Spruce On Tap (2024)

Recipe Ideas:

Below you will find many different recipes and dosing suggestions. These are just things we have played with ourselves over the years as well as some customer feed back. Have a recipe you would like to share using spruce, juniper or other fun ingredients? We would love to see it! Email us at brew@spruceontap.com and we may post it on our website.

Interested in making pine needle tea? Pine needle tea is known for many health benefits, especially in these crazy COVID days. And all of our spruce, fir, ponderosa and juniper products can be used for pine needle tea. Learn more about the benefits here:

https://www.vitalityherbsandclay.com/blogs/vital-health-newsletter-blog/9-ways-to-make-pine-needle-tea?_pos=1&_sid=eabefaa05&_ss=r

The majority of the recipes below are based on spruce, but there are also juniper and other ingredient suggestions. If you are looking for something specific, like juniper or sage, use the search function (Control F) to type in what you are looking for.

NOTE – Everyone’s tastes are different (and we are glad for that). Some people are very sensitive to the pine flavor that spruce tips add to a beer and other people are not as sensitive to it. We always recommend starting light on your first batch. Then you know what to expect. After that, start ramping up on future batches if so desired. Fresh spruce tips may have high levels of undesirable resins and tannins when boiled too long. 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. When you open your package, if they smell super strong to you then they probably are to you individually, and you can use a little less. If you love the aroma and just want to bury your face in it, use the full recommended amount!

COMMERCIAL BREWERIES - For commercial breweries we are seeing most people use 1-2lbs per BBL of spruce depending on the beer style for subtle flavor (juniper and other ingredients will have different dosage amounts. Please contact us for more info if it is not listed in the description or on this page.). So if you were brewing a porter or a stout it would probably be recommended to go with 2lbs or so. For a lighter beer 1lb should be fine. The young spruce tips that we harvest are not harsh, piney or resiny. For more details on dosing techniques and amounts, including dry-hopping or Sahti style beers, send us an email at brew@spruceontap.com and we can get you more detail.

Riff Raff Brewing Co brewed a 7BBL batch and used 2lbs per BBL (14lbs total) into a lightly hopped pale ale recipe. Here are their comments: "We wanted a lot of spruce flavor, and we got it. Though it is nice and sprucey, it is not overwhelming or too piney. Very little tannins are detected. It adds almost a sweet, slightly minty or melon character. It has been a very popular seller." So, that said, if you stick with the 1-2lb / BBL suggestion you should have a nice flavor balance. Customers are also using the dry hop technique with spruce. In doing this, the spruce is not pasteurized, which has risks, but it allows you to test the product out of the brite tank and monitor the effect of the spruce. Spruce is naturally antimicrobial and when using the dry-hopping technique it is going into an alcohol rich environment, so this is quite safe. Most people leave the spruce in the tank 3-5 days. Please contact us directly for bulk pricing.

Here is an article written about using spruce tips in the boil vs. using them in the fermenter. We normally recommend a combination of both (half the spruce in the boil kettle, the other half either in the fermenter or the brite tank). More details here:

https://brulosophy.com/2021/07/19/brewing-with-spruce-boil-addition-vs-fermentation-addition-in-an-american-ipa-exbeeriment-results/

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A few quick suggestions for uses on almost all of the products that we offer:

* Infused Vinegar

* Infused Gin

* Infused Tea

* Infused Salt

* Infused Sugar

* Infused Honey

* Baking Assistance (finely mince spruce tips or other items)

* Brine & Marinade

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BEER RECIPES:

Those adventurous brewers can go old-school and replace all hop additions with spruce tips – a true colonial spruce beer! But be careful, replacing hop additions with spruce additions (especially the longer boil times) can make one whopper of a sprucey beer.

