Drink the Trees in 4 Recipes including how to make Douglas Fir Simple Syrup (2024)

by Lisa Sipe, FoodFu Co-Founder | Apr 20, 2017 | Culinary World, Recipes | 0 comments

Drink the Trees in 4 Recipes including how to make Douglas Fir Simple Syrup (1)

Originally printed in The Source Weekly

Transport yourself into the forest anytime with a Douglas fir tea or co*cktail

“Let’s drink some pine tea,” my partner Jim said, at our camp along the Metolious River. “Uh, Ok,” I murmur, trusting that this man with a botany degree knows what he’s talking about. “I’ve never thought about drinking the trees.” He grabs the new growth off of a young Douglas fir—the bright green, tender new leaves. Jim crushes a few needles in his hands and says, “smell this.” I take a deep breath. It smells like the forest is alive. The aroma is surprisingly sweet with hints of citrus.

Jim washes the pine needles as I put on a pot of water to boil. When the water is ready, I remove it from our scratched and weathered camp stove, add a handful of pine needles and let it steep for 10 minutes.

This is the first time I’ve foraged for anything and the experience of finding my own food is satisfying. I pour the fresh steeped tea into two individual Light My Fire camp mugs, the ones with the lids like sippy cups. The child-like protection is appreciated, because we walk along the spines of downed trees around camp with the mugs in our hands while we wait for the tea to cool—with no worry of spilling.

When the tea is ready I take my first sip. The flavor is so gentle. I can taste the sweet citrus I smelled earlier. It’s quite nice, like a warm hug from the forest.

With this positive experience, we’re ready to taste more. We decide cedar tip tea is next. The cedar doesn’t have as sweet of a smell as the Douglas fir, but it still has a lovely forest aroma. We make the tea, let it steep and cool, then take our first sips. This tea tastes dry and medicinal, nowhere near the warm hug of the Douglas fir. The cedar is more like tripping on a root in the forest.

I decide I’m hooked on Doug and start dreaming about other tasty beverages I can make from the sweet conifer. On our hike out from our campsite I forage a full bag of Douglas fir tips to take home.

Back in my home kitchen I discover that besides the tea, Douglas fir makes a great simple syrup and an absolutely delightful liquor. Both recipes are really simple. The simple syrup is ready in 10 minutes. The hardest part of making the liquor is waiting a few months for it to be ready.

There are also a few health benefits from drinking this tree. Douglas fir has a high content of Vitamin C and has been used for colds and inflammatory conditions such as rheumatism and arthritis. The most magical property of using the Douglas fir tips is that it transports you back to the forest whenever you want. If you’ve ever left Central Oregon and then returned, you realize this place is covered with the sweet, intoxicating scent of pine and other conifers. When you live here, you get so used to the smell you no longer notice it. All you need to revive that scent memory is a delicious tree beverage. Here are a few to try:

Campfire Tea

INGREDIENTS:
A few Douglas Fir tips
1 ½ cups water

DIRECTIONS:
Add Douglas Fir tips to a French press and cover with boiled water (you can also use a saucepan). Let steep for 10-15 minutes, strain and serve. The color of the tea may be clear to light brown.

Drink the Trees in 4 Recipes including how to make Douglas Fir Simple Syrup (5)

Drink the Trees in 4 Recipes including how to make Douglas Fir Simple Syrup (6)

Douglas Fir Simple Syrup

INGREDIENTS:
1 cup sugar
1 cup water
1 cup Douglas fir tips

DIRECTIONS:
Roughly chop the tips and add all ingredients to a small saucepan. Turn the stove to medium and bring the mixture to a boil. When the sugar is dissolved, usually 8-10 minutes, remove from heat. Once the mixture cools, strain it through a fine sieve. For stronger syrup, let it steep for a few hours before straining. The simple syrup will keep for up to a month in the fridge.

Mix with sparkling water to make a soda, add to a co*cktail, or use it as a sweetener in desserts.

Drink the Trees in 4 Recipes including how to make Douglas Fir Simple Syrup (7)

The Bend Julep co*cktail

INGREDIENTS:
1.5 oz. Cascade Alchemy Bourbon
1 oz. Douglas Fir Simple Syrup
a few lime wedges
a small handful of mint leaves
2-3 dashes The Bitter Housewife Grapefruit Bitters

DIRECTIONS:
Muddle lime wedges and mint leaves in a co*cktail shaker or a mason jar. If you don’t have a muddler you can use the end of a wooden spoon. Next, add bourbon, simple syrup, bitters and ice. Shake for 20 seconds and pour over crushed ice in a highball glass if you are fancy and a mason jar if you are feeling rustic. Garnish with a mint leaf.

Drink the Trees in 4 Recipes including how to make Douglas Fir Simple Syrup (8)

The Forest Sour co*cktail

INGREDIENTS:
2 oz. South Sister Gin
1 oz. Douglas FirSimple Syrup
Egg White
1/2 Lemon
A few dashes of Woodland Bitters from Portland Bitters Project

DIRECTIONS:
In a co*cktail shaker combine gin, pine simple syrup, egg white and the juice of half a lemon. Shake vigorously for 20 seconds, then fill shaker with ice and shake for an additional 20 seconds. Strain drink through a fine-mesh co*cktail strainer intoa coupe or martini glass. Garnish with a few drops of woodland bitters.

