Solstice Medicine
~ Conifer Tree Potions ~
Solstice / Christmas trees can be timely medicine, and a
way to bring the magic of your tree to further purpose and honor. If your tree isn't sprayed or somehow compromised, you can easily make a cabinet full of
wonderful healing treasures from it, to give as gifts (ask your tree provider
for clipping scraps!) or as winter medicines.
Elixir
Elixirs are simple and a medicine easy to savor and enjoy over
time. I spend the most part of elixir creating being with the plant; carefully gathering the
plant and preparing if for medicine; which might be taking leaves from stems, plucking tiny flowers, clipping needles, or carving bark from twigs. This, to me, is where the
culmination of magic and intention is created. By the time I place the charmed
plant material in the jar and soak it with spirits and honey, everything is
potent with goodness. Then it’s just a matter of letting the osmosis do
its part over the next 4-6 weeks before decanting.
Conifer needles are rewarding to craft with in the winter;
bringing crisp warmth and circulatory support for the lungs and body as a
whole. Conifers make exceptional expectorants and additions to cough syrups.
To make an elixir, fill a quart size jar full with fresh
pine, spruce, or fir needles and a few twigs. Feel free to add some resin drops
if you have collected those too. They are common to find on white pine cones –
you can pluck off the shingles with spots of resin and add them. Next, fill
your jar ¾ of the way up with your preferred alcohol, (drinkable – do not use
rubbing alcohol!). Fill the remainder of the jar with a good quality raw/local
honey. Add a tight fitting lid, and shake every so often. Be sure to label and
date it!!
To decant, simply pour through a muslin or cheesecloth lined
strainer into a clean glass bowl or pyrex, and pour into your favorite
apothecary bottles.
This will keep indefinitely if stored out of light and heat.
If you have also made a ginger or mint preparation, they
make a very fine pair.
Spice Mix/Rub
Juniper, fir needles, pine needles, and various flavorful
shrubs that are less popular (like spice bush) make very lovely nuances to
cooking and pay homage to the local landscape.
First, you’ll want to let your needles dry. Place the whole
twigs in a paper bag or cardboard box for about a week. When the needles are
dry, they will effortlessly fall from the twigs.
Collect the needles, leaving behind ones that have yellowed.
Combine in a bowl:
2 parts:
Conifer needles
Rosemary leaves
Juniper berries
Salt Crystals
Peppercorns, cracked if you like
Rosemary leaves
Juniper berries
Salt Crystals
Peppercorns, cracked if you like
1 part:
Lavender flowers
Sage leaves, crumbled
Orange peel bits
Sage leaves, crumbled
Orange peel bits
Options for further refinement of purpose might be
– chili, garlic, and
paprika for a meat rub
– allspice, coriander, and clove for a corned beef or pickling mix
– dried onion, dried mushrooms, astragalus, and seaweed for a soup stock/ bone broth making blend.
--play!
– allspice, coriander, and clove for a corned beef or pickling mix
– dried onion, dried mushrooms, astragalus, and seaweed for a soup stock/ bone broth making blend.
--play!
Mix it all together, and place in little baggies or spice
jars, with a label an idea for how to use it.
You can use a suribachi to refine the blend if you like, or
you can offer a gift of the spice blend with
a suribachi, and inspire the chef in
someone you love.
This spice blend is delicious as an infused vinegar – start some
now and it will be ready for your holiday feasting! It also makes a wonderful gravy or stuffing
flavor. Any way you might use herbs de provence, you can use your conifer spice
blend.
Infused oil
If you know me, I don’t have to tell you how much I love making tree oils and
tree balms. White fir being among my ultimate favorites, Yule time is a good
excuse to make a batch.
First, I let the twigs wilt for a day or so. Then, I pack a
jar with needles and twigs (same as I would with the above elixir instructions).