2 Tbs Spruce Essence = Approximately 4 oz spruce tips

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Spruce Juice Pale Ale (Our own family recipe, which has won ribbons!):

(5 Gallons – Mash Extract)

1.5 lb Light Dry Malt Extract

2.75 lb Pale Malt Liquid Extract

2 lbs Pale Malt (2 Row)

1 lb Munich Malt – 10L (Great Western) ½ lb Carapils

¼ lb Caramel / Crystal Malt – 60L

1 oz New Zealand Hallertauer (8.5% - 60 minutes)

.5 oz Cascade (8.6% - 20 minutes)

4 to 8 oz Spruce Tips (15 minutes - less for subtle flavor, more for lots of flavor)

1 tsp Irish Moss (15 minutes)

1 oz New Zealand Hallertauer (8.5% - 5 minutes)

Ale Yeast (priming sugar for bottling)

Mash crushed grains at 150 degrees for one hour. Remove grains and bring to a boil. Cut heat and add extracts. Bring back to a boil and start hop additions. Cool wort in a fermenter and pitch yeast. Rack to secondary after primary fermentation has slowed (usually 3-5 days). Condition in secondary for two weeks before bottling or kegging.

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Our house recipe - 10 Gallon All Grain: Spruce Juice American Pale Ale

Type: All Grain

Batch Size (fermenter): 10.00 gal

Brewer: Trogdor

Boil Size: 13.44 gal

Boil Time: 60 min

Equipment: Stainless Kegs (10 Gal/37.8 L) - All Grain

End of Boil Volume 11.44 gal

Brewhouse Efficiency: 72.00 %

Final Bottling Volume: 9.25 gal

Est Mash Efficiency 79.2 %

Fermentation: Ale, Two Stage

Taste Rating(out of 50): 60.0

Taste Notes: Yeah, this beer rocks. Smell the spruce tips when you open the bag. If it hits you like a blast of Pine Sol (only good smelling) then you can cut down on the tips. If they are a little mellow, then up the ante. Remember, wild harvested means there may be variance in potency. Cheers to a fun filled brew (and end product of course). - Spruce On Tap

Ingredients

16 lbs 8.0 oz Pale Malt (2 Row) US (2.0 SRM)

2 lbs Caramel/Crystal Malt - 20L (20.0 SRM)

1 lbs Cara-Pils/Dextrine (2.0 SRM)

8.0 oz Caramel/Crystal Malt - 60L (60.0 SRM)

2.00 oz Cascade [8.60 %] - Boil 60.0 min

1.00 oz Cascade [8.60 %] - Boil 20.0 min

2.00 tsp Irish Moss (Boil 15.0 mins)

8 oz Spruce Tips (Boil 15.0 mins)

2.00 oz Cascade [8.60 %] - (Boil 5.0 min)

1.0 pkg American Ale (Wyeast Labs #1056)

Beer Profile

Est Original Gravity: 12.7 Plato Measured Original Gravity: 12.7 Plato

Est Final Gravity: 3.1 Plato

Measured Final Gravity: 3.1 Plato

Estimated Alcohol by Vol: 5.2 %

Actual Alcohol by Vol: 5.2 %

Bitterness: 47.6 IBUs

Calories: 171.5 kcal/12oz

Est Color: 7.0 SRM

Mash Profile

Single Infusion, Light Body, No Mash Out

Total Grain Weight: 20 lbs

Sparge Water: 9.59 gal

Grain Temperature: 65.0 F

Sparge Temperature: 168.0 F

Tun Temperature: 65.0 F

Mash Steps

Mash In - Add 29.00 qt of water at 167.3 to reach 153.0 for 60 min

Sparge Step: Fly sparge with 9.59 gal water at 168.0 F

Mash Notes: Simple single infusion mash for use with most modern well modified grains (about 95% of the time).

Carbonation and Storage

Carbonation Type: Keg

Volumes of CO2: 2.3 - Keg with 12.54 PSI

Keg/Bottling Temperature: 45.0 F

Age for: 30.00 days

Storage Temperature: 45.0 F

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Spruce & Juniper Mead Notes:

If you are looking for some guidance on making mead with spruce and juniper, check out the podcast that Spruce On Tap was involved with at the links below from The Mead House. On their website, click the blue box at the top of the page to start the podcast.

Their website:http://www.themeadhouse.com/podcast/episode-118/

Their FB page:https://www.facebook.com/TheMeadHouse/

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Spruce Soda: (Makes approx one gallon)

•1 gallon water

•1/2 cup sugar

•1lb spruce tips
•1/8 teaspoon yeast

1. Simmer spruce tips in water for 1 hour. (In brewing beer we typically don't boil longer than 15 minutes but with soda the sugar covers the added tannins)

2. Strain out spruce

3. Stir in sugar and let cool to 80*.

4. If bottling, pitch yeast, let set for an hour, then bottle. If kegging no yeast is necessary, just keg, chill and carbonate. (FYI to those bottling, the yeast is just to make carbonation.)

