screen in summertime make sure in the shade and make sure they are spread out not overlapping any. I used it to add to herbs to make a tea, excellent medicine when sick. I also used the flowers for tea, but the berries are better.
My grandma used to dip the flowers in a kind of thick pancake batter (without baking powder) and fry them. That recipe is one of my favourite childhood memories! It's a very popular way to eat them here in Europe.
We just spent our first year converting an invasive bush(Black Alder) into an off grid farmland in Ontario Canada. We have a stream going through the center of the land and there is literally thousands of wild black elderberry. I cut a few stems in the Spring of last year and stuck them in the ground and they grew into fully mature plants with flowers and fruits. We make syrup, but did not know the flowers were edible. Thank you. So got the elderberry, but need bees. Beeeez eh?
Thank you for this very informative video. Elderberry fritters are very good, they taste flowery and sweet. I have also made elderflower syrup for cold summer drinks.
Very interesting, thank you for sharing. Now I need to find a way to try an Elder tart, it looks good. Love the videos man! Keep up the good work! :) 👍(Hahaha at the Potter reference)
My local forest is full of black elderberry but good luck finding any ripe berries! The birds love them and you’d be wise to get in on the elder action for your health. Great video as always, thanks
Thanks so much for your video - loved it. I was introduced to elderberries a few years back in Denmark, where we harvested the flowers and made pancakes. Was tasty as pancakes usually are, but now I'm looking forward to transforming that traditional recipe into a more healthy one, using alternate flours and perhaps maple syrup as a sweetener. We've planted Elderberries on our new land in the Waikato, and they are doing amazingly well
This is my first year growing elderberry in Texas and I was looking for ways to use the flowers. Your video was so informative for the uses of both the flowers and the berries. I loved your video. You did a great job and I aspire to be as creative and talented as you! I do have one question though, if I dig out one of the suckers, do I need to make sure I get roots in order to be successful?
New to your channel so glad to have found you and for this, I live in Jacksonville Florida USA and these grow wild in my yard like a weed! I was afraid of them at first and tried to eradicate them but sadly they’re very invasive so I’ve embraced them and so glad to learn how to harvest and use the flowers & berries! Thanks! 12:58
What a great video! I've been growing elderberries for a few years now and the one tip you gave about freezing the clusters before raking the berries off is ... GENIUS! I have spent hours and hours pulling the fresh berries off the stems knowing that the stems are toxic. I had considered elderberries VERY laborious until I saw that great tip about freezing the clusters. THANK YOU and God Bless!
this man is a gem we are so lucky
Yessir
Faxxxx
I have also read the stem is a mole repellant
so he gardens, farms, cleans, teas, bakes, etc…. I aspire to be a man like this.
Growing up in Romania we always made syrup, tea, and a huge summer favorite, elbderflower infused lemonade, which is left to naturally ferment for a bit. The elder flower lemonade is like a natural fizzy drink, super refreshing. It was so popular in the Balkans that Fanta produced their own version of Elderflower Lemonade.
That’s cool. The lemonade sounds delicious!
I absolutely love elderberry lemonade too!
do you have the recipe?
Can you use elderberries for smoothies?
My ancestry is Romanian, and I dislike normal lemonade, I only like elderberry 😍
Where I live in germany there's so many wild elderberry bushes in the forests, the smell of the flowers always brings back memories of playing in the forest when I was still a kid😃 love your videos, so interesting and informative
That’s so cool that you can forage for them there! Cheers 😁
@@TheKiwiGrower Another German here: Since elderberries grow here in wild hegdes it is not very common to plant them in gardens. Though people use the flowers and berries here. The flowers are often made into syrup used to flavor fuzzy drinks or popular "Hugo" cocktail with sparkling wine. The berries are made into jelly or into a warm soup with sweet semolina dumplings floating in it.
My grandma used to dip the flowers in a kind of thick pancake batter (without baking powder) and fry them in a pan. That recipe is one of my favourite childhood memories! It tastes great, but is obviously very filling. It's a really popular way to eat them here in Germany.
@@mermer6160 I've never eaten it so far. But to form the pancake you have to leave the stems on the flower. By making syrup I've noticed it's better to get rid of most of the stems: they bring a bitter note.
