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Herbs & Plants

Elderflower

Sambucus nigra L.

The medicinal queen of summer meadows — a plant with a thousand years of history.

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The black elder (Sambucus nigra) deserves the title of the poor man's pharmacy — a plant that has accompanied humans for millennia, healing, feeding and protecting them. Its flowers, which fill the air with a sweet scent every June, are not just a raw material for delicious syrups and drinks — they are a symbol of summer abundance.

Taxonomy & Systematics

The black elder (Sambucus nigra L.) belongs to the genus Sambucus within the family Adoxaceae. The name Sambucus derives from the Greek sambuke — an ancient musical instrument made from the hollow stem of this plant. In Europe and Croatia, three species are found.

SpeciesCommon nameDistribution
Sambucus nigra L.Black elderAll of Europe, Croatia
Sambucus ebulus L.Dwarf elder (toxic)Europe, Middle East
Sambucus racemosa L.Red elderMountain Europe
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Only the black elder is partially edible and medicinal for humans. Sambucus ebulus (dwarf elder) is a toxic plant that can easily be confused with black elder — caution is needed when foraging.

Biology & Habitat

The black elder is one of the most widespread shrubs in Europe. Its natural range covers almost all of Europe — from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean, from the British Isles to western Turkey and the Caucasus.

Elder is a strongly nitrophilous plant — it loves nitrogen-rich, humus-rich soils. This is why it has been a faithful companion of humans since time immemorial: it grows along settlement edges, on ruderal habitats, along fences, in gardens, on forest edges and in hedgerows.

Elder is a fast-growing plant that can grow up to one metre per year. It lives up to 60 years and can reach 10 metres in height. Birds — especially blackbirds, thrushes and starlings — are the main dispersers of seeds over longer distances.

Morphology

Elder is a shrub or rarely a small tree with several main stems growing from the base. The bark of older branches is grey-brown, corky and deeply furrowed with longitudinal cracks. Young shoots are greenish, with clearly visible lenticels (pores for gas exchange).

The leaves are opposite, odd-pinnate, with 5 to 7 oval to elliptical leaflets with serrated margins. The leaves have an unpleasant smell when crushed — this is one of the reliable characteristics for identification.

The flowers are small, creamy white to yellowish-white, gathered in large, flat to slightly convex cymose inflorescences 10 to 30 centimetres in diameter. Each individual flower has five petals, five stamens and a pleasant, sweet scent. Flowering lasts from May to July.

After pollination, each flower develops into a small, round berry 5 to 8 millimetres in diameter. The fruits ripen from August to October, changing colour from green, through red, to dark black or dark blue. Each fruit contains 2 to 5 small seeds.

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Unripe (green and red) fruits, as well as leaves, bark and roots, contain cyanogenic glycosides (sambunigrin) that can cause nausea and vomiting. Ripe fruits are only safe for consumption after heat treatment.

Physiology

Elder follows the annual rhythm with great precision: leaf budding begins in early spring (March–April), flowering occurs in late spring and early summer (May–July), and fruits ripen in late summer and autumn (August–October).

Elder is a heliophytic to semi-shade plant — it grows well in both full sunlight and partial shade. Thanks to its high photosynthesis rate and rapid growth, it is able to quickly colonise disturbed habitats.

Plant partKey bioactive compounds
FlowersFlavonoids (quercetin, kaempferol, rutin), essential oil, triterpenes, mucilage, tannins
BerriesAnthocyanins (cyanidin-3-glucoside), vitamins C and B2, viburnic acid, tannins
LeavesSambunigrin (toxic!), flavonoids, essential oil
BarkTriterpenes, tannins, resins

Varieties & Cultivars

Through centuries of cultivation and selection, a large number of cultivars of black elder have been developed, differing in yield, size of the inflorescence, leaf colour and disease resistance.

CultivarCharacteristicsApplication
'Haschberg'High yield, large fruits, disease resistanceCommercial production of fruits and flowers
'Korsor'Danish cultivar, early flowering, high anthocyanin contentFood industry
'Sambu'Austrian cultivar, large flowers, intense fragranceSyrup and beverage production
'Black Beauty'Dark purple-black foliage, pink flowersOrnamental gardening
'Black Lace'Finely cut dark foliage, pink flowersOrnamental gardening

Health Effects

The flowers of black elder are exceptionally rich in flavonoids, particularly quercetin-3-rutinoside (rutin), kaempferol and isoquercetine. These compounds act as powerful antioxidants that neutralise free radicals and protect cells from oxidative stress.

Flavonoids from elderflower inhibit the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, particularly TNF-α and interleukins. In vitro and in vivo studies show that elderflower extract reduces inflammatory markers, explaining the traditional use of elder in treating colds, flu and inflammatory respiratory conditions.

