Sambucus nigra (LINN.)
Family: N.O. Caprifoliaceae
Synonyms: Black Elder. Common Elder. Pipe Tree. Bore Tree. Bour Tree.
(Fourteenth Century) Hylder, Hylantree. (Anglo-Saxon) Eldrum. (Low
Saxon). Ellhorn. (German) Hollunder. (French) Sureau.
Part Used: Bark, leaves, flowers, berries.
Name | History
| Uses |
Parts
Used Medicinally:| Bark
| Leaves
| Flowers
| Berries |
Medicinal
Preparations |
Elder wines | Jams
| Elderberry Vinegar | Elderberry
Chutney | Elderberry
Ketchup
The Elder, with its flat-topped masses of creamy-white, fragrant blossoms,
followed by large drooping bunches of purplish-black, juicy berries, is a
familiar object in English countryside and gardens. It has been said, with some
truth, that our English summer is not here until the Elder is fully in flower,
and that it ends when the berries are ripe.
The word 'Elder' comes from the Anglo-Saxon word aeld. In Anglo-Saxon
days we find the tree called Eldrun, which becomes Hyldor and Hyllantree in the
fourteenth century. One of its names in modern German - Hollunder - is clearly
derived from the same origin. In Low-Saxon, the name appears as Ellhorn. Æld
meant 'fire,' the hollow stems of the young branches having been used for
blowing up a fire: the soft pith pushes out easily and the tubes thus formed
were used as pipes - hence it was often called Pipe-Tree, or Bore-tree and Bour-tree,
the latter name remaining in Scotland and being traceable to the Anglo-Saxon
form, Burtre.
The generic name Sambucus occurs in the writings of Pliny and other
ancient writers and is evidently adapted from the Greek word Sambuca, the
Sackbut, an ancient musical instrument in much use among the Romans, in the
construction of which, it is surmised, the wood of this tree, on account of its
hardness, was used. The difficulty, however, of accepting this is that the
Sambuca was a stringed instrument, while anything made from the Elder would
doubtless be a wind instrument, something of the nature of a Pan-pipe or flute.
Pliny records the belief held by country folk that the shrillest pipes and the
most sonorous horns were made of Elder trees which were grown out of reach of
the sound of cock-crow. At the present day, Italian peasants construct a simple
pipe, which they call sampogna, from the branches of this plant.
The popular pop-gun of small boys in the country has often been made of Elder
stems from which the pith has been removed, which moved Culpepper to declare:
'It is needless to write any description of this (Elder), since every boy that
plays with a pop-gun will not mistake another tree for the Elder.' Pliny's
writings also testify that pop-guns and whistles are manufactures many centuries
old!
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¶ History.
A wealth of folk-lore, romance and
superstition centre round this English tree. Shakespeare, in Cymbeline,
referring to it as a symbol of grief, speaks slightingly of it as 'the stinking
Elder,' yet, although many people profess a strong dislike to the scent of its
blossom, the shrub is generally beloved by all who see it. In countrysides where
the Elder flourishes it is certainly one of the most attractive features of the
hedgerow, while its old-world associations have created for it a place in the
hearts of English people.
- In Love's Labour Lost reference is made to the common medieval
belief that 'Judas was hanged on an Elder.' We meet with this tradition as
far back in English literature as Langland's Vision of Piers Plowman
(middle of the fourteenth century, before Chaucer):
- 'Judas he japed with Jewen silver
- And sithen an eller hanged hymselve.'
Why the Elder should have been selected as a gallows for the traitor Apostle is,
considering the usual size of the tree, puzzling; but Sir John Mandeville in his
travels, written about the same time, tells us that he was shown 'faste by' the
Pool of Siloam, the identical 'Tree of Eldre that Judas henge himself upon, for
despeyr that he hadde, when he solde and betrayed oure Lord.' Gerard scouts the
tradition and says that the Judas-tree (Cercis siliquastrum) is 'the tree
whereon Judas did hange himselfe.'
- Another old tradition was that the Cross of Calvary was made of it, and an
old couplet runs:
- 'Bour tree - Bour tree: crooked rong
- Never straight and never strong;
- Ever bush and never tree
- Since our Lord was nailed on thee.'
- In consequence of these old traditions, the Elder became the emblem of
sorrow and death, and out of the legends which linger round the tree there
grew up a host of superstitious fancies which still remain in the minds of
simple country folk. Even in these prosaic days, one sometimes comes across
a hedge-cutter who cannot bring himself to molest the rampant growth of its
spreading branches for fear of being pursued by ill-luck. An old custom
among gypsies forbade them using the wood to kindle their camp fires and
gleaners of firewood formerly would look carefully through the faggots lest
a stick of Elder should have found its way into the bundle, perhaps because
the Holy Cross was believed to have been fashioned out of a giant elder
tree, though probably the superstitious awe of harming the Elder descended
from old heathen myths of northern Europe. In most countries, especially in
Denmark, the Elder was intimately connected with magic. In its branches was
supposed to dwell a dryad, Hylde-Moer, the Elder-tree Mother, who lived in
the tree and watched over it. Should the tree be cut down and furniture be
made of the wood, Hylde-Moer was believed to follow her property and haunt
the owners. Lady Northcote, in The Book of Herbs, relates:
- 'There is a tradition that once when a child was put in a cradle of
Elder-wood, HyldeMoer came and pulled it by the legs and would give it no
peace till it was lifted out Permission to cut Elder wood must always be
asked first and not until Hylde-Moer has given consent by keeping silence,
may the chopping begin.'
- Arnkiel relates:
- 'Our forefathers also held the Ellhorn holy wherefore whoever need to hew
it down (or cut its branches) has first to make request "Lady Ellhorn,
give me some of thy wood and I will give thee some of mine when it grows in
the forest" - the which, with partly bended knees, bare head and folded
arms was ordinarily done, as I myself have often seen and heard in my
younger years.'