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Drink the Trees in 4 Recipes including how to make Douglas Fir Simple Syrup (2024)

FAQs

What to make out of Douglas fir? ›

Douglas fir can be used in the following ways:
  1. Flooring. There are many reasons why douglas fir is such a popular choice for flooring. ...
  2. Doors and Windows. Douglas fir is used for doors and windows because it is strong and durable. ...
  3. Trim and Joinery. ...
  4. Furniture Making. ...
  5. Boat Making. ...
  6. Siding.

How do you make Douglas fir tip tea? ›

TEA: The most basic way to enjoy fir tips is as a tea. Bring 4 cups of water to a boil. Turn off the heat, add 1 cup fir tips and let steep for 20 minutes. Strain and sweeten if desired.

What trees can I tap for syrup? ›

Trees that can be tapped include: sugar, black, red and silver maple and box elder trees. Of all the maples, the highest concentration of sugar is found in the sap of the sugar maple. Generally the ratio of sap to syrup for the sugar maple is 40 to 1 (40 gallons of sap yields one gallon of syrup).

What are the disadvantages of Douglas fir? ›

Like all softwoods, one issue that can be a negative is that the Douglas Fir wood is, as the softwood name implies, softer than hardwoods. This can mean that the wood can be more easily damaged, so care must be taken in milling, handling, and transporting the lumber.

Is Douglas fir toxic to humans? ›

Douglas Fir, known scientifically as Pseudotsuga menziesii, is a giant in the tree world, both in stature and in holiday celebrations. Research shows that this tree is generally not considered toxic to humans. Its chemical makeup contributes to its robust scent and durability, but not to a health hazard.

What is a fun fact about Douglas fir? ›

Douglas firs are conifers, which means they produce seeds in cones rather than in flowers. The seeds have a single wing and are dispersed by wind. Douglas fir seeds provide food for a number of small mammals, including chipmunks, mice, shrews, and red squirrels. Bears eat the sap of these trees.

Which is better pine or Douglas fir? ›

If the wood needs to help support the ceiling, such as being used for a frame or as a load-bearing tool, fir is the better choice. It's less susceptible to warping, meaning it lasts longer than pine. However, if you're using wood for decorative purposes, the choice comes down to which aesthetic you prefer.

What is Douglas-fir tea good for? ›

Douglass Fir Tea

Douglas Fir needles are high in vitamin C, vitamin A, and antioxidants. I've been told that a cup of tea made from its needles has more vitamin C than an orange. Several Native American groups in California drank tea made from its needles.

What oils can I mix with Douglas-fir? ›

Due to its chemical makeup, the fresh, woody scent of Douglas Fir blends well with citrus, wood, and spice essential oils. Try blending Douglas Fir oil with citrus essential oils like Citrus Bliss®, or Lemon oil to produce a fresh aroma that can be used in homemade cleaning mixtures.

What does Douglas-fir tea taste like? ›

This Delicious Tea Tastes Like a Pine Tree, Because That's All That's in It.

How many trees can you make syrup from? ›

For personal use, 12 healthy trees will probably produce 2 plus gallons of syrup per year. To produce enough syrup to sell, you need at least one or two acres stocked with maple trees. A good target stocking for each acre is 50 to 75 healthy maples.

Do any other trees make good syrup? ›

Not Just Maple: Birch, Beech and Other Sappy Trees Make Syrup Just as Sweet. Sugar maples aren't the only sappy trees that can be tapped to make syrup. Living on Earth's Bobby Bascomb visited syrup producer David Moore in New Hampshire to taste and learn about syrups made from birch, beech, walnut, and other trees.

Can I eat pine needles? ›

The needles are high in vitamin c and are often used for tea. The pollen is loaded with nutrients and is mainly used as an additive to baked goods or confections. Eating pine bark is more of a novelty, though some species can be dried, ground, and used as a kind of flour!

Does a Douglas fir have a taproot? ›

In loose soils, Douglas-fir roots grow quickly, forming a taproot and reaching almost their entire length in the first ten years. The tree's rooting habit is not particularly deep. The roots of young coast Douglas-fir tend to shallower than roots of the same aged ponderosa pine, sugar pine, or incense-cedar.

Is it OK to burn Douglas fir? ›

Overall, Douglas fir is one of the best softwoods to burn. As a high density softwood, it sits right in the middle ground between sappy, crackly, easy-to-light softwoods, and smooth, hot, but hard-to-light hardwoods.

Do Douglas fir trees have a tap root? ›

Douglas fir usually develops a primary taproot whose growth into depth ends at about 10 years of its age (Hengst 1958). The slow-down of its growth has to do with the development of lateral roots, which begin to establish as taproot branches already during the first or second vegetation period (Eis 1974).

Do Douglas fir trees produce sap? ›

“If this is a Douglas-fir, sap flow from Douglas-firs is rather common and there are various reasons it happens, many we know about, and some that remain a mystery. Sap or pitch flow is often associated with pruning wounds – both old and new.

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