Elderberries (and to a lesser extent the flowers) contain compounds that interfere with the replication of influenza viruses. Clinical studies show that elderberry extract can shorten the duration of flu by 2 to 4 days compared to placebo.

Elderflower tea is traditionally used as a diaphoretic (promotes sweating) and expectorant (facilitates expectoration). The European Medicines Agency (EMA) has approved the use of dried elderflowers as a traditional herbal medicine for relieving cold symptoms.

Laboratory research shows that aqueous elderflower extract has an immunomodulatory effect — it stimulates the activity of macrophages and NK cells (natural killer cells). This effect may contribute to strengthening the immune defence, particularly during the winter months.

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Warnings and contraindications

  • Unripe fruits and other plant parts (leaves, bark, roots) contain sambunigrin — a cyanogenic glycoside that can cause nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea.
  • Fresh fruits are not recommended for consumption without heat treatment.
  • Pregnant and breastfeeding women should avoid therapeutic doses of elder preparations.
  • Drug interactions: elder may enhance the effect of immunosuppressants and diuretics.

Ethnobotany & History

Elder seeds have been found at prehistoric sites throughout Europe, testifying to the long history of use of this plant. Archaeological finds from the Stone and Bronze Ages show that people used the fruits, bark and branches of elder.

In ancient Greece and Rome, elder was a valued medicinal plant. Hippocrates (460–370 BC) paid special attention to elderberries. Dioscorides (1st century AD) recommended elderberry wine as a remedy against snake bites. Pliny the Elder describes numerous medicinal properties of elder in his Naturalis Historia.

In the Middle Ages, elder was almost ubiquitous in European herbals and monastery gardens. In the 17th century, English physician Martin Blochwich dedicated an entire book to the virtues of elder — on 230 pages he described how every part of the plant can be used in treatment, from toothache to the plague.

In Germanic and Norse mythology, elder was dedicated to the goddess Hylde Moer (Mother Elder) — an ancient vegetation goddess who ruled over the cycle of life and death. The old Germanic and Danish tradition forbade the felling of elder without first asking permission from the spirits dwelling within it.

In Croatian folk medicine and tradition, elder has always held a special place. Flowers were dried and used as tea for colds and fever. Young flowers were fried in batter as a delicacy — the so-called bazgove fritule (elderflower fritters) — a tradition preserved in some parts of Croatia to this day.

Interesting Facts

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Etymology: Elder = Fire

The English name elder probably comes from the Anglo-Saxon aeld, meaning fire. The hollow branches of elder were used as bellows to fan flames.

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Musical instrument

The name Sambucus comes from the Greek sambuke — a stringed instrument made from the hollow stem of elder. Flutes and wind instruments were made from elder branches across Europe.

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Jelly ear fungus

On old elder trees, the fungus Auricularia auricula-judae — the jelly ear — often grows. This edible fungus, named after the biblical legend of Judas, is commercially cultivated and sold as wood ear or cloud ear mushroom.

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Haschberg — Austrian star

The Haschberg cultivar, selected in Austria in the 1970s, now dominates European commercial elder plantations. Austria and Slovenia are the leading European producers of elderflower and elderberries.

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Natural dye

Elder was an important source of natural dyes. Berries give blue and purple, leaves yellow and green, and bark grey and black. These dyes were used for colouring fabrics.

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Ecological value

Elderflowers provide nectar and pollen for more than 70 insect species. The fruits are food for more than 50 bird species. Elder is one of the most ecologically valuable plants of European hedgerows and forest edges.

Sources & References

  1. 1. Woodland Trust. Elder (Sambucus nigra) – British Trees. woodlandtrust.org.uk
  2. 2. AGES – Österreichische Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit. Elderflowers – Medicinal plant. ages.at
  3. 3. Salamon, I. & Grulova, D. (2015). Elderberry (Sambucus nigra): from Natural Medicine in Ancient Times to Protection against Witches in the Middle Ages. Acta Horticulturae 1061.
  4. 4. Atkinson, M.D. & Atkinson, E. (2002). Sambucus nigra L. Journal of Ecology, 90(5), 895–923.
  5. 5. Nawirska-Olszańska, A. et al. (2024). Elderflowers (Sambuci flos L.): A Potential Source of Health-Promoting Compounds. PMC11354468.
  6. 6. Stępień, A.E. et al. (2023). Health-Promoting Properties: Anti-Inflammatory and Antioxidant Activity of Elderberry. PMC10489118.
  7. 7. Wieland, L.S. et al. (2021). Elderberry for prevention and treatment of viral respiratory illnesses. BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies.
  8. 8. Morgenstern, K. (2020). The Elder-Tree in myth, medicine and magic. Sacred Earth.

From elderflower to your glass

Try our organic elderflower syrup

Our elderflower syrup is made from wild flowers, hand-picked in Croatian forests. No artificial flavours, no preservatives.