- Mr. Jones (quoted in The Treasury of Botany), in his Notes on
Certain Superstitions in the Vale of Gloucester, cites the following,
said to be no unusual case:
- 'Some men were employed in removing an old hedgerow, partially formed of
Eldertrees. They had bound up all the other wood into faggots for burning,
but had set apart the elder and enquired of their master how it was to be
disposed of. Upon his saying that he should of course burn it with the rest,
one of the men said with an air of undisguised alarm, that he had never heard
of such a thing as burning Ellan Wood, and in fact, so strongly did
he feel upon the subject, that he refused to participate in the act of tying
it up. The word Ellan (still common with us) indicates the origin of the
superstition.'
- In earlier days, the Elder Tree was supposed to ward off evil influence
and give protection from witches, a popular belief held in widely-distant
countries. Lady Northcote says:
- 'The Russians believe that Elder-trees drive away evil spirits, and the
Bohemians go to it with a spell to take away fever. The Sicilians think that
sticks of its wood will kill serpents and drive away robbers, and the Serbs
introduce a stick of Elder into their wedding ceremonies to bring good luck.
In England it was thought that the Elder was never struck by lightning, and
a twig of it tied into three or four knots and carried in the pocket was a
charm against rheumatism. A cross made of Elder and fastened to cowhouses
and stables was supposed to keep all evil from the animals.'
- In Cole's Art of Simpling (1656) we may read how in the later part
of the seventeenth century:
- 'in order to prevent witches from entering their houses, the common people
used to gather Elder leaves on the last day of April and affix them
to their doors and windows,'
- and the tree was formerly much cultivated near English cottages for
protection against witches .
- The use of the Elder for funeral purposes was an old English custom
referred to by Spenser,
- 'The Muses that were wont green Baies to weave,
- Now bringen bittre Eldre braunches seare.'
- -------Shepheard's Calendar - November.
- And Canon Ellacombe says that in the Tyrol:
- 'An Elder bush, trimmed into the form of a cross, is planted on a new-made
grave, and if it blossoms, the soul of the person Iying beneath it is
happy.'
Green Elder branches were also buried in a grave to protect the dead from
witches and evil spirits, and in some parts it was a custom for the driver of
the hearse to carry a whip made of Elder wood.
In some of the rural Midlands, it is believed that if a child is chastised
with an Elder switch, it will cease to grow, owing, in this instance, to some
supposed malign influence of the tree. On the other hand, Lord Bacon commended
the rubbing of warts with a green Elder stick and then burying the stick to rot
in the mud, and for erysipelas, it was recommended to wear about the neck an
amulet made of Elder 'on which the sun had never shined.'
- In Denmark we come across the old belief that he who stood under an Elder
tree on Midsummer Eve would see the King of Fairyland ride by, attended by
all his retinue. Folkard, in Plant-Lore, Legends and Lyrics, relates:
- 'The pith of the branches when cut in round, flat shapes, is dipped in
oil, lighted, and then put to float in a glass of water; its light on
Christmas Eve is thought to reveal to the owner all the witches and
sorcerers in the neighbourhood';
- and again,
- 'On Bertha Night (6th January), the devil goes about with special
virulence. As a safeguard, persons are recommended to make a magic circle,
in the centre of which they should stand, with Elderberries gathered on St.
John's night. By doing this, the mystic Fern-seed may be obtained, which
possesses the strength of thirty or forty men.'
This is a Styrian tradition.
The whole tree has a narcotic smell, and it is not considered wise to sleep
under its shade. Perhaps the visions of fairyland were the result of the drugged
sleep! No plant will grow under the shadow of it, being affected by its
exhalations.
Apart from all these traditions, the Elder has had from the earliest days a
firm claim on the popular affection for its many sterling virtues.
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¶ Uses.
Its uses are manifold and important. The
wood of old trees is white and of a fine, close grain, easily cut, and polishes
well, hence it was used for making skewers for butchers, shoemakers' pegs, and
various turned articles, such as tops for angling rods and needles for weaving
nets, also for making combs, mathematical instruments and several different
musical instruments, and the pith of the younger stems, which is exceedingly
light, is cut into balls and is used for electrical experiments and for making
small toys. It is also considerably used for holding small objects for
sectioning for microscopical purposes.
- In a cutting of Worlidge's Mystery of Husbandry (dated 1675) the
Elder is included in the 'trees necessary and proper for fencing and
enclosing of Lands.'
- 'A considerable Fence,' he writes, 'may be made of Elder, set of
reasonable hasty Truncheons, like the Willow and may be laid with great
curiosity: this makes a speedy shelter for a garden from Winds, Beasts and
suchlike injuries,'
- though he adds and emphasizes with italics, 'rather than from rude
Michers.'
- The word 'micher' is now obsolete, but it means a lurking thief, a
skulking vagabond. By clipping two or three times a year, an Elder hedge
may, however, be made close and compact in growth. There is an old tradition
that an Elder stake will last in the ground longer than an iron bar of the
same size, hence the old couplet:
- 'An eldern stake and a black thorn ether (hedge)
- Will make a hedge to last for ever.'
- The leaves have an unpleasant odour when bruised, which is supposed to be
offensive to most insects, and a decoction of the young leaves is sometimes
employed by gardeners to sprinkle over delicate plants and the buds of the
flowers to keep off the attacks of aphis and minute caterpillars. Moths are
fond of the blossoms, but it was stated by Christopher Gullet (Phil.
Trans., 1772, LXII) that if turnips, cabbages, fruit trees or corn be
whipped with bunches of the green leaves, they gain immunity from blight.
Though this does not sound a very practical procedure, there is evidently
some foundation for this statement, as the following note which appeared in
the Chemist and Druggist, January 6, 1923, would seem to prove:
- 'A liquid preparation for preventing, and also curing, blight in fruit
trees, wherein the base is a liquid obtained by boiling the young shoots
of the Elder tree or bush, mixed with suitable proportions of copper
sulphate, iron sulphate, nicotine, soft soap, methylated spirit and slaked
lime.'
The leaves, bruised, if worn in the hat or rubbed on the face, prevent flies
settling on the person. In order to safeguard the skin from the attacks of
mosquitoes, midges and other troublesome flies, an infusion of the leaves may be
dabbed on with advantage. Gather a few fresh leaves from the elder, tear them
from their stalks and place them in a jug, pouring boiling water on them and
covering them at once, leaving for a few hours. When the infusion is cold, it is
fit for use and should be at once poured off into a bottle and kept tightly
corked. It is desirable to make a fresh infusion often. The leaves are said to
be valued by the farmer for driving mice away from granaries and moles from
their usual haunts.
