I discovered sumac tea about nine years ago. I was visiting a family whose yard was over run with sumac and they had started cutting it down. Whereas the drupes (sumac produces a cluster of densely packed seeds) are usually at the ends of branches high in the air, in this case I was able to easily gather all I wanted at waist height.
Following
recommendations, I broke up the drupes, put the seeds in a large jar,
filled it with water, and allowed it to soak over night.
I was stunned. It
was so delicious! and yet I had never known anyone, personally, who had tried it. I vowed to
popularize sumac tea, and set about to learn all I could. I began to
look for stands) whose
owners I could contact and from which I could arrange to collect. This endeavor was
surprisingly difficult, but I learned a lot about sumac.
“But isn’t Sumac
poisonous?” No Grasshopper, you needn’t worry. There is a poisonous variety
of Sumac with berries, which are white, not red. Our
variety is called staghorn, produces a seed cluster that is dark red
and fuzzy, and has no berries. No subtle discernment is involved, the
difference is quite obvious.
Rhizoidal Growth pattern |
There was
something else odd about these two forms of sumac. In the vast
majority of cases, the rhizoid produced small drupes, about two
inches in diameter and 4 to 7 inches in length. Again, the drupes
being at the end of the stalk, high in the air, it was difficult to
harvest these drupes. In contrast, the drupes produced by the
dendritic form were at times three inches in diameter, and would grow
to 8 or 10 inches in length. This is why I think there are two
genetic forms, but there’s nuance. The rhizoid form of the sumac
that were cut down in that yard produced large robust drupes, like
the tree nearby. And I have found rhizoid stands with these large
drupes. I don’t know that I’ve seen a tree with the small drupes,
but the large drupes are definitely delivered by both patterns of
growth. I traveled around Addison County Vermont for a couple of
years, and at first I wanted the difference in size to be a result of
their local conditions. But if this were true, the size of the drupes
would vary continuously across the entire range of sizes. But they
did not. The variation was bimodal. Hence I wonder if the
species has two varieties.
This is important
for you when you go to search for sumac drupes to turn into tea. You
can search for the large drupes. They are better in other ways.
There is an
insect, or perhaps a mite (it is very small, and I have not taken it
to a lab), which feeds on the sap of the sumac plant and favors the
warm safe enclosure of the drupe (I’m inferring). They tend to
favor the small drupes. Or perhaps the small size is a result of the
loss of plant energy to the arthropod. This bug also explains some of
the popular aversion to sumac tea. One Vermonter I spoke with told me
his family didn’t like sumac because it had all of that insect
detritus in it. This is a significant barrier. It is possible to
produce good tea with these drupes, but the thought of it is
disgusting. But again, there are strategies to over come this
obstacle, which I will review when I tell you about making tea. It’s
important to realize that not all drupes are infested with this bug.
They have to disperse, and presumably when sumac colonizes new soil
(they are a pioneer species), they do not have the bugs, and if you
find them, you will have sumac in its pristine form. On the other
hand, my experience is that the larger drupes tend not to be infested
so often. So that is what I look for when I want sumac!
Sumac Drupes high in the air |
Staghorn sumac
has a unique ecological niche, which explains some of its superb
qualities. One year I began watching the growth and development of drupes from their first appearances in the spring. The flowers were a
pale green (it doesn’t want any attention at this point), and
gradually grew pink over the summer and red late in the autumn. But
ripening did not follow the usual pattern of a fruit that ripens in
the fall and is ready to be eaten. Sumac is still not ripe in
November, when it is still green inside of the drupe. It’s
essentially ready late in December, but the best time to harvest is
late in the winter.
What is the point
of this? Sumac’s unique strategy is to provide an over-winter food
to birds. A berry would not be suitable to this strategy, because
berries have water in them, which would be frozen and suck heat out
of the target customer, the over-wintering birds. Instead, the seeds
are produced with a fuzz which is suffused with this plant’s unique
formulation of nutrients. And in this form, it lasts all winter.
Indeed, drupes can be found which, sheltered from rain, are two and
three years old, and still suitable for making tea. I recently made
tea with drupes that I have kept in my closet for three years. It had
no mold, and had lost only some of its flavor.
This is the
reason for sumac’s amazing properties. A plant whose strategy for
propagation is to feed birds over winter must formulate it’s
nutrient offering to persist over a significant period of time.
Hence, it is hypothesized that the staghorn sumac contains a rich
variety of anti-oxidants, starches, and other substances, which
preserve the fruit, and do not age or grow stale (the sparse
literature is ambiguous about the nutritional contents of the
suffuse). Sumac may be the only fruit engineered by nature to persist
as a viable food across such a span of time. (Grains and beans are
easily preserved for this length of time, but nature did not engineer
them to be viable as food for this span of time.) The
current attention to antioxidants gives sumac a special nutritional
value. It may be the richest source of antioxidants in nature. I
can’t prove that.
