Tip Off The Old Spruce (2024)

TIPS OF SPRING Spruce tips emerge over a matter of days, so keep an eye out for the bright green new growth breaking through the brown casing.

Around Southcentral and Southeast Alaska, spruce tips appear pretty reliably around Mother’s Day. Poet Seamus Heaney even referenced the bright fresh color, describing the “May-green spruce,” in his Glanmore Sonnets. The one exception I’ve noted to the May rule was the time I left our fresh Christmas tree up extra long because it still seemed so healthy and it was brightening our house during the still-dark days of post-Christmas winter. That year, sometime in late January, or early February (I know, I know), I got ready to take the thing down, and I noticed the bright green tips had pushed through their papery skins. Next year, I plan to try and force some tips with just a couple of spruce branches in a jar during the winter.

Spruce tips are what I think of as a “gateway” wild food—easy to pick, beginner friendly, and completely non-toxic. Spruce tips have a range of flavors depending on their stage of maturity: herbal, fruity, citrus, resinous. They play well with both sweet and savory dishes. All spruce varieties (from the pine or Pinaceae family) are edible. Janice Schofield, in Discovering Wild Plants, tells us that many parts of the tree have been historically used for food—from the new tips, to seeds from the cones, to the inner bark (cambium). Spruce tips have a long history outside of Alaska as an ingredient in spruce beer, and Captain Cook famously served the beer to sailors to ward off scurvy.

In Alaska, the use of spruce tips has grown well beyond home cooks, foragers, and home brewers. Many breweries around the state have adopted spruce tips in their recipes. Curtis Holmes of Alaskan Brewing told the Anchorage Press last year that the company uses 2,000–3,000 pounds of tips per year making their Spruce IPA.

Spruce trees are easy to identify. Spruce branches are sharp and pointy, unlike their hemlock neighbors, which are also edible. (Notably, yew trees in all varieties are extremely toxic, so if you’re foraging for conifers, make sure you can identify them. Unlike spruce, they have flat needles that come to a point at the end. In Alaska, yew occur only in Southeast.)

The tips first appear wrapped in a brown “paper” skin. The moment the tips begin to pop through the paper, they are ready to pick. There is a sweet spot in their growth cycle when they have mostly emerged but are still small. That’s the perfect time for picking. Too early, the tips encased in paper are a lot of extra work in the kitchen (the paper is resinous and not as tasty as the bright green tips). Too late and the tips’ flavor changes. They go from fruity and floral to tart and a bit medicinal. Next, they darken and become spruce branches, which are too tough and fibrous to eat.

Tip transformation happens quickly in May’s light-filled days. But if it seems like you missed it, try hiking up a hill. Forage on higher ground to find edible plants past their prime down low.

The word “spruce” came to the English language in medieval times. It was a shortening of the word “Prussia,” and it referred to the tree which was called Prussian fir. Prussians were considered orderly and tidy folks, and the term “to spruce up” also stemmed from the same origin. Spring cleaning and spring edibles—an unlikely connection!

I was introduced to spruce tips as a source for sweet treats, especially spruce tip syrup or jelly. It turns out that the tips have great savory uses as well. One of my favorite condiments to make is spruce tip salt. I find this salt is best used within a few months, because it loses flavor and color. So to have some in the winter, I make it again as needed with frozen spruce tips. Spruce tip salt is amazing on fresh salmon, or as a sprinkle on fresh spring salads, or on fresh tomatoes in summer. Erica Thompson Clark, who first turned me on to spruce tips, adds them to a glaze of mayo and whole grain mustard, which she coats on halibut and cod before grilling.

One of my favorite spruce items to have on hand is actually a byproduct of spruce tip syrup. After making a light syrup, I strain the tips and then dry the sugar-soaked tips in a dehydrator or in the oven. When they’re completely dried, they can be stored indefinitely (unlike the salt, they don’t seem to lose their flavor over time). Grind the tips as needed for spruce sugar topping on cookies, or to use in shortbread, or to rim a spruce-y co*cktail (like the Currant Mood from Carissa Pearce in this issue). Many folks in Cordova like to make a much darker spruce tip syrup. The light syrup has much more of a fresh, herbal flavor, and I love it in co*cktails. The amber syrup takes on the bright citrus notes of the spruce tips, and it’s great on pancakes.

Alaskan poet and writer Vivian Faith Prescott has become a little obsessed with spruce tips lately. She and her daughter Vivian Mork Yéilk’ are working together on a new book of spruce tip recipes. Prescott says, “I’ve eaten spruce tips since I was a child. I think that’s typical for people who are born and raised in Southeast Alaska. I’m pretty sure my parents and grandparents ate them in the spring. I’ve eaten them raw as a spring treat all my life and made spruce tip jelly and shortbread cookies when my children were young.”

Prescott’s forthcoming book is called Eat Your Trees, and it will feature many of her favorite recipes. I asked her what spruce tip advice she had to share. She says, “We have a section in our book called Spruce Tip Tips. One of the best tips I have is to know your spruce tip palate: experiment with the amount of chopped spruce tips you like in your recipes and write it down and stick with that. For example, one tablespoon might be too spruce-y for your tastes. One teaspoon might be just right. Also, it’s best to use fresh spruce tips, but when you can’t, and you’re using frozen ones, remember to chop them while frozen.” Vivian uses frozen tips all the time, she says. “I haven’t come across a recipe yet where I can’t use frozen spruce tips. Frozen spruce tips have about a year to two years’, thereabouts, freezer life. Basically, if the spruce tips in the freezer are starting to dull or yellow in color then they’re stale, so it’s time to make them into mulch for the garden.”