The bark of the older branches has been used in the Scotch Highlands
as an ingredient in dyeing black, also the root. The leaves yield,
with alum, a green dye and the berries dye blue and purple, the Juice
yielding with alum, violet; with alum and salt, a lilac colour.
The botanist finds in this plant an object of considerable interest, for if a
twig is partially cut, then cautiously broken and the divided portions are
carefully drawn asunder, the spiral air-vessels, resembling a screw, may be
distinctly seen.
Linnaeus observed that sheep eat the leaves, also cows, but that horses and
goats refuse it. If sheep that have the foot-rot can get at the bark and young
shoots, they will cure themselves. Elderberries are eaten greedily by young
birds and pigeons, but are said to have serious effects on chickens: the flowers
are reported to be fatal to turkeys, and according to Linnaeus, also to
peacocks.
Elder Flowers and Elder Berries have long been used in the English
countryside for making many home-made drinks and preserves that are almost as
great favourites now as in the time of our great-grandmothers. The berries make
an excellent home-made wine and winter cordial, which improves with age, and
taken hot with sugar, just before going to bed, is an old-fashioned and
wellestablished cure for a cold.
In Kent, there are entire orchards of Elder trees cultivated solely for the
sake of their fruit, which is brought regularly to market and sold for the
purpose of making wine. The berries are not only used legitimately for making
Elderberry Wine, but largely in the manufacture of so-called British wines -
they give a red colour to raisin wine - and in the adulteration of foreign
wines. Judiciously flavoured with vinegar and sugar and small quantities of port
wine, Elder is often the basis of spurious 'clarets' and 'Bordeaux.' 'Men of
nice palates,' says Berkeley (Querist, 1735), 'have been imposed on by
Elder Wine for French Claret.' Cheap port is often faked to resemble tawny port
by the addition of Elderberry juice, which forms one of the least injurious
ingredients of factitious port wines. Doctoring port wine with Elderberry juice
seems to have assumed such dimensions that in 1747 this practice was forbidden
in Portugal, even the cultivation of the Elder tree was forbidden on this
account. The practice proving so lucrative, however, is by no means obsolete,
but as the berries possess valuable medicinal properties, this adulteration has
no harmful results. The circumstances under which this was proved are somewhat
curious. In 1899 an American sailor informed a physician of Prague that getting
drunk on genuine, old, dark-red port was a sure remedy for rheumatic pains. This
unedifying observation started a long series of investigations ending in the
discovery that while genuine port wine has practically no anti-neuralgic
properties, the cheap stuff faked to resemble tawny port by the addition of
elderberry juice often banishes the pain of sciatica and other forms of
neuralgia, though of no avail in genuine neuritis. Cases of cure have been
instanced after many tests carried out by leading doctors in Prague and other
centres abroad, the dose recommended being 30 grams of Elderberry juice mixed
with 10 grams of port wine.
The Romans, as Pliny records, made use of it in medicine, as well as of the
Dwarf Elder (Sambucus Ebulus). Both kinds were employed in Britain by the
ancient English and Welsh leeches and in Italy in the medicine of the School of
Salernum. Elder still keeps its place in the British Pharmacopoeia, the cooling
effects of Elder flowers being well known. In many parts of the country, Elder
leaves and buds are used in drinks, poultices and ointments.
- It has been termed 'the medicine chest of the country people'
(Ettmueller)
and 'a whole magazine of physic to rustic practitioners,' and it is said the
great physician Boerhaave never passed an Elder without raising his hat, so
great an opinion had he of its curative properties. How great was the
popular estimation of it in Shakespeare's time may be gauged by the line in
the Merry Wives of Windsor, Act II, Sc. 3:
- 'What says my Æsculapius? my Galen? my heart of Elder?'
- John Evelyn, writing in praise of the Elder, says:
- 'If the medicinal properties of its leaves, bark and berries were fully
known, I cannot tell what our countryman could ail for which he might not
fetch a remedy from every hedge, either for sickness, or wounds.'
- 'The buds boiled in water gruel have effected wonders in a fever, the
spring buds are excellently wholesome in pattages; and small ale in which
Elder flowers have been infused is esteemed by many so salubrious that this
is to be had in most of the eatinghouses about our town.'
He also, as we have seen, recommends Elder flowers infused in vinegar as an
ingredient of a salad, 'though the leaves are somewhat rank of smell and so not
commendable in sallet they are of the most sovereign virtue,' and goes so far as
to say, 'an extract composed of the berries greatly assists longevity. Indeed
this is a catholicum against all infirmities whatever.'
Some twenty years before Evelyn's eulogy there had appeared in 1644 a book
entirely devoted to its praise: The Anatomie of the Elder, translated
from the Latin of Dr. Martin Blockwich by C. de Iryngio (who seems to have been
an army doctor), a treatise of some 230 pages, that in Latin and English went
through several editions. It deals very learnedly with the medicinal virtues of
the tree - its flowers, berries, leaves, 'middle bark,' pith, roots and 'Jew's
ears,' a large fungus often to be found on the Elder (Hirneola auricula Judae),
the name a corruption of 'Judas's ear,' from the tradition, referred to above,
that Judas hanged himself on the Elder. It is of a purplish tint, resembling in
shape and softness the human ear, and though it occurs also on the Elm, it grows
almost exclusively on Elder trunks in damp, shady places. It is curious that on
account of this connexion with Judas, the fungus should have (as Sir Thomas
Browne says) 'become a famous medicine in quinses, sore-throats, and
strangulation ever since.' Gerard says, 'the jelly of the Elder otherwise called
Jew's ear, taketh away inflammations of the mouth and throat if they be washed
therewith and doth in like manner help the uvula,' and Salmon, writing in the
early part of the eighteenth century, recommends an oil of Jew's ears for throat
affections. The fungus is edible and allied species are eaten in China.
