Spruce Tip Ice Cream (Dairy Free) + Spruce Tip Salt and Honey
A delight in nature influences my mother’s adventurous culinary skills. I grew up thinking it was normal to gather stinging nettles to eat or plantain to heal.
One wild vegetable/herb that is easy to forage is spruce tips. Spruce trees are the ones with scaley bark and short, prickley needles. In the spring, new growth sprouts from the ends of branches, a bright neon green against the dark old growth.
The smell of spruce tip tea brings me back to smokey fires and crisp morning alpine air. The little blackened tin pot would be have a few flecks of ash in the water, and the bright green tips would darken to an ugly brown as they infused their goodness into the hot water.
Spruce tips are full of vitamin C, although apparently three year old needles have the highest amount. The tips are much easier to gather, however, as they are easily pinched off and not prickly. Besides tea, you can also make beer, finishing salt, and spruce honey. I haven’t ventured into beer making (yet), but the salt and honey are easy to make.
Preserving herbs in honey is my favourite method of preservation – it’s easy, tasty, and lasts forever. I’ve done it with elderflowers, spruce tips, and have plans for more. Using sugar to make a medicinal syrup seems counterproductive to me, and using honey is much easier. I don’t have a recipe – just chopped up some spruce tips, threw them in a jar and poured honey overtop till it felt right, and stirred. I’m saving it for winter months, to stir in tea or take by the spoonful for colds and flus. I opened it after two weeks and it has an amazing smell and taste, quite different from the original spruce tips but I can’t describe it. You’ll just have to make it.
Making spruce finishing salt is just as easy. Chop up spruce tips finely, mix with equal amounts of (unrefined) salt, spread out to dry. When dry, put the mixture in a jar. The salt helps the spruce to dry faster; I dried some spruce tips plain, and they took much longer.
Hunger and Thirst has some excellent ideas for using spruce salt, including on mushrooms and in a bath. Mediterranean Cooking in Alaska also has some great recipes with spruce tips, including spruce mayonnaise and spruce shortbread.
I also used the spruce tips to make ice cream. I happened to use rapadura to sweeten it because it was the only sweetener I had on hand, and I ended up loving the caramel flavour of the rapadura paired with the zingyness of the spruce. For those on GAPS or AIP, dates would make a great substitute for the rapadura, I’ll update with how much when I try it.
I used homemade coconut milk which has considerabely less coconut flavour than bought coconut milk. I recommend making the coconut milk or using another mild flavoured milk, such as almond or cow milk/cream.
Spruce Tip Ice Cream (Dairy Free)
2 cups homemade coconut milk
1/2 cup spruce tips
1/2 cup rapadura
1 tsp gelatin powder
2 egg yolks
Heat the coconut milk until almost boiling. Add spruce tips and turn off the heat. I infused it for about 10 minutes, like for tea. If you are used to spruce tip flavour and want it stronger, you can infuse it for hours.
While still warm, pour the milk spruce tea through a sieve. Stir in rapadura. Sprinkle gelatin overtop and let bloom for a few minutes.
Meanwhile, whisk egg yolks. Temper the egg yolks by adding the milk mixutre a tbsp at a time until the eggs are well mixed, about 4 tbsp. Mix the yolks with the rest of the milk.
If you have an ice cream maker, follow the instructions for your particular maker.
If you don’t have an ice cream maker but do have a high speed blender, you can try it this way: put the milk mixture in the freezer. Stir it every once in a while when you happen to remember as it’s freezing (I’m so precise, I know). I think I managed three before it froze solid. When frozen solid, use a spoon or butter knife to cut the ice cream into chunks (alternatively, freeze the ice cream mixture in ice cube trays). Put the frozen chunks inside a high speed blender and blend until smooth, pushing down the pieces with a tamper as necessary. Put back in the freezer to let it firm up again.
If you have neither ice cream maker or high speed blender, you can whisk it every 10 min or so while it freezes, but I’ve never managed to remember for enough times.
Serve and savour the wild foraged goodness!
Shared at Fat Tuesday, Hearth and Soul, Allergy Free Wednesday, Gluten Free Wednesday, Real Food Wednesday, Pennywise Platter, Simple Lives Thursday, Fight Back Friday, Simple Meals Friday, Thank Goodness It’s Monday, Savoring Saturdays
alifemoment
May 13, 2014 @ 13:20:14
The ice cream looks delicious! 🙂
Naomi
May 13, 2014 @ 17:43:46
Thanks! Hope you try it!
alifemoment
May 13, 2014 @ 17:58:02
I will try it, it doesn’t seem too difficult 🙂
Lea Ann
May 15, 2014 @ 14:08:16
I’m here from our conversation on G+. Nice to find your blog. I’ve never heard of such a thing! And thanks so much for this information. Really nice photos and I’ve learned something today.
Naomi
May 15, 2014 @ 17:01:09
Thanks for stopping by and the encouragement! Glad you enjoyed. Spruce tips are pretty much everywhere but not many people know we can eat them!
pfmhblog (@pfmhblog)
May 16, 2014 @ 20:03:18
As always, such beautiful photos! And I can’t wait to try out your ice cream recipe! So interesting!
Naomi
May 18, 2014 @ 12:52:50
Thanks so much for the compliment, Leah! Hope you like it!
tessadomesticdiva
May 19, 2014 @ 03:41:36
this is really creative, and the spruce is very original! Featuring your recipe this week on Allergy FRee Wednesday, thanks for sharing!
Naomi
May 19, 2014 @ 06:09:58
Thanks so much, both for sharing and hosting! Glad you liked the idea!
Swathi
May 19, 2014 @ 15:34:15
Delicious spruce tip ice cream, lovely idea of mixing salt and Honey Naomi. Thanks for sharing with Hearth and Soul blog hop.
