Spruce Tip Jelly
by Aube Giroux on May 27, 2015
If you've ever been curious to know what a forest tastes like, then this recipe is for you. Each spring around this time, spruce trees put out pale green buds covered in delicate brown paper husks.
Essentially, they are little bundles of baby spruce needles and at this stage they are still soft and tender. Their flavor is reminiscent of Christmas, with a distinct element of citrus and all the vitality of a forest bursting forth in springtime.
Spruce is not the only edible conifer. Fir and pine are edible as well and all are packed with vitamin C. It's only last spring that I learned about cooking with spruce tips from a friend. At the time, I had my hands rather full. So I made a note to self that this would be the spring to experiment with spruce tips and I'm so glad I remembered. I've made spruce tip syrup (for some extra special woodsy cocktails), spruce tip vinegar (simply pack a bunch of spruce tips into a bottle of apple cider vinegar and let it sit, the flavour is amazing), and some spruce tip salt for sprinkling on meat or sandwiches.
But the best of all has been this light spruce tip jelly which is a delight with cheese and crackers. I imagine it's lovely on meat as well, particularly lamb, pork, or any wild game. You can simply make it and store it in the fridge for up to a month.
Harvest the tips when they are still pale green in color. If they're still covered with the brown papery husk, you can quickly remove it with your fingertips. Sometimes simply rubbing your hand across a branch will make them all fall off. As in all wild gathering, it's important to abide by good foraging principles and be thoughtful about not removing all the tips from any one given tree.
I found that in the various recipes I tried, chopping the spruce tips helped to release more of their aroma. I didn't do it for the batch of jelly I made in the video, but I encourage you to do so. This will make for a more flavour-packed jelly (though the lighter-flavored, more subtle jelly is gorgeous as well!)
I hope you try this recipe, its a very magical one and it would make a wonderful homemade gift. Enjoy!!
Aube Giroux is a food writer and filmmaker who shares her love of cooking on her farm-to-table blog, Kitchen Vignettes.
Aube is a passionate organic gardener and home cook who likes to share the stories of how food gets to our dinner plates. Her work has been shown on television and at international film festivals. Her web series has been nominated for multiple James Beard Awards for Best Video Webcast (On Location). In 2012, she was the recipient of Saveur Magazine's Best Food Blog award in the video category.