Evelyn refers to this work (or rather to the original by
'Blockwitzius,' as
he calls him!) for the comprehensive statement in praise of the Elder quoted
above. It sets forth that as every part of the tree was medicinal, so virtually
every ailment of the body was curable by it, from toothache to the plague. It
was used externally and internally, and in amulets (these were especially good
for epilepsy, and in popular belief also for rheumatism), and in every kind of
form - in rob and syrup, tincture, mixture, oil, spirit, water, liniment,
extract, salt, conserve, vinegar, oxymel, sugar, decoction, bath, cataplasm and
powder. Some of these were prepared from one part of the plant only, others from
several or from all. Their properties are summed up as 'desiccating,
conglutinating, and digesting,' but are extended to include everything necessary
to a universal remedy. The book prescribes in more or less detail for some
seventy or more distinct diseases or classes of diseases, and the writer is
never at a loss for an authority - from Dioscorides to the Pharmacopoeias of his
own day-while the examples of cures he adduces are drawn from all classes of
people, from Emylia, Countess of Isinburg, to the tradesmen of Heyna and their
dependants.
The interest in the Elder evinced about this period is also demonstrated by a
tract on 'Elder and Juniper Berries, showing how useful they may be in our
Coffee Houses,' which was published with The Natural History of Coffee,
in 1682.
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¶ Parts Used
Medicinally. The bark, leaves,
flowers and berries.
¶ Bark. The Inner Bark should be collected in
autumn, from young trees. It is best dried in a moderate sun-heat, being taken
indoors at night. When ready for use, it is a light grey, soft and corky
externally, with broad fissures; white and smooth on the inner surface. The
taste of the bark is sweetish at first, then slightly bitter and nauseous. It is
without odour.
¶ Chemical Constituents. The active principle of
the bark is a soft resin, and an acidViburnic acid, which has been proved
identical with Valeric acid. Other constituents are traces of a volatile oil,
albumen, resin, fat, wax, chlorophyll, tannic acid, grape sugar, gum,
extractive, starch, pectin and various alkaline and earthy salts. (According
to an analysis by Kramer in 1881.)
¶ Medicinal Action and Uses. The bark is a strong
purgative which may be employed with advantage, an infusion of 1 OZ. in a pint
of water being taken in wineglassful doses; in large doses it is an emetic. Its
use as a purgative dates back to Hippocrates. It has been much employed as a
diuretic, an aqueous solution having been found very useful in cardiac and renal
dropsies. It has also been successfully employed in epilepsy.
An emollient ointment is made of the green inner bark, and a homoeopathic
tincture made from the fresh inner bark of the young branches, in diluted form,
relieves asthmatic symptoms and spurious croup of children - dose, 4 or 5 drops
in water.
- Culpepper states:
- 'The first shoots of the common Elder, boiled like Asparagus, and the
young leaves and stalks boiled in fat broth, doth mightily carry forth
phlegm and choler. The middle or inward bark boiled in water and given in
drink wortheth much more violently; and the berries, either green or dry,
expel the same humour, and are often given with good success in dropsy; the
bark of the root boiled in wine, or the juice thereof drunk, worketh the
same effects, but more powerfully than either the leaves or fruit. The juice
of the root taken, causes vomitings and purgeth the watery humours of the
dropsy.'
Though the use of the root is now obsolete, its juice was used from very ancient
times to promote both vomiting and purging, and taken, as another old writer
recommends, in doses of 1 to 2 tablespoonsful, fasting, once in the week, was
held to be 'the most excellent purge of water humours in the world and very
singular against dropsy.' A tea was also made from the roots of Elder, which was
considered an effective preventative for incipient dropsy, in fact the very best
remedy for such cases .
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¶ Leaves.
Elder leaves are used both fresh and
dry.
Collect the leaves in June and July. Gather only in fine weather, in the
morning, after the dew has been dried by the sun. Strip the leaves off singly,
rejecting any that are stained or insect-eaten. Drying is then done in the usual
manner.
¶ Constituents. Elder Leaves contain an alkaloid
Sambucine, a purgative resin and the glucoside Sambunigrin, which crystallizes
in white, felted needles. Fresh Elder leaves yield about 0.16 per cent of
hydrocyanic acid. They also contain cane sugar, invertin, a considerable
quantity of potassium nitrate and a crystalline substance, Eldrin, which has
also been found in other white flowering plants.
De Sanctis claims to have isolated the alkaloid Coniine from the branches and
leaves of Sambucus nigra. Alpes (Proc. Amer. Pharm. Assoc., 1900)
found undoubted evidence of an alkaloid in the roots of the American Elder (S.
Canadensis), its odour being somewhat similar to that of coniine and also
suggesting nicotine. This alkaloid was evidently volatile. It appeared to be
much less abundant in the dried roots after some months keeping. The fresh root
of S. Canadensis has been found extremely poisonous, producing death in
children within a short time after being eaten with symptoms very similar to
those of poisoning by Hemlock (Conium).
¶ Uses. Elder leaves are used in the preparation
of an ointment, Unguentum Sambuci Viride, Green Elder Ointment, which is
a domestic remedy for bruises, sprains, chilblains, for use as an emollient, and
for applying to wounds. It can be compounded as follows: Take 3 parts of fresh
Elder leaves, 4 parts of lard and 2 of prepared suet, heat the Elder leaves with
the melted lard and suet until the colour is extracted, then strain through a
linen cloth with pressure and allow to cool.
Sir Thomas Browne (1655) stated: 'The common people keep as a good secret in
curing wounds the leaves of the Elder, which they have gathered the last day of
April.' The leaves, boiled soft with a little linseed oil, were used as a
healing application to piles. An ointment concocted from the green Elderberries,
with camphor and lard, was formerly ordered by the London College of Surgeons to
relieve the same complaint. The leaves are an ingredient of many cooling
ointments: Here is another recipe, not made from Elder leaves alone, and very
much recommended by modern herbalists as being very cooling and softening and
excellent for all kinds of tumours, swellings and wounds: Take the Elder leaves
1/2 lb., Plantain leaves 1/4 lb., Ground Ivy 2 oz., Wormwood 4 oz. (all green);
cut them small, and boil in 4 lb. of lard, in the oven, or over a slow fire;
stir them continually until the leaves become crisp, then strain, and press out
the ointment for use.