Hearth and Soul blog hop: Cooking with spices Edition 5/19/14 - Zesty South Indian Kitchen
May 19, 2014 @ 22:10:38
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Julie @ This Gal Cooks
May 20, 2014 @ 18:35:57
This is one intriguing ice cream recipe. I don’t think I’ve ever had spruce tips but I need to find some so I can try this. I love the method you use for preserving them. I’ve never even heard of doing that but now I really want to try it. Thanks for sharing this recipe, Naomi!
Naomi
May 20, 2014 @ 23:18:40
Thanks so much Julie! Spruce tips definitely have their own unique flavour, and they were especially good in the honey. I hope you find some!
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May 21, 2014 @ 18:34:51
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Rebekah
May 21, 2014 @ 20:10:37
What purpose does the gelatin serve?
Naomi
May 22, 2014 @ 00:52:36
I used the gelatin both for nutritional purposes (source of collagen, anti-inflammatory, etc) and texture purposes. Because I used homemade coconut milk with low fat and high water content, the gelatin helps make the ice cream have less crystals, and thus smoother. You can leave it out, but I would put more fat or other thickener (arrowroot powder?) to replace it. Or make it into popsicles, then the ice crystals don’t matter so much.
Rebekah
May 29, 2014 @ 23:06:14
Does the gelatin help make the ice cream easier to scoop just out of the freezer?
Naomi
May 30, 2014 @ 19:18:49
The ice cream will be softer than without, however it will still need a few minutes out of the freezer before scooping, just not as long.
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May 23, 2014 @ 10:18:52
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May 23, 2014 @ 10:19:54
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Angela
May 25, 2014 @ 18:09:55
When making the honey, do you leave the tips in forever or strain them out? Keep in fridge or on shelf? I have tons of spruce tips in my back yard… I’m so excited to be able to use them! The ice cream is in the works….I am soaking the tips in the milk much longer bc I love the aroma they are infusing! I also used a blend of homemade coconut milk and whole goat’s milk bc the flavor was so pleasant.
Naomi
May 25, 2014 @ 18:32:29
Wonderful! For the honey, leave them in at least two weeks, then you can strain it if you wish. It’s easier to use that way, but I’ve left mine in (just cause I”m lazy like that). The moisture from the spruce does thin the honey so it’s easier to strain. As long as you have raw honey, it should be fine in a cupboard at room temp. Let me know how you like the ice cream!
Raia Torn
May 30, 2014 @ 20:15:32
Wow! I bet this tastes wonderful! It sounds like Christmas in ice cream. 😉
Naomi
May 31, 2014 @ 15:10:13
My daughter, not knowing what kind it was, said, “why does this taste like tree?”
Anna
Oct 05, 2016 @ 00:25:03
Wow, that looks really interesting! I’ve heard of tea made with pine needles, and even syrups. But this inventive. Makes me think of Christmas!
Naomi
Oct 05, 2016 @ 10:58:02
Thanks! I think most things that can make tea can also infuse milk/cream, so it’s an excuse for ice cream!
Valerie
Mar 09, 2017 @ 05:21:42
I LOVE your blog Naomi! I am researching infused culinary honeys I can make from things I can gather from our forest here in Colorado. I want to be able to make infused honey with fresh herbs and flowers so I appreciate this blog post very much. I feel more confident that I can make a few bottles and not worry too much about them growing mold. Any other tips or tricks to help ensure a long shelf life for fresh flower and herb infused honey? All are appreciated! Thank you!! I am book marking your blog and will be back often to check out your stuff.
Naomi
Mar 09, 2017 @ 10:46:10
Thank you so much! I forgot about a few jars in the back of a cupboard that I still have so I pulled them out. I think some are two years old and no sign of mold. The one with linden flowers smells a bit alcoholy, the spruce tip one of lovely in tea this morning, and the elderflower seems rather strong. The honey certainly darkened over time, but everything is perfectly fine. I didn’t strain them, just left the herbs in, but next time for flowers I’ll strain them after a while. The only thing I did was occasionally turn the jar over so that the stuff floating to the top got submerged again. Enjoy and let me know how it goes!
Valerie
Mar 12, 2017 @ 00:13:22
Thank you Naomi! I really appreciate your follow up and so happy to have found you over there across the ocean – very cool! Let me know if you need help identifying those cottonwood trees, but suspect they are ornamental base on how your described them in our instagram chat.
I feel very enthusiastic about my infused honeys this summer and CAN’T wait for the spruce tips to start appearing! Thanks again for the confidence and the inspriation. I’ll let you know how it turns out. Blessings!
Naomi
Mar 12, 2017 @ 13:19:32
I’m so glad we’ve connected over the ocean too! I found some pics I had of the trees – I’ll have to look them up. You’ve got me excited about spruce tips coming too! Bear garlic will be here soon too, some places are like carpets.
Valerie
Mar 13, 2017 @ 08:05:33
Me too, so excited for spring!!! I would love to see those pictures of the cottonwoods!
Yvonne
Jun 18, 2017 @ 23:13:28
Hi Naomi,
have you had spruce tip honey ferment?
Naomi
Jun 19, 2017 @ 22:52:24
I haven’t. The first time I made it, it sat with the spruce in for two years 🙂 I have, however, had linden flowers that smelled like alcohol, but not right away, it took a few months. As far as I know, when people make honey yeast or ferments they add water to it. It’s on my list of things to try!
Katie
Jun 24, 2017 @ 04:59:08
Do you strain the spruce out of the honey before using it? Mine is sitting on the counter and smells/tastes wonderful!
Naomi
Jun 29, 2017 @ 10:50:18
I was too lazy to 🙂 But it would be easier to use if it was strained.