I remember, the old man in Bavaria, when I was a child, tipped their hats to the Elderberry, as it is said, from the roots to the leaves it is healing.
I made elderflower champagne and fermented Elderberry honey last year... so delicious! I've also made Elderberry jelly. Because elderberries lack acidity, the addition of lemon juice along with sweetener really brings out the flavor, especially in desserts.
Hi Kalem!
Elderberry is such an amazing plant! That beautiful scent of its flowers remind me of a hot Polish summer. In my homecountry we use it a lot. My mum always have some dried flowers stored in paper bags to use it as a medicinal tea for the flu and colds [most of the time she mixes it with dried linden (Tilia) flowers and wild primrose (Primula officinalis or elatior) flowers]. Nature is the best source of medicines. We also use fresh flowers to make this absolutely delicious slightly fizzy cordial which is a must on a hot summer day, can be also used as a base for a cocktail. I think one of your viewers from Romania mentioned it aswell. I will add the recipe at the end of my comment, you should really try it, you'll love it! 🙂 Those fritters you mentioned are actually very, very tasty, you should try it yourself, just dip the flowers in a pancake batter, put them on a frying pan, cut all the stems with scissors (they can give you a REALLY bad diarhorrea😂) sprinkle them with a bit of a sugar powder and taa daa you got yourself a light, healthy and tasty summer meal. I used to always pick my elderberry flowers and fruits in mountain forests of southern Poland where Im from but at the moment I live in Ireland so I get those from a local woodland park, where they grow in abundance. I get strange looks sometimes though from the people passing by😂 Just wanted to mention that from what I know it is good to boil your elderberry fruits with no lid on as some cyanid compounds can evaporate then from your syrup. Also it is a good idea to press your fruits through a sieve if you are making a jam, that way you remove all the seeds which contain the most of the cyanide. I would love to be able to plant at least one elderberry bush in my garden but I dont have enough space, I squeezed as many plants in it as I possibly could but elderberry is quite big. Maybe someday when I buy more land. You are lucky to have so much space which you use so efficiently. At the end of my looong comment😄 just want to say that you are doing an amazing job with your videos and passion for plants, animals and nature. Im a regular viewer and I share your videos with friends. Also you are a man of so many talents, you can built a house, establish a farm and bake tiny tarts aaand you look like a male model. Your wife is a lucky, lucky lady🙂 all the best! PS: New Zealand is such an amazing place, so exotic and unique, especially for someone coming from Europe, hopefully I'll be able to visit your country someday. For now Im gonna keep watching your videos and listen to Kimbra 😉
•●Elderberry flower cordial●•
40 elderberry flowers (clean but prefferably not washed as by washing you remove all the elderberry pollen)
2kg of sugar (I use around 1,5kg, Im sure it can be substituted with honey aswell)
2 big organic lemons
1 organic orange
2 organic mandarins
2 packets of citric acid powder (20gram each) it works as a natural, safe preservative.
2litres of boiled, cold water
Place elderberry flowers on a white paper sheet in a bright place for around 10 minutes, that way you'll make sure all the little critters will safely leave and wont end up in your cordial :) Wash and chop all the citrus fruits with skins on, use a big (around 6litres) preferably glass or stoneware container (you shouldnt use any metal containers or utensils with this cordial). Add all your ingredients in layers: flowers with stems cut off, sugar, citruses, citric acid, repeat until you use all the ingredients. Then use a big wooden spoon or wooden potato masher to press all of it from the top until you see citruses juice coming through. Cover your container with linen or cotton cloth and leave for 48 hours stirring all the ingredients around every 4 hours or so. After 48 hours add 2 liters of cold water and leave for another 48 hours, dont forget about stirring. After 48 hours sieve your liquid through a sieve and a gauze. Pour your cordial into sterilised bottles or jars and store in a fridge. After some time natural CO2 will appear so your cordial would get that nice fizziness. Enjoy with cold soda water and ice 🙂
Great work - I've saved your recipe!
I wonder if you could grow a compact variety in a large pot. If you keep it pruned, optimise the potting mix, nutrients, seaweed solution and water, it might work.