Oil of Elder Leaves (Oleum Viride), Green Oil, or Oil of Swallows, is
prepared by digesting 1 part of bruised fresh Elder leaves in 3 parts of linseed
oil. In commerce, it is said to be generally coloured with verdigris.
Like the bark, the leaves are also purgative, but more nauseous than the
bark. Their action is likewise expectorant, diuretic and diaphoretic. They are
said to be very efficacious in dropsy. The juice of Elder leaves is stated by
the old herbalists to be good for inflammation of the eyes, and 'snuffed up the
nostrils,' Culpepper declares, 'purgeth the brain.' Another old notion was that
if the green leaves were warmed between two hot tiles and applied to the
forehead, they would promptly relieve nervous headache.
The use of the leaves, bruised and in decoction to drive away flies and kill
aphides and other insect pests has already been referred to.
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¶ Flowers. Elder Flowers are chiefly used in
pharmacy in the fresh state for the distillation of Elder Flower Water, but as
the flowering season only lasts for about three weeks in June, the flowers are
often salted, so as to be available for distillation at a later season, 10 per
cent of common salt being added, the flowers being them termed 'pickled.' They
are also dried, for making infusions.
The flowers are collected when just in full bloom and thrown into heaps, and
after a few hours, during which they become slightly heated the corollas become
loosened and can then be removed by sifting. The Elder 'flowers' of pharmacy
consist of the small white wheel-shaped, five-lobed, monopetalous corollas only,
in the short tube of which the five stamens with very short filaments and yellow
anthers are inserted. When fresh, the flowers have a slightly bitter taste and
an odour scarcely pleasant. The pickled flowers, however, gradually acquire an
agreeable fragrance and are therefore generally used for the preparation of
Elder Flower Water. A similar change also takes place in the water distilled
from the fresh flowers.
In domestic herbal medicines, the dried flowers are largely used in
country districts and are sold by herbalists either in dried bunches of flowers,
or sifted free from flower stalks. The flowers are not easily dried of good
colour. If left too late exposed to the sun before gathering, the flowers assume
a brownish colour when dried, and if the flower bunches are left too long in
heaps, to cause the flowers to fall off, these heaps turn black. If the
inflorescence is only partly open when gathered, the flower-heads have to be
sifted more than once, as the flowers do not open all at the same time. The best
and lightest coloured flowers are obtained at the first sifting, when the
flowers that have matured and fallen naturally are free from stalks, and dried
quickly in a heated atmosphere. They may be very quickly dried in a heated
copper pan, being stirred about for a few minutes. They can also be dried almost
as quickly in a cool oven, with the door open. Quickness in drying is essential.
The dried flowers, which are so shrivelled that their details are quite
obscured, have a dingy, brownish-yellow colour and a faint, but characteristic
odour and mucilaginous taste. As a rule, imported flowers have a duller yellow
colour and inferior odour and are sold at a cheaper rate. When the microscope
does not reveal tufts of short hairs in the sinuses of the calyx, the drug is
not of this species. Most pharmacopoeias specify that dark brown or blackish
flowers should be rejected. This appearance may be due to their having been
collected some time after opening, to carelessness in drying, or to having been
preserved too long.
The flowers of the Dwarf Elder, a comparatively uncommon plant in this
country are distinguished from those of the Common Elder by having dark red
anthers.
The flowers of the Yarrow (Achillea millefolium), and other composite
plants, which have been used as adulterants of Elder flowers differ still more
markedly in appearance and their presence in the drug is readily detected.
¶ Constituents. The most important constituent of
Elder Flowers is a trace of semisolid volatile oil, present to the extent only
of 0.32, per cent possessing the odour of the flowers in a high degree. It is
obtained by distilling the fresh flowers with water, saturating the distillate
with salt and shaking it with ether. On evaporating the ethereal solution, the
oil is obtained as a yellowish, buttery mass. Without ether, fresh Elder flowers
yield 0.037 per cent of the volatile oil and the dried flowers 0.0027 per cent
only.
Elder Flower Water (Aqua Sambuci) is an official preparation of the
British Pharmacopoeia, which directs that it be made from 100 parts of Elder
Flowers distilled with 500 parts of water (about 10 lb. to the gallon), and that
if fresh Elder flowers are not obtainable, an equivalent quantity of the flowers
preserved with common salt be used. The product has at first a distinctly
unpleasant odour, but gradually acquires an agreeably aromatic odour, and it is
preferable not to use it until this change has taken place.
Elder Flower Water is employed in mixing medicines and chiefly as a vehicle
for eye and skin lotions. It is mildly astringent and a gentle stimulant. It is
the Eau de Sureau of the Continent, Sureau being the French name
of the Eider.
Here is a recipe that can be carried out at home: Fill a large jar with Elder
blossoms, pressing them down, the stalks of course having been removed
previously. Pour on them 2 quarts of boiling water and when slightly cooled, add
1 1/2 OZ. of rectified spirits. Cover with a folded cloth, and stand the jar in
a warm place for some hours. Then allow it to get quite cold and strain through
muslin. Put into bottles and cork securely.
Elderflower Water in our great-grandmothers' days was a household word for
clearing the complexion of freckles and sunburn, and keeping it in a good
condition. Every lady's toilet table possessed a bottle of the liquid, and she
relied on this to keep her skin fair and white and free from blemishes, and it
has not lost its reputation. Its use after sea-bathing has been recommended, and
if any eruption should appear on the face as the effect of salt water, it is a
good plan to use a mixture composed of Elder Flower Water with glycerine and
borax, and apply it night and morning.
Elder Flowers, if placed in the water used for washing the hands and face,
will both whiten and soften the skin-a convenient way being to place them in a
small muslin bag. Such a bag steeped in the bathwater makes a most refreshing
bath and a wellknown French doctor has stated that he considers it a fine aid in
the bath in cases of irritability of the skin and nerves.