Then, cover the plant material with a good quality oil; olive, jojoba, or
coconut (warm to melt coconut oil). Add a lid, place inside a
paper or canvas bag, and put in a warm spot – near a radiator, wood stove,
boiler, or heating vent. Be sure to not create a fire hazard. Let infuse
for 1-4 weeks, strain and enjoy as an elegant culinary oil or a medicinal skin care oil. Whit
fir needles (Abies concolor) are my favorite so far, for their strong orangey
aroma and utter deliciousness.
You can then use your oils to create salves, by melting in just enough beeswax to thicken it. You can also find my Tree Medicine Salve set in the shop right now (but there are only a few):
You can then use your oils to create salves, by melting in just enough beeswax to thicken it. You can also find my Tree Medicine Salve set in the shop right now (but there are only a few):
Wild Forest Incense
Loose incense is simple, beautiful, and rewarding. Blend your conifer needles
(and some small broken up twig pieces) with your favorite fragrant coal herbs.
Roses, White Sage, Sweetgrass, Pine resin tears, Cinnamon, Lavender, Rosemary, Frankincense,
Copal, Myrrh, and Artemisia are all beautiful choices.
Mix together your blend, emphasizing the notes you wish to
be stronger by using more of that herb. I generally try my blend a few times on
a smoldering coal and adjust of needed before I decide if it is to my standards.
Package however you like, with a little instruction note and
a roll of self-lighting charcoals and a ceramic incense dish. Wrap some matches and a smudge feather as
gifts to make it extra special, or make this for your own circle time.
If you're feeling adventurous, you can go for a more complex, Kyphi style incense. Kiva Rose offers a helpful article on the process here.
And of course, you can always make a smudge wand:
Bundle up your twigs and wrap with natural string, hang and let dry in a ventilated area for about two weeks, out of direct sun or heat.
Infused Butter/Ghee
Conifer needles make a delicious ghee. Simply warm the
ghee over low heat, and stir in your fresh (1/2 day wilted) needles. Cover,
leaving just a crack open at the side of the lid. Let infuse warm for about 8
hours. Strain and jar, letting cool to solid before capping.
You can do the same thing to flavor your local pig lard,
beef tallow, bear fat, or bacon fat for extra special cooking adventures. This
makes an awesome gift for the hunter, primitive skills folk, or outdoorsman in
your life.
If you have good clean deer tallow, it makes an incredibly beautiful natural salve when herbally infused.
For butter, chop fresh needles and sage leaves, stir into warmed butter, and when cool, roll into logs using parchment paper. You can also make decorative butter pats using candy molds. Refrigerate these herbal butters, and be sure your needles are not too bitter and not too hard to chew.
If you have good clean deer tallow, it makes an incredibly beautiful natural salve when herbally infused.
For butter, chop fresh needles and sage leaves, stir into warmed butter, and when cool, roll into logs using parchment paper. You can also make decorative butter pats using candy molds. Refrigerate these herbal butters, and be sure your needles are not too bitter and not too hard to chew.
Healing Needle Honey
To make a tree needle honey, simply fill your quart sized
jar half way full with fresh needles. *taste* your needles to get a feel for
the strength and bitterness! Fill your jar with good honey, and each day invert the jar so the
honey completely saturates the needles. If this step is missed, your honey
could either mold or ferment. If done properly, your infused honey will last
you all year long (or longer) whether you choose to strain it or not.
Personally I rarely strain my honeys. I like the crystalline herb leaves and
petals, and add them to my tea as well. When I've gotten all the honey I can, I
use the rest to brew a nice strong pot of tea or syrup, or I freeze it to use
over time.
Tree needle honey is beautiful for everyday use, but
especially helpful for the lungs when expectoration and loosening of congestion
is needed. It is mildly stimulating to the mucosa and would be less desirable
for an extremely dry condition. In that case, I would first use demulcents, and
then a small amount of the tree needle honey.