@@FrancesHart99 thats a very good idea worth of trying! Thanks Frances :) I know there are different cultivars of Elderberry which have a different growing habits but not sure if they have the same medicinal properites as an original one so your advice is the best option for compact gardeners like me ;)
Such a nice reply, enjoyed reading it--you sound as sparkly as the summer drink! Thank you for the recipe!
@@calonlan7561 thank you very much, Im glad you enjoyed reading my very long comment 😄 And I hope you will also enjoy this elderberry cordial, it is worth trying for sure. All the best😊
I live in Denmark where elderberry is a huge part of the culture. Every summer people go out elderflower-picking, and they grow absolutely everywhere (roadsides, parks, forests, etc.).
Nowadays people mostly use the flowers to make elderflower cordial, which is just the flavour of summer to me. I feel like the berries are more used by people in the countryside and older generation. Mostly we make a warm berry soup, which is really nice if you like that very distinct elderberry taste.
I have hade elderflower fritters, but honestly it mostly tastes of fried batter 😆
I'd love to learn how to make an elderberry cordial 😋
You're starting to make me want to become a gardener... It's quite impressive what you can grow if you take properly care of it in the right conditions
This one is particularly easy to grow too. They can thrive in less than ideal conditions :)
@@TheKiwiGrower yep, we have a few wild bushes locally which seems to do well on their own!
Elderberries are honestly so easy to grow. Planted one of these same dark coloured varieties in a pretty poor draining area and it has gone gangbusters with very little maintenance.
A few years ago I made a "champagne" wine from the Elder and produced about 4.5 litres @ 14% alcohol. A few fuzzy nights for a while 🤣😂
I made a syrup with own harvested elderberries from the forest 2 years ago and it tasted very good! In my region in Austria there are also plantations of elderberries for the use of especially the fruits 💚👋
Awesome, that’s cool that you can forage for them there!
Natural remedy to fight Covid-19 and strengthen immune system
I didn't know there were so many things Elderberry can be used for. Thanks Kalem another great video. I think maybe you should apply for Masterchef NZ😂
Haha cheers Mark!
Yep, elderflower fritters are the best, slightly sweet batter and shallow fry. Really fragrant and tasty.
Plus elderflower sparkling wine, yum.
I so love watching your videos, so informative!
As an Aussie, you look the spitting image of our famous surfer Mick Fanning! I’m sure you’ve been told that before 😊
Your love of plants is epic! So inspiring 💚💚💚
You are so easy to listen to. No puffed up filler! Thanks
Hi, I'm really excited to see you cultivate a plant native to my area as well! Here they are pretty much ubiquitous and grow everywhere on the edges of woods and along paths in the forest. It's really quite a beautiful sight in may when the elderflowers are in bloom. I've been drinking diluted elderflower infused sirup for pretty much my entire life and can really recommend it. It's made by soaking freshly harvested elderflowers overnight in water, then adding sugar and heating slightly to make it into a sirup. It turns a nice yellow colour and always tastes like early summer :)
Cheers from Germany, love your Channel
Thanks for info! I’m definitely keen to try out the syrup next year. Must be amazing walking through the forest during that time. The smell would be intense
I have a path through the woods where they grow for hundreds of feet and seeing them in bloom in spring is one of my favorite things.
Not only is he smart, well-spoken and obviously hard-working, but a total hunk with that New-Zealander/Aussie charm. Keep up the good work, gorgeous! 😀
As someone who's foraged elderberries since I was young I love this! Some breweries I've lived near even add the flowers to their ciders
That’s awesome, so many cool uses!
that sounds like it would make an amazing cider!
@@Liliarthan they are some of my favorites!
One thing i will definitely miss when i leave NZ is Pie . LOL
I’m so impressed with the looks of the tart you made. Beautifully perfect!
They grow in the UK like weeds!
I like to harvest the flowers in a local park here, I collect 20 heads and add 4.5 litres of hot water, lemon, lime, around 700g sugar and maybe a pinch of yeast if it's not fermenting after a day or so. Leave for a few days loosely covered, then bottle in plastic bottles or strong glass flip top bottles. Wait two weeks maybe and you've got elderflower champagne. It's gorgeous, sparkling and light, tastes like lychee!
