Birch sap, birch water or birch juice is the sap directly tapped from birch trees, Betula pubescens (white birch), Betula pendula (silver birch), Betula lenta, Betula papyrifera, and Betula fontinalis.
Birch sap may be consumed both fresh and naturally fermented. When fresh, it is a clear and uncoloured liquid, often slightly sweet with a slightly silky texture. After two to three days, the sap starts fermenting and the taste becomes more acidic.
Birch sap is a traditional beverage in boreal and hemiboreal regions of the Northern Hemisphere[1] as well as parts of northern China.
Birch sap is collected only at the break of winter and spring when the sap moves intensively.
Birch sap collection is done by drilling a hole into the tree trunk and leading the sap into a container via some conduit (a tube or simply a thin twig); the sap will flow along it because of the surface tension. The wound is then plugged to minimise infection.[2]
Birch sap has to be collected in early spring before any green leaves have appeared, as in late spring it becomes bitter. The collection period is only about a month per year.
No published evidence exists to quantify the long-term impacts of sap harvest on birch tree and birch forest health, or birch timber quality.[2] However, the wounds caused by tapping birches consistently lead to dark staining in the wood.[2] In one study, infection and wood decay had spread from more than half of old tapping holes.[2]
In comparison to maples, birch trees are considered far less tolerant to the wounds caused by tapping, so more conservative harvesting practises have been recommended by trade bodies such as the Alaska Birch Syrupmakers Association.[2]
Ancient Balts, Slavs and Finns regarded birch as one of their most sacred trees[3] [4] and made a traditional beverage from it.
In Slavic regions the sap is known as birch juice as in Russia (Russian: берёзовый сок|translit=byeryozovyi sok), Belarus (Belarusian: бярозавы сок|translit=biarozavy sok, Byarozavik), Bulgaria (Bulgarian: брезов сок, romanized: brezov sok), Poland (Polish: sok z brzozy, oskoła), Slovakia (Slovak: brezová šťava), Ukraine (Ukrainian: березовий сік|translit=berezovyi sik).
Estonia (Estonian: kasemahl), Finland (Finnish: mahla), Latvia (Latvian: bērzu sula), Lithuania (Lithuanian: beržo sula, beržų sula), Norway,[5] Sweden (Swedish: björksav).[6]
France, Scotland and elsewhere in Northern Europe[1] as well as parts of northern China and both Hokkaido and Aomori as parts of northern Japan.
It is also widely used among the Pennsylvania Dutch, both as a traditional beverage in its own right, and particularly as a key ingredient in birch beer.[7]
Sap, birch water[8] | |
Kcal: | 4.6 |
Fat: | less than 0.1 g |
Carbs: | 1.1 g |
Sugars: | 1.1 g |
Fiber: | 0 g |
Iron Mg: | 0.1 |
Calcium Mg: | 60 |
Magnesium Mg: | 11 |
Phosphorus Mg: | 6.4 |
Potassium Mg: | 120 |
Manganese Mg: | 1.1 |
Right: | 1 |
Birch sap contains heterosides (betuloside and monotropitoside),[9] 17 amino acids including glutamic acid,[10] as well as minerals, enzymes, proteins, betulinic acid and betulin,[11] [12] [13] antioxidants,[14] sugar (fructose, glucose and small amounts of sucrose) and vitamins (C and B(group)). Contrary to popular belief, there is no xylitol in birch sap (xylitol is a sugar alcohol that is industrially produced using high temperature and sulfuric acid, or through fermentation).[15]
Folk uses have been documented which include medicinal use, supplementary nutrition, and cosmetic applications for skin and hair.[1]
Region | Traditional medicinal use | Cosmetic use | |
---|---|---|---|
Belarus | lung diseases, gout, sickness | washing hair | |
Bulgaria | hair growth | ||
Czech Republic | against freckles | ||
Estonia | (prevention of) eye diseases, skin diseases, source of vitamins | washing hair, against freckles and to bleach the skin | |
Hungary | against freckles | ||
Latvia | “revitalization” | washing hair | |
Poland | washing hair in order to strengthen it | ||
Romania | kidney stones, jaundice, as milk-rennet, scab, diuretic | hair colouring, to remove sunspots and moles | |
Russia | externally against sores, to help children during teething | washing face | |
Sweden | |||
Ukraine | treating skin diseases, source of vitamins, diuretic | against freckles | |
United Kingdom | tonic, rheumatism, first nourishment for new-born children | prevention of baldness | |
United States | Poor health |
Birch sap may be consumed both fresh and naturally fermented. Fresh birch sap is highly perishable; even if refrigerated, it is stable for only 7 days. Shelf life can be prolonged by freezing or preservation techniques. Existing preservation techniques include:[16]
Birch sap can also be used as an ingredient in food or drink recipes,[17] such as birch beer or wintergreen-flavored candy.
Concentrated birch sap is used to make birch syrup, a very expensive type of syrup mainly made from paper birch in Alaska[18] and Canada, and from several species in Latvia, Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine.