    
BENEFITS OF
ELDERBERRY
The elderberry has fallen into neglect of late years, owing
to the lazy and disastrous modern habit of substituting the
mineral drugs of the chemist for the home-made vegetable
remedies of our grandmothers.
Nevertheless, the elderberry is one of the most ancient and
tried of medicines, held in such great esteem in Germany that,
according to the German folk-lore, men should take off their
hats in the presence of an elder-tree. In Denmark there is a
legend to the effect that the trees are under the protection of
a being known as the Elder-Mother, who has been immortalised in
one of the fairy tales of Hans Andersen.
The berries of the elder-tree are not palatable enough to be
used as a common article of food, but in the days when nearly
every garden boasted its elder-tree few housewives omitted to
make elderberry wine in due season.
It is not permitted to “food-reformers” to make “wine,” but
those readers who are fortunate enough to possess an elder-tree
might well preserve the juice of the berries against winter
coughs and colds.
Preserved Fruit
Juice
The following is E. and B. May’s recipe for preserving fruit
juice. Put the fruit into a preserving-pan, crush it and allow
it to simmer slowly until the juice is well drawn out. This
will take about an hour. Press out the juice and strain through
a jelly-bag until quite clear. Put the juice back into the pan,
and to every quart add a quarter of a pound of best cane sugar.
Stir until dissolved. Put the juice into clean, dry bottles.
Stand the bottles in a pan of hot water, and when the latter
has come to the boil allow the bottles to remain in the boiling
water for fifteen minutes. The idea is to bring the juice
inside the bottles to boiling point just before sealing up, but
not to boil it. See that the bottles are full. Cork immediately
on taking out of the pan, and then seal up. To seal mix a
little plaster of Paris with water and spread it well over the
cork. Let it come a little below the cork so as to exclude all
air.
The juice of the elderberry is famous for promoting
perspiration, hence its efficacy in the cure of colds. Two
tablespoonfuls should be taken at bed-time in a tumbler of hot
water.
The juice of the elderberry is excellent in fevers, and is also
said to promote longevity.
Elderberry
Poultice
“The leaves of the elder, boiled until they are soft, with a
little linseed oil added thereto,” laid upon a scarlet cloth
and applied, as hot as it can be borne, to piles, has been said
to be an infallible remedy. Each time this poultice gets cold
it must be renewed for “the space of an hour.” At the end of
this time the final dressing is to be “bound on,” and the
patient “put warm to bed.” If necessary the whole operation is
to be repeated; but the writer assures us that “this hath not
yet failed at the first dressing to cure the disease.” If any
reader desires to try the experiment I would suggest that the
leaves be steamed rather than boiled, and pure olive oil used
in the place of linseed oil. It must also be remembered that no
outward application can be expected to effect a permanent cure,
since the presence of piles indicates an effort of Nature to
clear out some poison from the system. But if this expulsion is
assisted by appropriate means the pain may well be alleviated
by external applications. (Pepper should be avoided by
sufferers from piles.)
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