Spruce Beer Homebrew Recipe (made with spruce tips) (2024)

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Homebrewing is one of my favorite things to do, but I especially love it when I can incorporate foraged ingredients. I came across some nice big spruce tips recently, and when I saw them I immediately knew what I was going to make with them: spruce beer! Homemade spruce beer has been something that I’ve been wanting to make for some time, but it just hadn’t happened yet until now. This spruce beer recipe isn’t complicated and the end result is delicious!

Spruce Beer Homebrew Recipe (made with spruce tips) (1)

Harvesting Spruce Tips

Spruce tips are the bright green new growth on the end of spruce tree branches in the springtime.

Using spruce tips in this recipe is preferred, but they are generally only available for a short time during the spring. Exactly when to find them varies from location to location depending on your climate.

Warmer regions will get spruce tips in late winter or early spring, and cooler regions in late spring or possibly even during the summertime.

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Spruce Beer Homebrew Recipe (made with spruce tips) (2)

Try not to pick more than a small handful of spruce tips off of each mature tree, and avoid taking any tips from smaller trees.

If it’s the wrong time of year for spruce tips, you can use spruce cuttings from the older growth. The flavor will be different, a little more piney perhaps, but still good.

You can also use the tips or older growth of any edible conifer, such as pine, fir, or hemlock (the tree, not the poisonous plant). Be sure to avoid the yew tree as it is toxic.

Spruce Beer Recipe

This is not a traditional beer recipe that uses hops and malt, but more of an old-fashioned foraged brew.

Feel free to add in some hops and malt if you are looking for more of a beer-like flavor. I really wanted the flavor of the spruce to shine in this recipe which is why I made it this way.

This recipe calls for champagne yeast, but you can also use a wild yeast starter in the same manner that I did in this mugwort lemon beer recipe instead.

Before you start brewing, you will need some equipment. Sanitizer is important, and a one gallon jug with airlock is needed for fermenting. Check out my page on mead brewing and bottling equipment for more.

How to Make Spruce Tip Beer

Mix the water, brown sugar, and spruce tips in a large pot. Cut and squeeze the lemon into the pot. Bring to a boil and let it boil for 30 minutes.

Place the pot into a pan of ice water until the wort has cooled to room temperature, about 70°F (21°C).

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Strain the wort into a one gallon jug, leaving 2-3 inches of head space at the top, then add the yeast. Cap the jug with a lid and give it a few shakes to combine and aerate.

Put a bit of water in the airlock to the line, then position it on the jug. Let the spruce beer ferment for at least 2-3 weeks, until the bubbles in the jug have slowed significantly but not completely.

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Bottle the beer using the bottling instructions on this page. Let the bottles sit for 3-4 weeks before drinking. Serve cold!

I really love how this spruce beer turned out! It has a pleasant and barely sweet pine-like flavor without being overwhelming. The champagne yeast makes it quite dry, which is how I prefer it.

It’s refreshing when served cold and has a wonderful bubbly carbonation to it.

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Even though spruce tips aren’t in season in the fall, this would be an excellent recipe to make for the holidays with any type of conifer needle.

I hope you try this spruce beer recipe. If you do, let me know what you think!

If you enjoy foraging for spruce tips and other conifer needles, here are

MoreHomebrewing Recipes

Ready for your next brewing adventure? Try one of these tasty recipes!

  • Root Beer
  • Apple Ginger Beer
  • Mugwort Lemon Beer

Spruce Beer Homebrew Recipe (made with spruce tips) (6)

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4.12 from 43 votes

Spruce Beer

This homemade spruce beer is made with foraged spruce tips and fermented in a one gallon jug.

Course Drinks

Cuisine American

Prep Time 5 minutes minutes

Cook Time 1 hour hour

Fermenting Time 21 days days

Total Time 1 hour hour 5 minutes minutes

Servings 13 servings

Calories 140kcal

Author Colleen @ Grow Forage Cook Ferment

Ingredients

US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Before you begin, sanitize all of your brewing equipment.

  • Mix the water, brown sugar, and spruce tips in a large pot. Cut and squeeze the lemon into the pot. Bring to a boil and let it boil for 30 minutes.

  • Place the pot into a pan of ice water until the wort has cooled to room temperature, about 70°F (21°C).

  • Strain the wort into a one gallon jug, leaving 2-3 inches of head space at the top, then add the yeast. Cap the jug with a lid and give it a few shakes to combine and aerate.

  • Put a bit of water in the airlock to the line, then position it on the jug. Let the spruce beer ferment for at least 2-3 weeks, until the bubbles in the jug have slowed significantly but not completely.