Conifer Shrub
A shrub or oxymel is a mixture of vinegar and honey that is
infused with herbs. It’s a traditional preparation (common in the Appalachia
region). It makes a great gift and a very nice remedy for coughs, colds, and
the flu. It’s awesome in salad dressing and sparkly beverages! Shrubs are a
world of herbal fun and extremely easy to make.
Fill your quart or half gallon sized jar 1/3 of the way with
plant material, dried or fresh.
For example:
1 part Tree needles
1 Part Orange peel
1 Part Elderberries
1 part Tree needles
1 Part Orange peel
1 Part Elderberries
Cover the herbs well with good honey. You want to stay
around the 1/3 amount of your total … unless you like your oxymel really sweet.
Fill the rest of the way with apple cider vinegar, or other favorite naturally fermented vinegar (avoid distilled vinegars like white vinegar.) Cover and infuse for 5-20 days. Strain if you wish. We like to make individual bottlesfor gifts.
If you have homemade vinegar, or home harvested honey, that’s really special!
Nourishing Needle
Vinegar
Vinegar is a deeply nutritious preparation used for food and
medicine. Vinegar withdraws all of the minerals from our plant friends and is
excellent for our bone health, digestive health, and circulation. Tree needle
vinegar is unique and wildly flavorful!
First, make sure you have tasted your needles. Add less if
they are very bitter, more if they are less bitter.
Fill your jar 1/8 to 1/4 way full with needles, fresh. Fill to the top with good vinegar, and let infuse 3-6 weeks. Use a plastic lid, or on with a rubber gasket, as metal will rust.
Fill your jar 1/8 to 1/4 way full with needles, fresh. Fill to the top with good vinegar, and let infuse 3-6 weeks. Use a plastic lid, or on with a rubber gasket, as metal will rust.
Conifer needle vinegar can also be packed with items you
wish to brine …. Hard boiled eggs, Olives, Carrots, Burdock roots, Turnips, or
Beets – just add them to the jar before you pour the vinegar.
Juniper & Pine Needle Gin
Juniper – Pine gin, with a pinch of mugwort and lavender. Mmmmm
a very classy gift indeed. How about an herbal smoking blend and a corn cob pipe
with that? How about a fancy flask or a witchy spirits glass?
To Make:
Fill your jar (yep, your 1 quart jar again ;)
- 2/3 cup Juniper berries
- 2/3 cup fresh conifer needles
- 1 tablespoon allspice berries
- pinch of grated nutmeg, pepper, or cardamom if desired.
- pinch of mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris, or Artemisia absinthium)
-Cover with your favorite Gin or Scotch
-Lid and label
-Keep out of reach of children and away from fire hazard areas!
- 2/3 cup Juniper berries
- 2/3 cup fresh conifer needles
- 1 tablespoon allspice berries
- pinch of grated nutmeg, pepper, or cardamom if desired.
- pinch of mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris, or Artemisia absinthium)
-Cover with your favorite Gin or Scotch
-Lid and label
-Keep out of reach of children and away from fire hazard areas!
Let extract for at least a week. If you’re in a time crunch,
make in individual bottles so you can leave the herbs in, simply label it with
a “ready by” date for the recipient. Chances are it will be potent even after a
few days.
Potpourri without
Chemicals
Mix in a bowl:
Conifer needles (the majority quantity)
Rose petals
Sage leaves
Lavender flowers
Bay leaves, Sweet gale, or Eaucalyptus leaves.
Bark pieces, small … oak, paper birch, or shagbark hickory, if you like to gather these.
Acorn caps, dry.
Moss – Spanish moss is often available at craft stores, or you can use locally gathered beard moss or common stringy mosses (please be careful not to harvest anything at risk)
Conifer needles (the majority quantity)
Rose petals
Sage leaves
Lavender flowers
Bay leaves, Sweet gale, or Eaucalyptus leaves.
Bark pieces, small … oak, paper birch, or shagbark hickory, if you like to gather these.
Acorn caps, dry.