I also made an elderberry and blackberry wine in 2010 which actually tasted like a really good red, it was unreal!
When I've done the syrup before, I've used sugar and boiled it up with it which made more of a syrup than what you ended up with.
I've also done pies and crumbles with them but bulked out with blackberries or apples. Both brilliant!
Great video, I enjoyed this and didn't know about the ease of propagation, I better go find a stick to get me started, I've always wanted it in my garden!
I am so happy to learn about the plant...I kept it in my yard for 25yrs and never knew anything about it except that it was a very special tree.
Great video, but surprised you missed one.
Sambucus gaudichaudiana, or the Australian native Elderberry. It's meant to have all the properties of its northern cousins but lacks the bad parts in the berries. So you can eat them to your heart's content. I have a few, they grow to 1.5m and do well in temperate places.
Wow, that’s First Nations medicine. What a fabulous project to do with children. I wonder where I could source seeds. I notice some First Nations cultural centres have plantings of bushes and trees with berries in their gardens. On the guided tour they didn’t go near them or tell us what they were.
Checked it out, they’re white berries, it’s a compact shrub, it can be purchased from a nursery in Victoria. I wonder if the medicinal properties are comparable. Thank you for your comment.
Do you think they could be shipped to the US? Or are they considered an invasive species? Customs is always finnicky with plants i hear.
I watched this video when you first posted it and this year finally got to picking my own elderberries. Thanks for the inspiration! I decided to make jam. For those interested you need to add pectic or combine your elderberry with another fruit (like blackberries) which are richer in pectin otherwise your jam won't set... I learnt the hard way...
I love elderberries, they grow wild in our hedgerows and every year we used to gather bucketfuls of the berries. Now we have our own elderberry trees to harvest from. Lovely video!
Awesome, such a great plant to have. Thanks Liz :)
Is fine to use elderberries for smoothies? Like mix milk in it?
It’s amazing how widespread elderberries are. I live in northern Minnesota (zone 3) and they grow wild all over the place. God has blessed us with this tree!
Mn here. My woods have thousands of of them growing..... unfortunately the red variety. I have the black variety planted in my berry patch and will be propagating them for planting around the property.
Wow that tart Pie looks awesome yummy. Great job, thanks for sharing
It's nice to see you using the bottle gourd that you made
Wow , very beautiful video my friend👍🤗
speaking of not growing them in a hot dry location. We grow them in Las Vegas, US - a very hot very dry climate. The plants flower and produce fruit in the spring. Then the heat of the summer burns off the foliage, but in the late summer they will re-leaf, bloom and fruit again before winter. We love this plant!
You are an all rounder! Very rare in these days of left ear specialists and right ear specialists.
I think that Elderberry Flower Fritters are one of my most favorite childhood memories! I have an old Swiss recipe that I’ll send to you.
loved this video. As a german living in New Zealand i cannot wait to grow them in my garden :)
The detail in the making of the tart crust top is impressive. 🤣🤗👌👌👌
The Elder wand is the most useful posibility! :) Thank you for the beautiful video! :)
Living in California's mountain's, elder grows wild. Made jam and loved the tartness on everything! Put it on steaks and even chicken and of course toast and pancakes love it.
Sounds great! The jam would be soo good!
Also there was wild choke cherries and I made jam from that too, both grow wild in abundance all over the mountain but you have beat the bears to get them lol. Thanks for replying peace out brother.
Hi, in Czech Republic we cook sirup for regular drinking out of the flowers. Just mix the sirup with water and you have tasty flavoured glass of water.
Sounds yum, will have to try that out. Cheers!
Kalem, you're a wonderful human being.
Elderflower wine is my favourite wine of all, to me it's the true taste of summer. I have never eaten the elderberries, but I have used them as a bait additive for freshwater fishing with great success.
This episode was entertaining and informative. Loved to Harry Potter reference.
It grows everywhere in Sweden we use the flowers for lemonade it's probably the most popular lemonade here.
And the Berries we salt like capers for food :)
Love the additional info.
These always make me think of Arsenic & Old Lace. I freaking love that movie!