Originally published in Edible Alaska issue12, Summer 2019.

Tip Off The Old Spruce (2024)

FAQs

What is spruce tip tincture good for? ›

They are full of vitamin C for immune system strengthening, vitamin A for healthy organ function, magnesium and potassium, and have always been used by indigenous tribes for coughs, colds and sore throats. It's easily as good as any cough tincture from the pharmacy!!

What happens when you cut the top off a blue spruce? ›

Large evergreen trees do not respond well to topping. The removal of the upper main stem through topping opens the tree to internal decay, disease or damaging insects; it also removes the most productive portion of the tree. The practice of topping to control tree size or growth is not justified.

How long will spruce tips last? ›

If you have a few bags of spruce tips in the freezer, now is the time to use them before the harvesting season begins again. Two of the best ways to freeze spruce tips is to bag them up in plastic freezer baggies or to vacuum seal them and then freeze. Spruce tips can last up to one year.

What is the disease in the Colorado blue spruce? ›

Cytospora canker, caused by the fungus Cytospora kunzei (also known as Valsa kunzei var. piceae), is the most prevalent and destructive fungal disease of Norway and Colorado blue spruce.

What is the medicinal use of spruce tips? ›

Due to their antimicrobial and antiseptic properties, Spruce tips can help treat cuts, abrasions, eczema, boils, and acne. Medicinally, spruce tips can be used as a therapy to help ease lung congestion. It's antiseptic properties can help with pneumonia, whooping cough, and croup.

Can a dying Blue Spruce be saved? ›

Treatment can take a few years to eradicate the disease, and even then, the climate of our seasons can always bring in new fungal bodies. If the tree is already severely affected there may not be much we can do to save it. Treatment is best if started early in the disease cycle.

Do spruce tips grow back? ›

Harvesting spruce tips is very simple: pluck them off with your finger tips! The bright green tips are the new branch shoots of the tree. So any tip that is removed from the tree is in effect pruning it and new growth won't emerge from that same tip again. Removing the tips inspires growth from the lateral branches.

Why is the top of my Blue Spruce dead? ›

That Frigid Winter Wind Damages Tops of Trees

The tops of tall pine and spruce trees are especially vulnerable, way up high where the wind is even stronger and colder. Evergreens like spruce lose precious moisture through their needles. Damaged needles turn brown and the tree starts to die at the top.

What can I substitute for spruce tips? ›

The spruce tips could be swapped for some young fir tips or even pine. But please do make sure that you know what you are picking as the last thing you want to do is use yew as it is poisonous!

Are any spruce tips poisonous? ›

All parts of the tree are non-toxic. Medicinal and nutritional qualities of the spruce include help with the respiratory system; active vitamin C, which fights against colds and infections; Spruce needles contain large amounts of shikimic acid, which is a flu-fighting compound and helps fight respiratory ailments.

What animals eat spruce tips? ›

Is the ground around your spruce, Scots pine or white pine tree littered with branch tips? This damage is often thought to be caused by an insect or disease problem, but is usually the work of a hungry red squirrel.

Should you cut dead branches off Blue Spruce? ›

Dead limbs won't regrow, so they should be cut off. That can be done at any time of year. Winter dormant season is as good as any.

What are the cons of Blue Spruce? ›

In USDA hardiness zone 7, blue spruce struggles with high nighttime temperatures. Although tolerant of short-term drought, water stress is one of the primary predisposing factors that facilitates disease development.

What is the lifespan of the Colorado Blue Spruce? ›

Colorado blue spruce (Picea pungens) is a popular landscape tree. It's attractive blue foliage and tolerance of urban conditions are big reasons it's been so heavily planted. Despite this, its true native range is the Rocky Mountains region. Thus, its life expectancy in the Anoka Sandplain is only around 30-40 years.

What are the benefits of using spruce? ›

The top advantages of Spruce include low cost, uniform texture, great workability, and basic resistance to rot. Spruce is often treated to make it more durable and resistant, but it can be expensive. Spruce also has some disadvantages. For one, it is not very durable and cannot be used for outdoor applications.

What are the benefits of tinctures? ›

Because tinctures contain concentrated plant extracts, they are used as convenient vehicles for getting the right nutrients to where they are needed in the body. Tinctures are prescribed for a wide range of issues, including indigestion, stress, PMS, pain and insomnia.

What are the benefits of spruce resin? ›

Rashes: anti-inflammatory properties in spruce resin quickly bring down redness and irritation on the skin. Helpful for things like poison ivy, hives, psoriasis, or eczema.

What is spruce tip oil used for? ›

It cleanses the wound and protects it from germs. Spring spruce tips and pitch can also be of benefit to the skin when used topically in a poultice, oil, salve, or cream. Because of the tree's antimicrobial and antiseptic properties, it can help conditions like cuts, abrasions, eczema, boils, and acne.

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