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Shared on 12/9/2025
Combine water and sugar in a small saucepan over medium heat. Stir until the sugar dissolves and the syrup gently simmers: do not boil.
Add the rosemary, crushed juniper, lemon peel, and a pinch of salt. Let the mixture steep on low heat for about 10 minutes. The aroma should smell like fresh-cut pine.
Turn off the heat, cover the pot, and let everything infuse for another 15-30 minutes as it cools. This longer steep gives the syrup that deep, resinous, wintery finish.
Strain through a fine mesh strainer and bottle in a clean glass jar. Refrigerate for up to 2–3 weeks.
Bartender Notes: If you do have access to real spruce or fir tips (typically best in spring), you can make a more traditional version: Replace the rosemary/juniper with 1 cup fresh spruce tips. Steep the tips in hot water for 30–45 minutes before adding sugar. Then convert to a 2:1 syrup by dissolving sugar into the strained infusion. Fresh tips give a soft, citrusy pine flavor compared to the more resin-forward pantry method above.
How to Use It This syrup brings winter energy to anything it touches. Try it in:
Final Pour If “fresh forest air” could be bottled, this would be it. This spruce-inspired syrup is bright, crisp, and just woodsy enough to give your winter drinks a signature twist... no foraging required. Make a batch, tag @highproofpreacher, and show me how you’re using it. And if you’re not already subscribed, sign up for Simple Syrup Monthly to get more original recipes like this in your inbox every month. Did you miss it?
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