Skip to content
  • Home
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Recipes
  • Self Sufficiency
  • Sourdough
  • Cheesemaking
  • Free Resources

The Nourishing Hearthfire

/

Spiced Elderberry Oxymel (Elderberry Syrup)

Home » Homestead Recipes

katedownham

·

May 16, 2018

·

Homestead Recipes, All blog posts, Self Sufficiency & Homesteading
Elderberry oxymel or elderberry syrup in jars

Here is a simple way to make a healthy medicine for the cold months ahead. An elderberry oxymel is like a slightly less-sweet elderberry syrup. I can’t say enough good things about elderberries, and this way of preserving them for the winter can be used either as a daily boost to health to prevent colds and flus, or as something taken when you are sick to relieve the symptoms and get rid of the cold or flu quickly, or just because it tastes good. This recipe is cheap to make, using stuff that’s always in my kitchen.

How to make elderberry oxymel (or elderberry syrup)

Ingredients

Elderberries
Optional spices (see step 3)
Raw apple cider vinegar
Raw honey

Method

1. First you will need to find an elderberry tree in fruit. I found these in the first month of autumn and in the garden of an old homestead we were visiting. Sometimes trees are on the side of the road, or branches are hanging over someone’s fence. Elder trees are beautiful to look at and many people have them growing in their garden as ornamentals that don’t end up being harvested. They’re supposed to be quite easy to grow, and the leaves and branches are good goat food.

14837696670_8bd85ded78_z
Photo credit: here

2. Carefully harvest the bunches of fruits off the trees, gather as much as you’re likely to use. I started with around 2 litres of loosely packed bunches and ended up with around 1300ml of oxymel.

3. Wash the berries and gently strip the berries from the twigs into a cooking pot, it doesn’t matter if a few small twigs get in too. Mix in a small amount of water (for around 1200ml of berries at this stage I added half a cup). Add some spices now if you wish, I added 1/2 inch of grated fresh ginger, a pinch of ground cloves, 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg and 1 teaspoon cinnamon.

4. Bring the berries to the boil with the lid on, then remove the lid and continue to cook, while squashing the berries with a wooden spoon to extract the juice and evaporate some of the water. Do this for 10-20 minutes, being careful to not evaporate too much of the liquid, until it looks like you’ve squashed the berries as much as they can be squashed.

5. Filter the juice through a fine mesh sieve, then continue to squash the berries into the sieve to extract the last of the juice. Pour the juice into a measuring cup or jar to see how much you have. I ended up with 400ml of juice. Allow the juice to cool down to a blood-warm temperature.

6. When you can put some of the juice on the inside of your wrist without it hurting, pour the juice into a mixing bowl and add the same volume of raw cider vinegar and raw honey, so that you have 1 part elderberry juice, 1 part cider vinegar, and 1 part honey.

7. Pour into sterilised jars and store in a fairly cold and dry place. Take 1 tablespoon at a time, either on its own or mixed with water. It’s also good mixed with boiling water as a hot drink.

 

Like this:

Like Loading…
  • Share using Native toolsShareCopied to clipboard
Kate Downham off grid homesteader

About Kate Downham

Kate Downham has been growing, preserving, and cooking real food since 2007. She is the author of four books on homestead skills: A Year in an Off-Grid Kitchen, Natural Small Batch Cheesemaking, Backyard Dairy Goats, and Sourdough Without Fail.

Off-grid with her family of nine in the Tasmanian forest, Kate milks her own goats, makes all their cheese, mills all her own grain, and bakes fresh sourdough bread daily.

Learn more about Kate’s books →

Related posts

  • Quinces: How to prepare, cook, and preserve them
  • How to Make Jam Without White Sugar or Pectin
  • Salted Caramel Cheesecake Pie (grain-free)

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




One response to “Spiced Elderberry Oxymel (Elderberry Syrup)”
  1. Keirra Mushett Avatar
    Keirra Mushett
    Jan 5, 2019

    Thank you, I need to find a place to harvest elderberries.

    Reply
8 different homesteading ebook covers

My books

Sourdough without fail: 100% whole grain sourdough breads, pizza, and pastries for any kitchen fresh milled flour sourdough book cover
a year in an off grid kitchen by kate downham off grid homesteading book cover
natural small batch cheesemaking natural cheesemaking book cover
backyard dairy goats homesteading book cover

More Resources for Off-Grid Living

off grid solar dehydrator
garden master course
diy wood fired pizza oven
the $50 and up underground house
natural swimming pools

Categories

  • All blog posts
  • Homestead Recipes
  • Natural Cheesemaking
  • Self Sufficiency & Homesteading
  • Whole Grain Sourdough Baking

Recent Posts

  • Magic Overnight Sourdough Pizza Dough Recipe with Fresh Milled FlourMay 26, 2026
  • Cooking year-round on a wood cookstove: the dream, the reality, and the practicalities of relying on our own firewood and being off the gas gridMay 20, 2026
  • 100% Whole Grain Fresh Milled Flour Sourdough Bread for Beginners: A Step-by-Step GuideMay 4, 2026
  • Easy 100% Whole Grain Sourdough Cinnamon Raisin Bread (honey-sweetened, and works with fresh milled flour & ancient grains)May 4, 2026
  • Natural Cheesemaking: How to Make and Use Your Own Cheese CulturesMay 2, 2026

The Nourishing Hearthfire is reader-supported and mostly ad-free

Buy me a coffee

Search

  • Home
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Recipes
  • Self Sufficiency
  • Sourdough
  • Cheesemaking
  • Free Homestead Resources

© 2026 Kate Downham – The Nourishing Hearthfire. This blog is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Join The Nourishing Hearthfire mailing list for thoughtful monthly emails and free ebooks
Find us on forums and social media

Permies: Permaculture and Homesteading Forums

Instagram

Facebook

X

Goodreads

About

Contact

Privacy Policy

Terms and Disclaimer

The Nourishing Hearthfire

%d