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Elderberry

Herbal infusion

About this tea

Elderberry (Sambucus nigra) is a deep-purple herbal infusion — not a true tea — made from the cooked berries of the European elder shrub, a classic of immune-season traditions across Europe and North America. Its tart, dark-fruit flavor and rich anthocyanin color have made it a comforting cold-weather ritual for generations. Elderberry is naturally caffeine-free and is traditionally enjoyed warm and lightly sweetened. Importantly, elderberries must always be cooked before consumption, as raw berries contain compounds that can cause stomach upset. When properly prepared, elderberry offers a vibrant, jammy infusion long associated with seasonal comfort.

How to brew: 100°C, 15 min, 5 g per cup.

Caffeine

None

How to brew

100°C
15 min
5 g per cup

Flavor notes

fruity, tart, sweet, aromatic

Often associated with

Comfort, Sense of well-being

Best time to enjoy

Afternoon, Evening, Any time

Tags

WarmCaffeine-freeSweetCalm

Origin & Production

Europe — temperate woodlands and hedgerows; also naturalized across North America

The European elder (Sambucus nigra) grows wild across temperate Europe, thriving in hedgerows, woodland edges, riverbanks, and disturbed ground from the British Isles to the Caucasus. It is also widely naturalized throughout North America, where related species are gathered each autumn. The deciduous shrub produces creamy flower clusters in late spring followed by dark, glossy berries in late summer and early autumn. Elderberries are predominantly wild-harvested or grown on small farms rather than large industrial plantations, and central and eastern Europe — particularly Austria, Hungary, and Poland — supply much of the world's cultivated elderberry crop.

Production process

1

Harvesting ripe berries

Fully ripe, dark-purple berry clusters are gathered in late summer and early autumn, when the umbels droop under their weight. Only fully colored berries are picked, as unripe green berries are higher in undesirable compounds.

2

Destemming & sorting

Berries are stripped from the stems — traditionally with a fork — since the stems, leaves, and bark are discarded. Damaged or underripe berries are sorted out, leaving only sound fruit for processing.

3

Cooking (essential safety step)

Berries are gently cooked or steamed before any further use. This essential step neutralizes the compounds that make raw elderberries unpalatable and prone to causing stomach upset. Raw elderberries should never be eaten.

4

Drying or concentrating

For tea, cooked berries are dried at low temperature to preserve their deep anthocyanin color; for syrups, the cooked juice is strained and concentrated. Slow drying protects the rich purple pigments and tart aroma.

5

Packaging & storage

Dried berries and concentrates are packed in sealed, light-protected containers to guard the color and flavor. Elderberry reaches consumers as loose dried berries, tea bags, and bottled syrups.

Caffeine-freeCooked before useAnthocyanin-richWild-harvested

History & Tradition

Elderberry is one of Europe's oldest folk botanicals, woven into seasonal traditions, kitchen lore, and immune-season rituals for thousands of years across many cultures.

1
Ancient Greece

Hippocratic mentions

Writings attributed to Hippocrates referred to the elder as a versatile household plant, and Greek and later Roman naturalists described its berries and flowers among everyday seasonal remedies.

2
Middle Ages

Hedgerow tradition

Across medieval Europe the elder was a fixture of cottage gardens and hedgerows, surrounded by folklore. Cooked berries were turned into warming winter cordials and seasonal comfort drinks.

3
1600s

Herbals of the era

European herbalists of the 17th century, including John Evelyn, praised the elder so highly that it was sometimes called a complete country medicine chest, documenting cooked-berry cordials in detail.

4
1800s

Wine & syrup cultures

Elderberry wine and homemade syrups became cherished autumn traditions across Britain and central Europe, with families gathering hedgerow berries to put up cordials for the cold months ahead.

5
2000s

Modern wellness revival

Elderberry syrups, teas, and lozenges surged in popularity as a caffeine-free wellness staple, celebrated for their rich anthocyanin color and traditional association with seasonal comfort.

Health Benefits

Immune-season tradition

Elderberry has long been a go-to during cold and chilly seasons. As a traditional comfort drink, a warm cup is widely enjoyed for the cozy, soothing ritual it provides when the weather turns.

Rich in anthocyanins

The deep purple color of elderberries comes from anthocyanins, the same plant pigments found in blueberries and blackberries. These compounds are part of what gives elderberry its vibrant, jammy character.

Caffeine-free comfort

Naturally caffeine-free, elderberry can be enjoyed at any hour, including the evening. Its gentle tartness and warmth make it an easy, soothing drink that fits comfortably into a wind-down routine.

Soothing warm sipper

Served hot with a touch of honey and lemon, elderberry is a classic warming sipper. The tart dark-fruit flavor is often associated with cold-symptom comfort in traditional seasonal use.

Cozy seasonal ritual

Beyond flavor, elderberry's appeal lies in ritual — a steaming, fragrant cup that signals slowing down. Many people reach for it as a comforting moment of calm during the darker, colder months.

Grades & Varieties

Whole dried berries

Complete dried elderberries with the deepest color and most concentrated tart flavor. These must be simmered (never used raw) to make tea or syrup — the traditional starting point for homemade preparations.

Best for

  • Homemade elderberry syrup
  • Simmered seasonal infusions
  • Berry blends with spices

Cut berries (tea bags)

Pre-cooked, dried elderberries cut for convenient brewing in tea bags or blends. Slightly milder than whole berries but ready to steep, often combined with hibiscus or rosehip for a balanced tart cup.

Best for

  • Daily caffeine-free tea
  • Quick warm sippers
  • Fruit-forward blends

Elderberry syrup

A concentrated, sweetened cooked-berry syrup with intense color and jammy tartness. A spoonful stirred into hot water makes an instant elderberry drink, and it is a beloved immune-season pantry staple.

Best for

  • Instant warm drinks
  • Drizzling over desserts
  • Mixing into mocktails

Did you know?

Elderberries must always be cooked before use — raw berries can cause stomach upset, which is why traditional elderberry drinks are simmered, never steeped raw.

Foods with this tea

Drinks with this tea