Meet Northwest Balsamroot

Nearly all parts of the plant are used by Native Americans:

  • Roots and young shoots can be baked or steamed to eat.
  • The young flower stems can be peeled and eaten raw.
  • Animals such as elk, deer, bighorn sheep, and cattle eat the bitter flowers that smell like pine sap.
  • Balsamroot seeds are a nutritious, oil-rich food source. They can be eaten raw or ground into flour.
  • The root can be used as a substitute for coffee and medicinally for diseases, swelling, and insect bites.
  • The sap can be applied topically as an antiseptic for minor wounds.

Get up close to a balsamroot leaf and take a sniff. Many say the leaves smell like chocolate!

Northwest Balsamroot 

(Balsamorhiza deltoidea)

(Asteraceae) Sunflower Family 

Composite, ≤ 2 feet tall

Photo by Ashley Erdely

By Ashley Erdely – White Salmon Wildflower Festival Advisory Board Member and author of Meet the Wildflowers.