Scottish Daily Mail

Birch tree sap, nature’s new super-drink

- By Sean Poulter Consumer Affairs Editor

IT is being hailed as the new super-drink to replace coconut water in the gym bags of faddy fitness fans.

Birch water – sap tapped from the trees of Finland, Latvia and Lithuania in the spring – is coming to the high street.

Waitrose is to sell it on the basis that it is super-hydrating and toxin-cleansing.

It has long been prized for its curative properties in Scotland, where the ‘thirsty’ silver birch tree thrives in our wet soil.

Independen­t dieticians are less convinced, suggesting that a glass of tap water would be just as good at hydrating the body – somewhat cheaper too when the UK brand Sibberi sells at £2.49 for 250ml.

The high cost is because collecting the clear tree sap or water is labour intensive and can only be done during a three-week window in early spring. Sibberi says it takes only a fraction of the sap from a tree and ‘plug the hole back when we leave so that trees don’t even notice’.

It promotes the water on the basis it has a fraction of the calories found in coconut water at five per 100ml.

The company said: ‘Birch water has long been favoured across Nordic folk cultures as a spring detoxing elixir. It tastes a little sweet and beautifull­y crisp, with a delightful aftertaste of the forest.’

Sibberi co-founder Paul-Adrien Cormerais said: ‘Coconut water has really opened the door for other tree waters to enter the market. We think birch can be bigger.’

Wellbeing expert Akcelina Cvijetic, who has a private practice in Harley Street, said: ‘The birch tree has been called “the tree of life” and used as a medicinal plant for centuries throughout eastern and northern Europe as well as northern China.

‘However, it also contains sugars and commercial birch water may contain even higher amounts due to added sugars, so be aware and always read the labels’.

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