Belgium's food authorities have issued a warning against the consumption of Christmas trees. This follows the city of Ghent's suggestion to recycle trees into spruce needle butter, sparking concerns over safety.
Belgium Advises Against Eating Christmas Trees Amid Spruce Butter Suggestion

Belgium Advises Against Eating Christmas Trees Amid Spruce Butter Suggestion
The country's food agency cautions against consuming evergreens after a city in Belgium promotes making spruce needle butter.
Go ahead and recycle your Christmas tree. But please, the Belgian authorities say, don’t try to eat it.
The country’s federal food agency delivered that unusual warning this week after a suggestion from the climate-friendly city of Ghent. If you’re trying to cut down on holiday food waste, the city recently said on an environmental page of its website, why not make a “delicious spruce needle butter” with the leftover needles from your holiday tree?
“It’s a breeze,” the city’s post read. “That way your Christmas tree is not 100 percent waste.”
The city acknowledged that there could be health dangers in the bristly boughs. Yew, an evergreen, can be poisonous. Trees treated with pesticides and fire retardants are also hazardous, it said. Ghent credited Scandinavian cooks with the idea of picking the needles, boiling and drying them, and then turning them into flavored butter. “In Scandinavia,” the city wrote, “they have been doing it for a long time.”
That turned out to be not quite true — Scandinavian food historians said it was far from a widespread tradition. And Belgium’s food agency quickly urged the public against such a gastronomic experiment.