Moss – Spanish moss is often available at craft stores, or you can use locally gathered beard moss or common stringy mosses (please be careful not to harvest anything at risk)
Drip into your mix, essential oils:
20 - 40 drops pine needle and/or Juniper berry
20 - 40 drops Cedar wood
10 - 20 drops Oakmoss absolute (highly viscous, be aware)
20 – 40 Orange essential oil if desired.
20 - 40 drops pine needle and/or Juniper berry
20 - 40 drops Cedar wood
10 - 20 drops Oakmoss absolute (highly viscous, be aware)
20 – 40 Orange essential oil if desired.
Mix with a metal or glass spoon, and place in decorate bowls, glasses, or sachets wherever you like. Play with the amount of essential oils - this is a forgiving recipe and you have all the room in the world to use less or more, and other oils you might wish to try.
If you have extra essential oils you want to use, consider
saturating some of the moss with it, and placing it in a tight container with a
stack of stationery to create beautiful scented paper, and keep until Valentine
’s Day or the moment you’re moved to write a love letter. J
Bath Bags
Fill a muslin bag with equal parts conifer needles, roses,
and peppermint. Add to your bath as it fills for a gentle healing tub for kids
and adults alike. For a bedtime blend, use lavender, chamomile, hops, or
jasmine in place of the mint. Oatmeal is a very nice addition as well.
Tea Blends - Try my Black Forest Chai Recipe From my recent archives:
BLACK FOREST CHAI
An intense herbal brew for your days hiding in the Cave.
Into a pot on the stove or wood stove, add 2 to 3 quarts filtered or well water.
Add:
~ 1, One inch sized root of Osha, dried.
~ One tablespoon Smoked black tea, such as Lapsang Souchong, or a roasted Mate
~ 1 tablespoon Licorice root
~ 1 tablespoon Cardamom seeds
~ 1-2 tablespoons Ginger, fresh minced
~ 1-2 Springs freshly gathered conifer twigs with needles (spruce, fir, or pine)
~ 1 handful fresh Black Birch twigs cut into 1 inch bits
~ 5-10 Juniper berries
~ One inch piece dried mushroom (chaga, reishi, or shitake) if desired
~ grated Nutmeg to taste
~ Black Peppercorns as desired
~ 1 Handful of your favorite nuts; walnuts, almonds, or hazelnuts work well)
Directions: Gently simmer all ingredients for 30-45 minutes (longer will make it stronger). When ready, ladle out cupfuls as you desire, into your favorite mug. Add cream and honey and herbal elixirs as desired. Enjoy.
Using candy molds, sprinkle bits of needles and petals into each one, and pour over with melted beeswax. When partially cooled but still soft, use a toothpick to poke holes for string.
Syrup
If you're in the mood to make a pine syrup, you can reference my previous article on the process HERE.
If you're in the mood to make a pine syrup, you can reference my previous article on the process HERE.
Share with us *your* favorite way to make goodies from your Yule tree! Leave a comment below, or come play on Facebook
And remember to check out the Apothecary before it's too late to order - right now it's stocked with limited edition botanical perfumes, aromatherapy/elixir support, dreaming goddess night cream, and tree medicine balms.....
~ Nymphaea ~ Honey Lotus Botanical Perfume Solid ~ Lt'd Ed. 2012 ~ |
Blessings to you on this paradox holiday.....
Love,
Ananda
4 comments:
I am totally amazed at the cornucopia of ideas in this article! I live in Washington with conifers all around me and I have to say I can't identify a single one (only moved here in May and was focusing on the garden). This article inspires me to, at least, learn about the green goddesses all around me. Thank you for all these ideas. See you on Facebook, Ali
Love the wild incense idea! Gonna give it a try, thanks!
I made the pine elixir. Now that I have decanted I am wondering how to consume! How much per day? Drops, a spoonful, etc. Thanks for all the great ideas.
That's great! You can use the pine elixir for pure enjoyment, or to help clear congestion and support circulation.
So glad you made some!
--Ananda
Post a Comment