The flowers were used by our forefathers in bronchial and pulmonary
affections, and in scarlet fever, measles and other eruptive diseases. An
infusion of the dried flowers, Elder Flower Tea, is said to promote
expectoration in pleurisy; it is gently laxative and aperient and is considered
excellent for inducing free perspiration. It is a good oldfashioned remedy for
colds and throat trouble, taken hot on going to bed. An almost infallible cure
for an attack of influenza in its first stage is a strong infusion of dried
Elder Blossoms and Peppermint. Put a handful of each in a jug, pour over them a
pint and a half of boiling water, allow to steep, on the stove, for half an hour
then strain and sweeten and drink in bed as hot as possible. Heavy perspiration
and refreshing sleep will follow, and the patient will wake up well on the way
to recovery and the cold or influenza will probably be banished within
thirty-six hours. Yarrow may also be added.
Elder Flower Tea, cold, was also considered almost as good for inflammation
of the eyes as the distilled Elder Flower Water.
Tea made from Elder Flowers has also been recommended as a splendid spring
medicine, to be taken every morning before breakfast for some weeks, being
considered an excellent blood purifier.
- Externally, Elder Flowers are used in fomentations, to ease pain and abate
inflammation. An old writer tells us:
- 'There be nothing more excellent to ease the pains of the haemorrhoids
than a fomentation made of the flowers of the Elder and Verbusie, or
Honeysuckle in water or milk for a short time. It easeth the greatest pain.
'
A lotion, too, can be made by pouring boiling water on the dried blossoms, which
is healing, cooling and soothing. Add 2 1/2 drachms of Elder Flowers to 1 quart
of boiling water, infuse for an hour and then strain. The liquor can be applied
as a lotion by means of a linen rag, for tumours boils, and affections of the
skin, and is said to be effective put on the temples against headache and also
for warding off the attacks of flies.
A salad of young Elder buds, macerated a little in hot water and dressed with
oil, vinegar and salt, has been used as a remedy against skin eruptions.
Elder Vinegar made from the flowers is an old remedy for sore throat.
A good ointment is also prepared from the flowers by infusion in warm lard,
useful for dressing wounds, burns and scalds, which is used, also, as a basis
for pomades and cosmetic ointments, Elder Flower Ointment (Unguentum Sambuci)
was largely used for wounded horses in the War - the Blue Cross made a special
appeal for supplies - but it is also good for human use and is an old remedy for
chapped hands and chilblains. Equal quantities of the fresh flowers and of lard
are taken, the flowers are heated with the lard until they become crisp, then
strained through a linen cloth with pressure and allowed to cool. For use as a
Face Cream, (This preparation is hardly suitable as a cosmetic, as lard induces
the growth of hair. - EDITOR.) the directions are a little more elaborate, but
it is essentially the same: Melt lard in a pan then add a small cup of cold
water and stir well. Simmer with the lid on for about an hour and finally let
the mixture boil with the lid off until all the water has evaporated; this will
have happened when, on stirring, no steam arises. Place on one side to cool a
little and then pass the liquid fat through a piece of muslin so that it may be
well strained and free from impurities. Take a quantity of Elder Flowers equal
in weight to the lard and place these in the lard. Then boil up the mixture
again, keeping it simmering for a good hour. At the end of that time, strain the
whole through a coarse cloth and when cool, the ointment will be ready for use.
Elder Flowers, with their subtle sweet scent, entered into much delicate
cookery, in olden days. Formerly the creamy blossoms were beaten up in the
batter of flannel cakes and muffins, to which they gave a more delicate texture.
They were also boiled in gruel as a fever-drink, and were added to the posset of
the Christening feast.
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¶ Berries. All the other parts of the Elder plant,
except the wood and pith, are more active than either the flowers or the fruit.
Fresh Elder Berries are found to contain sudorific properties similar to those
of the flowers, but weaker. Chemically, the berries furnish Viburnic acid, with
an odorous oil, combined with malates of potash and lime. The fresh, ripe fruits
contain Tyrosin.
The blue colouring matter extracted from them has been considerably used as
an indication for alkalis, with which it gives a green colour, being red with
acids. (Alkalis redden some vegetable yellows and change some vegetable blues to
green.) According to Cowie this colouring matter is best extracted in the form
of a 20 per cent tincture from the refuse remaining after the expression of the
first juice. The colouring matter is precipitated blue by lead acetate (National
Standard Dispensatory, 1909.)
The Romans made use of Elderberry juice as a hair-dye, and Culpepper tells us
that 'the hair of the head washed with the berries boiled in wine is made
black.'
- English Elder Berries, as we have seen, are extensively used for the
preparation of Elder Wine. French and other Continental Elder berries, when
dried, are not liked for this purpose, as they have a more unpleasant odour
and flavour, and English berries are preferred. Possibly this may be due to
the conditions of growth, or variety, or to the presence of the berries of
the Dwarf Elder. Aubrey (1626-97) tells us that:
- 'the apothecaries well know the use of the berries, and so do the
vintners, who buy vast quantities of them in London, and some do make no
inconsiderable profit by the sale of them.'
They were held by our forefathers to be efficacious in rheumatism and
erysipelas. They have aperient, diuretic and emetic properties, and the
inspissated juice of the berries has been used as an alterative in rheumatism
and syphilis in doses of from one to two drachms, also as a laxative in doses of
half an ounce or more. It promotes all fluid secretions and natural evacuations.
For colic and diarrhoea, a tea made of the dried berries is said to be a good
remedy.
In The Anatomie of the Elder, it is stated that the berries of the
Elder and Herb Paris are useful in epilepsy. Green Elderberry Ointment has
already been mentioned as curative of piles.
- After enumerating many uses of the Elder, Gerard says:
- 'The seeds contained within the berries, dried, are good for such as have
the dropsie, and such as are too fat, and would faine be leaner, if they be
taken in a morning to the quantity of a dram with wine for a certain space.
The green leaves, pounded with Deeres suet or Bulls tallow are good to be
laid to hot swellings and tumors, and doth assuage the paine of the gout.'
Parkinson, physician to James I, also tells us of the same use of the seeds,
which he recommends to be taken powdered, in vinegar.