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More Fun With Spruce Tips:

There are so many fun things to do with spruce. Add spruce tips to salt to make spruce salt. Add spruce tips to honey for an amazing flavor combination. Boil spruce tips in water for 15 minutes (approximately 4 oz of spruce in 3 cups of water) to make a wonderful essence that can be used in making bread or other baking recipes. Check out food ideas below!

Prepare as a tea: Pour 8 oz of boiling water over 1/2oz of spruce. Cover and steep 3-4 minutes, strain, and serve. Stir in some spruce honey to taste.

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Playing with Juniper:

We offer both juniper berries, a mixture of juniper needles and berries as well as just the needles. The juniper that we harvest in Southwest Colorado are unique (J. scopulorum) in that both the needles and the berries have similar flavor and aroma characteristics. For that reason, in brewing, distilling and culinary, we recommend trying the needle and berry combination or just the needles to keep things cost effective.

In brewing, typically juniper is added at about 1/4 of the recommended amount of spruce. So in a 5 gallon batch, maybe only add 1 oz to the end of the boil. On a commercial level, maybe only add .25 to .5lb per BBL. Again, we recommend using it in the last 15 minutes of the boil, but the dry hopping technique can be used - just recognize, like hops, they are not pasteurized when using them post boil.

Prepare as a tea: Pour 8 oz of boiling water over 1/4oz of juniper. Cover and steep 3-4 minutes, strain, and serve. Option: Stir in some spruce honey to taste.

Safety Note On Spruce & Juniper: Not to be used during pregnancy. Use with caution in persons with inflammatory kidney disease. Not for use exceeding 6 weeks in succession.

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Playing with Yarrow:

Yarrow is an awesome little herb with many uses and some big kick. It helps stop bleeding, it repels mosquitoes and other insects when rubbed on the skin, and has been used for making beer for hundreds of years. General dosage is about 1oz per 5 gallons in the end of the boil for a medium bodied beer.

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Playing with Wild Sage:

Wild sage is a fun product rich in history for its medicinal uses. You can read more about some of the uses on the individual product pages. However, when used in brewing beer, we typically recommend using approximately 1/4lb per barrel in the last 15 minutes of the boil or during whirlpool. We do NOT recommend using this product for marinades or brines. This product should not be consumed directly.

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Cooking with Spruce & Juniper:

We love cooking with spruce and juniper. Both can be used in a variety of methods including marinades, garnishes and dried seasonings (to dry them just put them in the oven on very low heat on a cookie sheet for a half hour or so - do this without burning your house down please). However, one of our favorite things to do is to brine chicken and turkey with them. Below are some recipes for brining that come out AMAZING! Hope you enjoy!

Delicious Juniper Brined Chicken Recipe:

1 whole chicken, quartered

64 oz filtered water

1/4 cup+ 3 tsp ground pink Himalayan sea salt

(If you use any other salt, look up a salt conversion chart as all types of salt vary)

1 oz juniper needles & berries

1 T peppercorns

10 drops stevia extract

Take 16 ozs of the water, heat it to almost boiling, dissolve the salt with it in a large bowl. Take another 24 ozs of the water, add it to a blender with the juniper and peppercorns and blend until pulverized. Combine all ingredients in a large bowl and brine in the refrigerator for 4 hours. Grill or roast until done.

Hints: Once you taste brined poultry you probably won't want it any other way! This means needing a lot of salt on hand. Costco carries a 5 lb container of Ground Himalayan Pink Salt at a very good price.

On the grill: We love grilling brined chicken. Heat the grill to 600 degrees to burn off any old stuff. Then add the chicken and turn the heat all the way down. Keep your grill on low (about 325 degrees F) and cook the chicken for one hour (or until done). This will give you some of the juiciest chicken you can imagine!

Delicious Spruce Brined Chicken Recipe:

Use the same recipe as above, but replace the juniper with 4oz of spruce tips (yes, 4oz, not 1oz - juniper is much more potent). Amazing!

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When using spruce and juniper in cooking, normally the best way to really impart the flavor is to blend or emulsify them with some water and use that. Biting into each needle can be a bit intense so it is best to blend them in.

Spruce On Tap (2024)

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