FabulousFusionFood's Cook's Guide for Elder Home Page

Elder flowers and elderberries Elder trees Sambucus nigra showing elder flowers (left)
and elderberries (right).
Welcome to the summary page for FabulousFusionFood's Cook's Guide entry for Elder along with all the Elder containing recipes presented on this site, with 15 recipes in total.

This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Elder recipes added to this site.

These recipes, all contain Elder as a major wild food ingredient.

The elder (also known as elderberry) represent the flowers and the fruit of the black (or common) elder Sambucus nigra, native to Europe and western Asia. These are small trees which are classed as part of the Caprifoliaceae (honeysuckle) family, but which recent genetic evidence has shown to be part of the Adoxaceae (viburnum) family. This can grow to a tree reaching 15m tall, though more generally it grows as a large shrub (some 5–8m tall). Both the flowers and the berries are edible.

Elder flowers can either be used to create an infusion (elderflower cordial or wine) or they can actually be eaten themselves (elderflower fritters). It is best to pick the flowering heads when the flowers are open and full of pollen (it's the pollen that actually produces the flavour). If the flowers have begun to turn brown then they are past their best and have shed their pollen. These kinds of flowers should be discarded. The ripe fruit of the elder is also edible (although it is somewhat bitter, but a pinch of salt cures that problem) and can be made into wines or even baked into pies. You can also collect elderflower buds for pickling in vinegar and they make a decent substitute for capers.




The alphabetical list of all Elder recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 15 recipes in total:

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Câpres de sureau verte
(Green Elderberry Capers)
     Origin: France
Elderberry Soup
     Origin: Britain
Patina de Sabuco
(Elderberry Souflée)
     Origin: Roman
Chilled Elderberry Soup
     Origin: Britain
Elderberry Syrup Bavarois
     Origin: Britain
Petits Gâteaux au Sureau
(Elderberry Muffins)
     Origin: Switzerland
Elderberry and Chocolate Muffins
     Origin: Britain
Elderberry Syrup II
     Origin: Britain
Pontac Catsup for Fish
     Origin: British
Elderberry Sauce
     Origin: British
Fruit Dumplings
     Origin: Ancient
Pontack Sauce
     Origin: Britain
Elderberry Sauce
     Origin: Britain
Holdermus
(Elderberry Mush)
     Origin: Germany
Roast Venison with Elderberries and
Lavender Vinegar

     Origin: Britain

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