The small purplish-black fruits, which are quite tart and contain large seeds, are edible raw after the season's first frosts. They were included in small quantities in the traditional diets of
Pacific Northwest tribes, mixed with
salal or another sweeter fruit. Today, they are sometimes used to make
jelly, alone or mixed with salal. Oregon-grape juice can be fermented to make wine, similar to European barberry wine folk traditions, although it requires an unusually high amount of sugar. The inner bark of the larger stems and roots of Oregon grape yield a yellow dye. blue, pink, or green depending on the pH of water used to make the dye, due to the berries containing a naturally occurring pH indicator.
Medicinal uses Some
indigenous peoples of the Northwest Plateau use Oregon grape for indigestion. The plant contains
berberine and reportedly has
antimicrobial properties similar to those of
goldenseal. ==In culture==