• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Dargan Landscape Architects

Create Nourishing Flourishing Home Utopias

  • Home
  • About
    • Vitae
  • Services
    • Dargan Landscape Architects
    • Consultations & Tune-Ups
  • Events
    • Events
    • Courses & Workshops
    • Need a Speaker?
  • The Toolbox
    • The Placemakers Academy Landscape Design Course
  • Blog
  • Press
  • Contact

cashiers nc

Jeff Zahner’s Collection of Edible Shrubs & trees videos and list

May 30, 2016

Boy, oh boy!  Did we have a grand kick-off for our Garden Talk Salon 2016: Nature’s Kitchen.

Jeff Zahner shared his first choices with this list, all great for western North Carolina. Enjoy his take on paw paw (Asimina triloba) , blueberries (Vaccinium) , apples, lindera (Allspice), brambles and elderberry (Sambucus) plants.

Like this stuff?????  Please join us on Friday June 3rd for “Foraging and Processing GREENS” at Dovecote, 10 am. Please email me or call 828-743-0307. 

Please click on videos to watch! 

Jeff Zahner Part 1 shrubs edible 5-27-16

Jeff Zahner Part 2 trees 5-27-16

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: blueberries, cashiers nc, Chattooga Gardens, dargan landscape architects, edibles, foraging, Garden Talk Salon, jeff zahner, mary palmer dargan, pawpaw, spicebush

The Last Cherry Hazelnut Bitters Ship Dec 17!

November 23, 2015

Pondering a gift for that special someone? 

MP bitters offer copy

My homemade bitters are fresh from the field! Aged at Dovecote for 12 weeks in little charcoal barrels. Only a few boxes of Cherry Hazelnut paired with Elderberry Apple remain from our winter bottling.

Available till Thursday, Dec 17 for Christmas Delivery to your list.

Please watch video for particulars!  ) … and opps, about the my head cut off video aspect thing! 

IMG_20151213_115340

IMG_20151213_125623

bitters packaged

 

IMG_20151213_115501

 

 

 

 

Gift wrapped and sent to your friends.

Just click the BUY NOW button.

personalized message


MP Pr headshot elderberry bestHugh and I go out early mornings in the late summer to collect the elderberries and green apples from the marshy area in the pasture next to Dovecote.


Then we soak them in spirits and add specially chosen ingredients like huckleberry vodka, dandelion root, wild cherry bark and elderberry syrup. They steep for about 8-10 weeks. Then I finish them in the little charred oak kegs for 2-3 more weeks.

These bitters are delicious on their own or in a cocktail.

While supplies last ’til Thursday, December 17.

Cheers,

mp signature

 

Mary Palmer

personalized message



Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Bitters, cashiers nc, Dovecote, mary palmer dargan

Elderflower Cordial Recipe! A Bumper Crop this Summer

June 21, 2015

A summer elderflower cordial is a lovely, light drink, made even more special with a bit of fizzy water and a touch of white wine.

We served it at the Village Heritage Award Ceremony at Dovecote this week attended by the Chamber & Cashiers Historical Society. It was a hit! 

elderflower cordial village heritage 2015

Elderflowers are the precursors of  ..yes, you guessed it! Elderberries. This beautiful fluffy, white flower head is blooming now in our mountains of western NC. However, at lower elevations, they’ve been blooming for several weeks. It is a pervasive plant found across the continent in moist places and has strap like leaves. It is know as Sambucus canadensis ( American Elderberry) or S. nigra ( European Elderberry), or in Cherokee as gogasaga.

 One especially fruitful edition of the European golden elderflower  lives at Chattooga Gardens and provides us a barometer for what’s happin’ in the elderflower world. It bloomed 2 weeks early this year.

Elderflower/elderberry history is fascinating.

I love ethnobotanical history and The Herb Society of America published this excellent article on the elder plant: berries, flowers, uses and lore. Herb Society of America’s Elderberry Research

Crafting Elderberry Cordials, Wines and Presse

As far as creating an elderflower drink, I do the following each year. Watch these Garden Talk Salon Videos fro last year and you will be instantly entertained and informed!