Awesome! You’re so inspiring. I live in an apartment but I am dreaming of having a garden in my future yard❤️
Fantastic guide from propagation-growing plant to harvesting and preparation own health remedy, and creative kitchen work!
10 stars video! Smart film
Thanks so much :)
The tart!!! ❤❤❤
Love this channel, keeps inspiring me to get in the garden
Cheers! 🌳 🌱
Enjoying cold, organic elderberry syrup right now. Truly an amazing plant. I also like that you appear to be doing a great job researching.
Elderberries grow wild here in Oregon so it's nice to see other people try them. I usually make a cordial with honey and drink it when I feel a cold coming on. The cordial also goes great in seltzer water for a cocktail.
Awesome, sounds good. It’s cool that you can forage for them!
Is it like the elderberry syrup then add the seltzer water?
@@patroot2536 yeah just add to your level of flavor. Maybe add some lime juice or garnish if you want.
@@tylerjones1574 thank you
My mother use to make alsorts of wine and elderberry was one of them. She also use to make elderflower champagne which was lovely. Happy memories.
A fellow kiwi to follow for gardening. How awesome!
This is such a good video! The tart looks amazing.
Can’t wait to grow. great info and video
Wooow the desert at the end 😍
you should make an Elder wand! love that you inserted a Harry Piotter reference :)
Maybe I will some day lol
Here in slovenia the batter covered and fried flowers used to be quite a popular food in the past, I haven't seen it outside my grandmas house though. It's really good, an interesting taste that I just can't really put into words. What is more popular nowadays is to make a syrup for diluting out of the flowers, almost every (rural) household makes their own lol.
Oddly, I have never tasted the fruit of them I think, which is weird since they grow everywhere here.
thanks friend for all the information you are my inspiration to make my garden
This is very interesting and I am encouraged to plant elderberries now 🙏 thankyou xx
thank you for this information. I have elderberries growing in my yard, and never ate them, now I will try them.
I'm inspired. I will definitely keep a lookout during my explorations.
Thanks for the tip about pulling the berries off frozen! That will come in handy.
My Grandfather had a Elderberry tree growing on the curb/berm/sidewalk of his property in the South Island. He use to make Elderberry Wine and it was a "blow your mind experience" drinking it LOL
We found some American black elder
Berries while camping, and we made
An elder berry syrup out of them!
It was delicious!
My friends make elderberry champagne from the flowers. They've given me cuttings so I can't wait to try it next year
This was great timing as I just planted elderberry last week!! I was told that two varieties would pollinate each other to produce more fruit, so I planted a “York” and a “Nova”.Are you familiar with these varieties? I didn’t think it would produce berries the first year but seeing your cutting take off so fast, I will know to remove them if so and let the plants grow. I am so excited to try making the medicinal beverage for cold and flu season! Your tart looks delicious!! Thank you from Washington State USA
i love drinking fizzy water with white elderberry syrup 😋it's also common to find white or black elderberry lemonade in german supermarkets. one of my favourite drinks ever 🥰i have yet to try the berries by themselves though 😊
Love your video coz I love gardening too
Regards from Bali, Indonesia
I love this channel been binging for a few weeks now really informative and really satisfying w/all the cooking and preps!
Thabk u^^
Thanks for the support, glad you’ve been enjoying it! 😁
I am from Austria and we have tons of elderberry trees growing in our forests. My grandmother always made elderberry flowers dipped in batter and fried. It's my favourite way to eat them.
Btw did you know that the wood ear mushroom loves to grow on elderberry wood?
Yum, and no didn’t know about the wood ear mushroom. That’s really interesting
I just planted two elderberry plants in my backyard, so I'm really excited to see how they'll be next year. I really appreciate your video on this, I learned so much
How are your bushes doing?
I'm British and these are everywhere - I've never used them myself to make anything, but I've drank elderflower cordial and elderberry wine. I've also just eaten the berries straight off or the tree, too.
The videos are so full of knowledge and facts and you deliver the message really well 🤙🤙🌱
They grow all over in Florida! Love them. A friend's husband would make poultice of the leaves to treat his hemorrhoids. Claimed it works great! *just putting that out there in case someone needs it. Happy to find your channel. Great stuff!