Collecting sumac
can be impossible if you try to do it with leaves on the plant. Since
it remains fresh all winter, the best time to collect it would be a
warm day in January or February, but definitely before the leaves
come out.
Some people worry
about the nutrient broth being washed away by rain, and if you find
drupes from the previous year, the exposed portions of the drupe will
have been rinsed by rain to a point where the drupe turns grey. But
this fruit is engineered (by nature, through natural selection) to
provide a tasty treat to the birds who might stop by for a meal, all
winter long! I don’t worry about rain damaging the drupes before I
collect them in their first year. The prize is a large drupe without
the detritus of arthropods. If a little rain has fallen on them, they
are still abundant with nutrients. Here is a piece done by Vermont
Public Radio, with some great photos:
foraging-vermonts-surprisingly-scrumptuous-sumac.
So you found some
Sumac to harvest, and you have at least three large drupes. I get a
big pot (two or three gallons), add a gallon or two of water, and
heat it to 150 degrees (use a thermometer). I do not have the science to prove this is
the best protocol, but it works great for me. (If you want to
experiment, bear in mind that you want the nutrients to dissolve in
the water, not get cooked, and high temperatures will cook them.)
Now, you could just add the entire drupes to the hot water, but I use
another method, described below. Using a porous fabric (my favorite I
stripped from a large hi-fi speaker) to hold the drupes, I dunk them
until the water turns a dark red, in about a minute, and then I
remove the drupes. I now have sumac tea.
An option, which
I prefer because I want to unpack the seeds and expose every side of
them to water, is to break up the drupe. This can be done by hand,
which is work and will make your hands stronger, but I prefer a piece
of hardware cloth or kitchen bread rack with 3/8 or ½ inch pitch,
which provides an easy way to break up the drupe. Like grating a
carrot the long way, I scrape the drupe on the wire mesh, against the
direction of the stems, and the seeds quickly fall through. I use a
large rectangular cake pan to catch the seeds. However you do this,
be watching for the detritus of the arthropod inside the drupe. An
advantage of breaking up the drupe in this way is that as soon as you
see the brown stuff exposed, you can stop grating, leaving the
detritus attached to the stem for convenient disposal!
But suppose you
weren’t so lucky and you could only collect some of the smaller
drupes. You will find some that are free of bugs but frequently are not. You have two strategies. Use a screen, to separate the
seeds from their stem, which allows you to collect seeds without
disturbing the bug stuff inside. Or, you could dunk entire drupes in
the hot water. The seeds are so densely packed that there is
typically no danger of the bug stuff inside coming in contact with
the water before you are finished steeping your drupe. But you must
be careful. I don’t think there is any actual danger from this
stuff, but it’s gross. And if you wanted to make tea for sale, you
would have to answer questions from food safety people. So consider
your goals and the condition of the drupes, use your judgment,
consider the preferences of your consumers, and do what feels right
to you.
If you wanted to
propagate sumac, you could find some plants that you like and
transplant them. They are pioneers and will grow easily in disturbed
soil. I don’t know, but it is possible that all you need is a few
pieces of root. If you have the idea that you want to grow from
seeds, you want to consider this: it may be necessary for seeds to be
digested by birds to activate them. I was once offered hundreds of
seedlings – which were growing in a pile of pigeon poo. I couldn’t
use them, but I was intrigued by the idea that the seeds, produced by
a plant that uses a strategy of attracting birds in winter to
disperse its seeds, need to be digested by the birds, in the same way
that some plants will only grow after a fire. Maybe someday I will be
able to experiment.
That’s my
accumulated wisdom on the subject of Staghorn Sumac. Oh, one more
thing. I always thought the flavor would be great to add to other
beverages, beer for example. A month ago, I made a batch and added a
kombucha starter. Do you want to know what was better than Sumac tea?
Sumac is known in
the literature to have huge tannin levels in the bark, and sumac tea
that is steeped for too long will acquire the bitter, sickening
flavor of tannin. That is why we only steep for a minute, two at
most. Meanwhile, why do they say that Kombucha cannot be made with
herbal tea, but must be made with Camellia
sinensis teas? Sumac, apparently an “herbal” tea, may
have some of the secret mojo needed to make Kombucha, and that mojo
may be tannic acid. Any food chemists who want to look into this? If
you want to make Sumac Kombucha, add some sugar (all Kombucha
requires this), let your tea cool to room temperature, add the
starter, and let it ferment for a month. Get the details by reading
about how to make Kombucha.
So experiment.
There is information out there and you can look it up. One article I
found very informative was from the Pakistan Journal of Nutrition,
2009, called Comparative Study on the Chemical Composition of
Syrian Sumac and Chinese Sumac, by Kossah, Nsabimana, Zhao, Chen,
et al. Sumac isn’t an easy fruit to harvest and use, but it is
highly rewarding.
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