Mary Palmer shares how to Make Elderflower Drinks

…and Thanks for the Gift! 

Interesting, I found 2 sacks of elderflower heads, the loveliest panicles/corymbs I’ve ever seen, hanging on my doorknob this am. If you left them for me, know that they are on primary and already soaking to become…something yummy!  I owe you a bottle, so please step forward!

My favorite recipe for Elderflower Cordial 

l use the traditional recipe from Scotland & Ireland and found this one at british food

  • 1k /2 ¼ lbs sugar
  • 1.5 litres / 6 cups boiling water
  • 4 medium lemons, washed
  • 30 large Elderflower heads, shake to remove any insects
  • 55g / 2 oz citric acid (available from grocery )
    • Place the sugar into a large saucepan/stockpot or a large Pyrex bowl. Pour the boiling water over and stir until all the sugar has dissolved and leave to cool. ( other recipes say to pour hot liquid over the dry ingredients…I’ve done it both ways)
    • Grate the rind of the lemons with a fine grater, add to the sugar water.
    • Slice the lemons into thick slices and add to the water. Add the citric acid and stir, then finally add the flower heads to the water and stir again.
    • Cover with a clean cloth and leave to steep for 48 hours.
      • Strain through clean fine muslin cloth into a clean bowl.
      • Using a funnel, fill sterilized bottles (see note below).
      • Seal and store in a cool, dark place (not the refrigerator) for a few weeks or freeze in plastic bottles to keep for longer (see note below).
      • Store opened stock in the fridge
    • NOTE: I often do not have enough elderflowers, so just halve the recipe. I also often put the lemon rind thru thru my juicer…caution as this can really tart it up! It really is best tasting when this exact recipe is followed.

MP - Elderflowers in Cordials

My favorite recipe for Elderflower Wine

This elderflower wine recipe is  from England and found in the archives of My Favorite Magazine, Country Life.

Elderflower Wine
Ingredients

1 pint elderflowers (destalked)

8 pints boiling water

3lbs sugar

Juice of 1 lemon

Grated rind of 1 lemon

½oz yeast

Method

Add lemon rind to the elderflowers, pour boiling water over them and stand for four days, stirring occasionally. Strain through a fine sieve or muslin, then stir in sugar, lemon juice and yeast. Ferment at room temperature (not below 18˚C). When the bubbling has ceased, stir the wine and allow to settle for three days. Strain again carefully. Put in a demijohn to mature for three months, then bottle.

NOTE: I used this recipe and left my elderflower wine in the fridge for a year. It cleared and is ultra-fantastic. I also froze lots of it. It is highly volatile, so if you rack it…watch out for exploding bottles!
Read more at http://www.countrylife.co.uk/food-drink/recipes/how-to-make-elderflower-cordial-and-wine-33684#B25BUvbIGEmU534j.99

Elderflower Presse…

Most of you know I am an anglophile and learned about elderflower drinks while there many decades ago. I got hooked on Elderflower Presse by the legendary, Rosemary Verey, who had me grate lemon rind for dinner drinks! Never heard of Elderflower Presse or “Champaign”?  It is a naturally sparkling  summer drink made from elderflowers and is served very young…the recipe is at above Country Life link.

Enjoy the fruits of your labors this summer and let me know of your successes , medicinal uses and pretty foods using elderflowers.

Stay tuned for elderberry recipes later this summer!

Cheers,

mp signature

 

Mary Palmer Dargan, The Boundless Gardener
The Boundless Gardener_1047x220_WebBanner_FA

 

 

 

 

 

 

Please join us for The Garden Talk Salon held weekly from May till end August at Dovecote..please visit dargan.com/dovecote-events

Filed Under: Dovecote Garden Talk Salons, Uncategorized, Videos Tagged With: cashiers nc, Elderflower, elderflower champaign, elderflower presse, Elderflower wine, mary palmer dargan, the garden talk salon

Footer

Let’s Get Started on Your Project

Contact us to kick things off. This will be more fun than you think!
Get In Touch

Copyright © 2025 · Dargan Landscape Architects, All Rights Reserved