Elderberry Wine has a curative power of established repute as a remedy, taken
hot, at night, for promoting perspiration in the early stages of severe catarrh,
accompanied by shivering, sore throat, etc. Like Elderflower Tea, it is one of
the best preventives known against the advance of influenza and the ill effects
of a chill. A little cinnamon may be added. It has also a reputation as an
excellent remedy for asthma.
Almost from time immemorial, a 'Rob' (a vegetable juice thickened by heat)
has been made from the juice of Elderberries simmered and thickened with sugar,
forming an invaluable cordial for colds and coughs, but only of late years has
science proved that Elderberries furnish Viburnic acid, which induces
perspiration, and is especially useful in cases of bronchitis and similar
troubles.
To make Elderberry Rob, 5 lb. of fresh ripe, crushed berries are simmered
with 1 lb. of loaf sugar and the juice evaporated to the thickness of honey. It
is cordial, aperient and diuretic. One or two tablespoonsful mixed with a
tumblerful of hot water, taken at night, promotes perspiration and is demulcent
to the chest. The Rob when made can be bottled and stored for the winter.
Herbalists sell it ready for use.
'Syrup of Elderberries' is made as follows: Pick the berries when throughly
ripe from the stalks and stew with a little water in a jar in the oven or pan.
After straining, allow 1/2 oz. of whole ginger and 18 cloves to each gallon.
Boil the ingredients an hour, strain again and bottle. The syrup is an excellent
cure for a cold. To about a wineglassful of Elderberry syrup, add hot water, and
if liked, sugar.
Both Syrup of Elderberries and the Rob were once official in this country (as
they are still in Holland), the rob being the older of of the two, and the one
that retained its place longer in our Pharmacopoeia. In 1788, its name was
changed to Succus Sambuci spissatus, and in 1809 it disappeared
altogether. Brookes in 1773 strongly recommended it as a 'saponaceous Resolvent'
promoting 'the natural secretions by stool, urine and sweat,' and, diluted with
water, for common colds. John Wesley, in his Primitive Physick, directs
it to be taken in broth, and in Germany it is used as an ingredient in soups.
There were six or seven robs in the old London
Pharmacopceia, to most of
which sugar was added. They were thicker than syrups, but did not differ
materially from them; among them was a rob of Elderberries, and both Quincy and
Bates had a syrup of Elder.
An old prescription for sciatica (called the Duke of Monmouth's recipe) was
compounded of ripe haws and fennel roots, distilled in white wine and taken with
syrup of Elder.
The use of the juicy berries, not as medicine, but as a pleasant article of
food, in jam, jelly, chutney and ketchup has already been described.
¶ Medicinal
Preparations. Fluid extract of
bark, 1/2 to 1 drachm. Water, B.P.
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An old recipe for Elder Wine
'To every quart of berries put 2 quarts of water; boil half an hour, run the
liquor and break the fruit through a hair sieve; then to every quart of juice,
put 3/4 of a pound of Lisbon sugar, coarse, but not the very coarsest. Boil the
whole a quarter of an hour with some Jamaica peppers, ginger, and a few cloves.
Pour it into a tub, and when of a proper warmth, into the barrel, with toast and
yeast to work, which there is more difficulty to make it do than most other
liquors. When it ceases to hiss, put a quart of brandy to eight gallons and stop
up. Bottle in the spring, or at Christmas. The liquor must be in a warm place to
make it work.'
- The following recipe for making Elder Wine is given by Mrs. Hewlett in a
work entitled Cottage Comforts:
"If two gallons of wine are to be made, get one gallon of Elderberries,
and a quart of damsons, or sloes; boil them together in six quarts of water,
for half an hour, breaking the fruit with a stick, flat at one end; run off
the liquor, and squeeze the pulp through a sieve, or straining cloth; boil
the liquor up again with six pounds of coarse sugar, two ounces of ginger,
two ounces of bruised allspice, and one ounce of hops; (the spice had better
be loosely tied in a bit of muslin); let this boil above half an hour; then
pour it off, when quite cool, stir in a teacupful of yeast, and cover it up
to work. After two days, skim off the yeast, and put the wine into the
barrel, and when it ceases to hiss, which will be in about a fortnight,
paste a stiff brown paper over the bung-hole. After this, it will be fit for
use in about 8 weeks, but will keep 8 years, if required. The bag of spice
may be dropped in at the bung-hole, having a string fastened outside, which
shall keep it from reaching the bottom of the barrel.'
Another Recipe
'Strip the berries, which must be quite ripe, into a dry pan and pour 2 gallons
of boiling water over 3 gallons of berries. Cover and leave in a warm place for
24 hours; then strain, pressing the juice well out. Measure it and allow 3
pounds of sugar, half an ounce of ginger and 1/4 ounce of cloves to each gallon.
Boil for 20 minutes slowly, then strain it into a cask and ferment when
lukewarm. Let it remain until still, before bunging, and bottle in six months.
'If a weaker wine is preferred, use 4 gallons of water to 3 gallons of
berries and leave for two days before straining.
'If a cask be not available, large stone jars will answer: then the wine need
not be bottled.'
Parkinson tells us that fresh Elder Flowers hung in a vessel of new wine and
pressed every evening for seven nights together, 'giveth to the wine a very good
relish and a smell like Muscadine.' Ale was also infused with Elder flowers.
The berries make good pies, if blended with spices, and formerly used
to be preserved with spice and kept for winter use in pies when fruit was
scarce.
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Quite a delicious jam can also be made of them, mixed with
apples, which has much the flavour of Blackberry jam. They mix to very great
advantage with Crab Apple, or with the hard Catillac cooking Pear, or with
Vegetable Marrow, and also with Blackberries or Rhubarb.
The Fruit Preserving Section of the Food Ministry issued during the War the
following recipe for Elderberry and Apple Jam: 6 lb. Elderberries, 6 lb.
sliced apples, 12 lb. sugar. Make a pulp of the apples by boiling in water till
soft and passing through a coarse sieve to remove any seeds or cores. The
Elderberries should also be stewed for half an hour to soften them. Combine the
Apple pulp, berries and sugar and return to the fire to boil till thick.