Beautiful sharing knowledge
Where I used to live had many places to gather the berries and I would dry them out on a clean window screen in summertime make sure in the shade and make sure they are spread out not overlapping any. I used it to add to herbs to make a tea, excellent medicine when sick. I also used the flowers for tea, but the berries are better.
I love foraging the flowers and making fresh tea from them in summer, it's so tasty 😌☕. I didn't know I had to remove the stems though 😳.
I made elderflower cordial here in Invercargill at the bottom of NZ. Delicious!
When I was a child, I often had warm soup with apple wedges, it was really good.
We always used to make elderflower pancakes which were delicious
My grandma and mom has been making jelly from elderberries since I was little
Great tasting!
My grandma used to dip the flowers in a kind of thick pancake batter (without baking powder) and fry them. That recipe is one of my favourite childhood memories! It's a very popular way to eat them here in Europe.
We just spent our first year converting an invasive bush(Black Alder) into an off grid farmland in Ontario Canada. We have a stream going through the center of the land and there is literally thousands of wild black elderberry. I cut a few stems in the Spring of last year and stuck them in the ground and they grew into fully mature plants with flowers and fruits. We make syrup, but did not know the flowers were edible. Thank you. So got the elderberry, but need bees. Beeeez eh?
Planning on planting a couple of elderberries in my place in Tasmania if I can source them. Can't wait to try them out in teas!!!!
Nice, hope it goes well!
That was such an interesting video. Man you are so talented. Thank you.
Thank you for this very informative video. Elderberry fritters are very good, they taste flowery and sweet. I have also made elderflower syrup for cold summer drinks.
That tea is awesome, forgot to mention that. I want one
I love that tea pot. Thanks for more information on elderberries
what a guy, thanks for the video, its a good one !
Soak some cotton with the elderflower tea and dab on irritated eyes. Grandma's working solution, from Cyprus. Smells great too!
Very interesting, thank you for sharing. Now I need to find a way to try an Elder tart, it looks good. Love the videos man! Keep up the good work! :) 👍(Hahaha at the Potter reference)
Cheers Mitch! 🪄
I love the flowers...
I came for the growing info but really loved the cooking segment too, thank you! :D
Cheers John, glad you enjoyed it!
My local forest is full of black elderberry but good luck finding any ripe berries! The birds love them and you’d be wise to get in on the elder action for your health. Great video as always, thanks
You are a very clever, multi talented young man. I really enjoy your videos. All the best.
Thanks so much for your video - loved it. I was introduced to elderberries a few years back in Denmark, where we harvested the flowers and made pancakes. Was tasty as pancakes usually are, but now I'm looking forward to transforming that traditional recipe into a more healthy one, using alternate flours and perhaps maple syrup as a sweetener. We've planted Elderberries on our new land in the Waikato, and they are doing amazingly well
That’s awesome, so many great uses for them. Glad to hear your ones are doing well :)
Highly informative, as well as interesting! 👍💯
This is my first year growing elderberry in Texas and I was looking for ways to use the flowers. Your video was so informative for the uses of both the flowers and the berries. I loved your video. You did a great job and I aspire to be as creative and talented as you! I do have one question though, if I dig out one of the suckers, do I need to make sure I get roots in order to be successful?
I made elderberry wine with red elderberries. It was pretty good chilled. Never had any negative effects.
New to your channel so glad to have found you and for this, I live in Jacksonville Florida USA and these grow wild in my yard like a weed! I was afraid of them at first and tried to eradicate them but sadly they’re very invasive so I’ve embraced them and so glad to learn how to harvest and use the flowers & berries! Thanks! 12:58
What a great video! I've been growing elderberries for a few years now and the one tip you gave about freezing the clusters before raking the berries off is ... GENIUS! I have spent hours and hours pulling the fresh berries off the stems knowing that the stems are toxic. I had considered elderberries VERY laborious until I saw that great tip about freezing the clusters. THANK YOU and God Bless!
Only thing is when you are pulling the frozen berries of the stem and you miss the bowl those little suckers can bounce. lol
You're very talented and Good person