  • Bottle the beer using the bottling instructions on this page. Let the bottles sit for 3-4 weeks before drinking. Serve cold!

Notes

Store beer in a cold, dark place to extend the shelf life to 1+ years.

Nutrition

Serving: 12ounces | Calories: 140kcal | Carbohydrates: 36g | Sodium: 21mg | Potassium: 61mg | Sugar: 35g | Calcium: 30mg | Iron: 0.2mg

Spruce Beer Homebrew Recipe (made with spruce tips) (2024)

FAQs

How do you use spruce tips in beer? ›

We normally add the spruce to the last 15 min of the boil (or less). The aromatic quality of the spruce is most present with this process. ANOTHER NOTE - Because of the different sensitivities to spruce tips, if this is your first time around using them go on your gut.

What can I do with fresh spruce tips? ›

Spruce tips have a distinct taste — citrus with a hint of resin. You can snack on them fresh or or add them to salads. Dried spruce tips can be ground in a coffee grinder and make a great nutmeg like spice – check out the recipe for Moose Steak with Yukon Rub and for Northern Pumpkin Pie! They can also be used in teas.

Can you ferment spruce tips? ›

Fermented Spruce Tip Syrup

To make your syrup ferment, add ½ cup (4 oz) water to the basic proportions below, or just enough water so that the spruce tips are just barely covered with liquid from the get-go. Anywhere from ⅓ to ½ cup of water will do the trick.

What does spruce tip beer taste like? ›

Lots of piney, resinous notes, which many craft beer fans have come to expect from New World hops. As one online rater put it in a review of Ballast Point's Spruce Tip Sculpin: “Like regular Sculpin, but more dank.”

What is the difference between pine tips and spruce tips? ›

This is an easy tip to remember: on pine trees, needles are attached and attached to the branches in clusters; on spruce trees, needles are attached individually. A longleaf pine – which you can tell is a pine because its needles are attached in bundles.

Can you eat raw spruce tips? ›

Spruce tips can be eaten raw, cooked, or dried and powdered like a spice/flavoring. We add them raw to salads, use them to flavor desserts, and use the powder to bring unique color and flavor to dishes.

Which spruce tips are edible? ›

The young shoots, which stand out from the darker mature needles from last year break off easily from the branch for effortless harvest. Not all spruce tips taste the same. The Forager Chef recommends White Spruce, Blue Spruce, and Norway Spruce.

Can you freeze fresh spruce tips? ›

Two of the best ways to freeze spruce tips is to bag them up in plastic freezer baggies or to vacuum seal them and then freeze. Spruce tips can last up to one year. Today, I'm making spruce tip/carrot/zucchini/ bread with spruce tip cream cheese frosting. All you need is your favroite zucchini carrot bread recipe.

How do you infuse spruce tips? ›

Directions. To make the spruce syrup, combine the sugar and water in a sauce pan over medium heat until the sugar is melted and fully dissolved into the water. Place the spruce tips in a heat safe container and pour the hot sugar syrup over it. Cover and let sit for as long as possible to infuse the flavor.

Can spruce tips be used as an ingredient for making tea or beer True or false? ›

The needles, shoots, light-green tips and inner bark of the popular conifer have been used for centuries to brew forest-scented tea, soft drinks and beer.

How alcoholic is spruce beer? ›

Contrary to what its name suggests, spruce beer is a fir-flavoured, non-alcoholic fizzy drink.

Is there alcohol in spruce beer? ›

Spruce beer is a beverage flavored with the buds, needles, or essence of spruce trees. Spruce beer can refer to either alcoholic or non-alcoholic beverages.

What are the benefits of spruce beer? ›

The health benefits arose from the fact that spruce tips, especially the new growth, contain up to 50 mg of vitamin C per 100 grams. The native people of eastern Canada also prevented scurvy by chewing the spruce tree's inner bark and sticky gum.

What flavors go with spruce tips? ›

FRUIT + SPRUCE PAIRINGS
  • CITRUS: Grapefruit, Tangerine.
  • TROPICAL: Mango, Passion Fruit, Pineapple.
  • STONE FRUIT: Peach, Plum.
  • BERRY: Blackberry, Raspberry.
  • OTHER: Rhubarb, Watermelon.

Are spruce tips edible raw? ›

Spruce tips can be eaten raw, cooked, or dried and powdered like a spice/flavoring. We add them raw to salads, use them to flavor desserts, and use the powder to bring unique color and flavor to dishes.

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