Another Recipe
Equal quantities of Elderberries and Apples, 3/4 lb. sugar and one lemon to each
pound of fruit. Strip the berries from the stalks, peel, core and cut up the
apples and weigh both fruits. Put the Elderberries into a pan over low heat and
bruise them with a wooden spoon. When the juice begins to flow, add the Apples
and one-third of the sugar and bring slowly to the boil. When quite soft, rub
all through a hair sieve. Return the pulp to the pan, add the rest of the sugar,
the grated lemon rind and juice and boil for half an hour, or until the jam sets
when tested. Remove all scum, put into pots and cover.
Elderberry Jam without Apples
To every pound of berries add 1/4 pint ofwater, the juice of 2 lemons and 1 lb.
of sugar. Boil from 30 to 45 minutes, until it sets when tested. Put into jars
and tie down when cold.
The Elderberry will, of course, also make a jelly. As it is a juicy
fruit, it will not need the addition of any more liquid than, perhaps, a squeeze
of lemon. Equal quantities of Elderberry juice and apple juice, and apple juice
from peeling, will require 3/4 lb. of sugar to a pint. Elderberry Jelly is firm
and flavorous, with a racy tang.
When the fruit is not quite ripe, it may be preserved in brine and used as a
substitute for capers.
The juice from Elder Berries, too, was formerly distilled and mixed with
vinegar for salad dressings and flavouring sauces. Vinegars used in former times
frequently to be aromatized by steeping in them barberries, rosemary, rose
leaves, gilliflowers, lavender, violets - in short, any scented flower or plant
though tarragon is now practically the only herb used in this manner to any
large extent.
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Elderflower Vinegar
is made thus:
Take 2 lb. of dried flowers of Elder. If you use your own flowers, pluck
carefully their stalks from them and dry them carefully and thoroughly. This
done, place in a large vessel and pour over them 2 pints of good vinegar. Close
the vessel hermetically, keep it in a very warm place and shake them from time
to time. After 8 days, strain the vinegar through a paper filter. Keep in
well-stoppered bottles.
This is an old-world simple, but rarely met with nowadays, but worth the
slight trouble of making. It was well-known and appreciated in former days and
often mentioned in old books; Steele, in The Tatler, says: 'They had
dissented about the preference of Elder to Wine vinegar.'
One seldom has the chance of now tasting the old country pickle made from the
tender young shoots and flowers. John Evelyn, writing in 1664, recommends Elder
flowers infused in vinegar as an ingredient of a salad. The pickled blossoms are
said by those who have tried them to be a welcome relish with boiled mutton, as
a substitute for capers. Clusters of the flowers are gathered in their unripened
green state, put into a stone jar and covered with boiling vinegar. Spices are
unnecessary. The jar is tied down directly the pickle is cold. This pickle is
very good and has the advantage of costing next to nothing.
The pickle made from the tender young shoots - sometimes known as
'English Bamboo' - is more elaborate. During May, in the middle of the Elder
bushes in the hedges, large young green shoots may be observed. Cut these,
selecting the greenest, peel off every vestige of the outer skin and lay them in
salt and water overnight. Each individual length must be carefully chosen, for
while they must not be too immature, if the shoots are at all woody, they will
not be worth eating, The following morning, prepare the pickle for the Mock
Bamboo. To a quart of vinegar, add an ounce of white pepper, an ounce of ginger,
half a saltspoonful of mace and boil all well together. Remove the Elder shoots
from the salt and water, dry in a cloth and slice up into suitable pieces,
laying them in a stone jar. Pour the boiling mixture over them and either place
them in an oven for 2 hours, or in a pan of boiling water on the stove. When
cold, the pickle should be green in colour. If not, strain the liquor, boil it
up again, pour over the shoots and repeat the process. The great art of
obtaining and retaining the essence of the plant lies in excluding air from the
tied-down jar as much as possible.
The young shoots can also be boiled in salted water with a pinch of soda to
preserve the colour, they prove beautifully tender, resembling spinach, and form
quite a welcome addition to the dinner table.
Good use can be made of the berries for Ketchup and Chutney,
and the following recipes will be found excellent.
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Elderberry Chutney
2 lb. Elderberries, 1 large Onion, 1 pint vinegar, 1 teaspoonful salt, 1
teaspoonful ground ginger, 2 tablespoonsful sugar, 1 saltspoonful cayenne and
mixed spices, 1 teaspoonful mustard seed.
Stalk, weigh and wash the berries; put them into a pan and bruise with a
wooden spoon; chop the onion and add with the rest of the ingredients and
vinegar. Bring to the boil and simmer till it becomes thick. Stir well, being
careful not to let it burn as it thickens. Put into jars and cover.
Another Recipe
Rub 1 1/2 lb. of berries through a wire sieve, pound 1 onion, 6 cloves, 1/4 oz.
ground ginger, 2 oz. Demerara sugar, 3 oz. stoned raisins, a dust of cayenne and
mace, 1 teaspoonful salt and 1 pint vinegar. Put all in an enamelled saucepan
and boil with the pulp of the berries for 10 minutes. Take the pan from the fire
and let it stand till cold. Put the chutney into jars and cork securely.
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Elderberry Ketchup
1 pint Elderberries, 1 OZ. shallots, 1 blade mace, 1/2 oz. peppercorns, 1 1/2
OZ. whole ginger, 1 pint vinegar.
Pick the berries (which must be ripe) from the stalks, weigh and wash them.
Put them into an unglazed crock or jar, pour over the boiling vinegar and leave
all night in a cool oven. Next day, strain the liquor from the berries through a
cloth tied on to the legs of an inverted chair and put it into a pan, with the
peeled and minced shallots, the ginger peeled and cut up small, the mace and
peppercorns. Boil for 10 minutes, then put into bottles, dividing the spices
among the bottles. Cork well.
All parts of the tree - bark, leaves, flowers and berries - have long enjoyed
a high reputation in domestic medicine. From the days of Hippocrates, it has
been famous for its medicinal properties.
Reprinted from "A
Modern Herbal" (1931)
Mrs. M. Grieve, Edited by Mrs. C.F. Leyel
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