Buffalo Currants

© Copyright 2012. Do not copy. All rights reserved and enforced.


Buffalo Currants are small berries, pea-sized though occasionally larger, with glossy, brownish-purple skin.

The bushes they grow on will be bush 4 to 6 feet (1.2 to 1.8 metres) tall, spreading out 2 to 3 feet (about a metre.)

The weeping branches bend almost all the way to the ground with small, greyish-green leaves that turn yellowish-orange in the fall.

The bushes are self-fertile. They produce many fragrant yellow flowers with a smell reminiscent of cloves.

The weeping branches make fruit hard to spot inside the bush.

The ripe berries can be left on the bush for up to 2 months.

Cooking Tips for Buffalo Currants

The berries can be eaten raw or cooked, but because their flavour is quite bland, people often mix them with other kinds of berries to improve the flavour.

They can be used for jams, jellies, juice, syrups, wine, etc.

History Notes for Buffalo Currants

Native to North American prairies. The fruit appears to have first been identified for classification in Iowa in the 1890s.

Also called:
Crandal Berries; Ribes aureum (Scientific Name)

Recipe Search
Loading

Other entries for: Berries
Açaí Berries, Akala Berries, Aronia Berries, Baba Berries, Barberries, Bilberries, Black Gooseberries, Blackberries, Blueberries, Buffalo Currants, Bumbleberries, Cape Gooseberries, Cloudberries, Cranberries, Currants, Elderberries, Garden Huckleberries, Gooseberries, Haw Flakes, Hawthorne Berries, Huckleberry, Hudson Bay Currants, Jostaberries, Lingonberries, Mulberries, Otaheite Gooseberry, Raspberries, Red Currants, Saskatoon Berries, Sea Buckthorn, Serendipity Berries, Strawberries, Sunberries, Tayberries, Thimbleberries, Ugni, Waimate Berries, White Currants, Wineberries, Wonderberries, Worcesterberries, Worcesterberries

Other entries for: Soft Fruit
Cherries, Grapes

Other entries for: Fruit
Bananas, Candied Fruit, Dried Fruit, Hard Fruit, Olives