Sumac Mint Iced Tea doesn't involve any critters once you have washed the sumac flowers. This part of the forum is a little slow until hunting season starts so I hope you will indulge me. I sort of remembered from my Boy Scout manual that a kind of lemonade can be made from sumac tops. At our place we have some so I picked a good bunch of the tops that were sticky and shiny with sap. I covered these with an inch of water and put in a good sprig of mint. Brought this to a slow boil and covered it and let it cool while I cut the grass and got the tractor stuck again. We strained this liquid and added a cup of sugar. Ended up with about a half gallon. Poured over lots of ice this stuff tastes a little like lemonade but there is a kind of flavor that reminds me of the way pines smell. The mint is good. If I was a drinking man (again) I'd jack it up with a good gin or rum. Ah well, Dane.
Sumac Mint Iced Tea
- 2.6K Views
- Last Post 10 May 2020
Sounds tasty. It is called Poison Sumac for a reason. A small percentage of the population will have a serious reaction to your tea and die within moments of drinking it from suffocation as their airways close from the mild toxin in Poison Sumac. A dermatologist can do a simple skin test to determine if a particular person has the fatal allergy to your tea. I have used Sumac pods, well ripened and dark red-brown, dried then pulverized and brewed with 25% Alcohol 75% water to make a dark natural gun stock stain for maple gun stocks.
I wouldn't drink your tea for money but I have had my Great Aunt's Pennsylvania Polka Dotted Mushroom Soup as a child and have seen the future.
Gary
Attached Files
http://www.healing-from-home-remedies.com/sumac-tea.html
Just be informed. Not saying yes, or no.
Duane
Attached Files
I'm not convinced! I have way too many allergies to risk it!
Gary
Attached Files
We don't have poison sumac in Wisconsin that I know of. I woke up alive today so I guess ours is okay. poison sumac acts like poison ivy. Poison oak, ivy and sumac all have the same allergen in different strengths. I did a bunch of research when I got into the ivy in a major way.
Attached Files
Good stuff, like you I discovered it in the Boy Scout manual. Most of the other scouts didn't like it, but I did, sorta sweetart tasting. Turns out the berries are pretty high in several medicinal phytochemicals. For me, the price is right! Late summer is the best time to get the berries. They're oozing with antioxidants meant to preserve the seeds through the winter. Might be a good winter weather predictor. Two summers ago, they oozed a lot of it and we had a very cold winter that hung on late. Last summer, they oozed very little, like they knew they wouldn't have to preserve the seeds as long. So far it has panned out, but the winter isn't over yet.
Attached Files
or of course you could pick a few elderberries ... makes terrific wine ...and the very finest jelly for your cornbread .....
Attached Files
or of course you could pick a few elderberries ... makes terrific wine ...and the very finest jelly for your cornbread .....
Ken, I wouldn't know what an elderberry is,but I do like wine,I buy mine,commercially made from grapes,jelly is called jam,over here,if it wasn't so far from here to the US,I think I would visit you.Tried making cornbread,was nice,but whether it was the same as the US recipe,I don't know. Really enjoy your posts.Mike.
Attached Files
The first year we tried making Elderberry jelly, we did not get enough thickener into it, We were delighted to find we had syrup that we put on everything from pancakes to ice cream. And, it makes a wonderful addition to just about any mixed drink. (I'm particularly fond of it in Kentuckys finest home distilled product.)
Attached Files
Sumac with the red tops, and poison sumac are two completely different plants.
Attached Files
Also used as a spice in Persian cooking!
Sumac, NOT poison sumac
Attached Files
Now you have made this "worse" by saying you are in Wisconsin (I am east of Hayward 14 miles)! Is this the Sumac that you see in clumps alongside the highways, turned beautifully red in the fall? I have some just down the road... And I love tea (get mine from Mark T. Wendall's) in Massachusetts. I like a good shot of Canadian Mist in my tea as an antidote for stress when a firearm stresses me out. What say you?
Greg T
Attached Files
You guys can pick and brew all the Sumac you want. I have been picking loads of Morels and they sure are tasty. Squid
"Squid Pro Quo"
Attached Files
I am all for the Canadian Mist with or without the tea.
B.E.Brickey
Attached Files
I had broke out bad when I was kid with poison sumac. It took me a time to get over it after that I stay away from it now . I hear how the tea can be .
Attached Files
An old friend of mine, Col. William Robinson, told me that when his Father came down with poison oak as a boy his Father picked a bucket of leaves made a tea out of it and made the boy drink it. According to Bill's Dad he itched inside and out intolerably for three days. Since then he has never been bothered by poison oak. Not a cure I am interested in.
B.E.Brickey
Attached Files
We don't have poison oak up here but poison ivy is like ground cover in some places on our place. The best thing I have found short of Prednisone is plantain weed. I pull a few leaves, roll them between my palms to bruise them , and scrub the leaves into the spots that itch.
Attached Files
... juice from an aloe vera plant is an oldie but goodie ... for burns, bites, itches ... amazing stuff ...
Attached Files
Poison ivy doesn't bother me. Wife told me to get rid of it, but it was a different variety than I'd grown up with. So I trimmed ALL the brush out - with no effect on me. BUT in the process I would pet the cats. Darlene would pet the cats and get the itch! Ok, so our poison ivy has dull leaves and what I'd seen as a kid had shiny leaves.
When my boss would trim the roads of brush he would, before the event, eat poison ivy leaves, washing down with a good bourbon. Poison ivy wouldn't bother him either then.
Attached Files
"When my boss would trim the roads of brush he would, before the event, eat poison ivy leaves, washing down with a good bourbon. Poison ivy wouldn't bother him either then."
-------
Some people aren't bothered by poison ivy, including me. Never thought of my immunity as an excuse for drinking bourbon.
John
Attached Files
When I came down with it , My face and hands had blow up and I was at the point I could not hardly see and had to be in a dark room because for the regular light was too bright for me. also had to take baths in a additive in the water so my skin would not dry out beside the meds I had to take and I do break out with oak and ivy too .
Attached Files
Categories
- All Categories
- General Polls
- Contact Us w/ Forum Issues
- Welcome to The Cast Bullet Association Forum
- General
- Bullet Casting
-
Guns and Shooting
- AR Platform
- TC Contenders & Other Single Shot Handguns
- Shotguns
- Informal Matches & Other Shooting Events
- Gunsmithing Tips
- Gun Cleaning & Maintenance
- Optics
- Benchrest Cast Bullet Shooting
- Military Bench Rest Cast Bullet Shooting
- Silhouette Shooting
- Postal Match Cast Bullet Shooting
- Factory Guns
- Black Powder Cartridge
- Hand Guns
- Lever Guns
- Single Shot Rifles
- Bolt Action Rifles
- Military Surplus Rifles
- Plinkers Hollow
- Muzzleloaders
- Hunting
- Reloading
- Buy, Sell or Trade
- Other Information & Reference
Search
This Weeks High Earners
- jeff houck 20
- Aaron 15
- Wilderness 14
- Tom Acheson 14
- John Carlson 13
- sghart3578 10
- Spindrift 5
- alphabrass 5
- SkinnerD 5
- MP1886 3