Pondering Pecans
12/05/2008
![]() |
You probably don't. Contemplate pecans, that is. Except maybe in the holiday season, when bowls of deluxe mixed nuts (no peanuts) are strategically placed around cocktail parties, while open bins of unshelled walnuts, pecans, almonds, hazelnuts and Brazil nuts compete for your attention at the produce market. Indeed, when I was growing up in Michigan, my dad always brought home an assortment of hard-shelled tree nuts at Christmas time, Carnation Milk's annual gift to employes at the condensery over by the railroad tracks. We'd sit at the kitchen table with a nutcracker and picks, trying our best to remove the walnut and pecan halves in one piece but seldom succeeding. For as any nut lover will tell you, those sweet, buttery meats are the real prizes in the assortment.
Most of the nuts mentioned above are grown commercially, the exception being the Brazil nut, which has defied cultivation. Those heavily armored fruits fall from massive, centuries-old trees in the Amazon rainforest. Almonds, of course, come from California orchards but the tree itself originated in Near East lands like Iraq that in my youth were only mysterious blocks of color on a library globe. There were shrubby stands of American hazelnuts at the edge of my favorite squirrel-hunting woods, to the delight of not only bushytails but chipmunks, jays, grouse and deer. However, the "filberts" found in Planters cans come from a closely related Old World species nutured on groves in the Pacific Northwest.
Which leaves walnuts and pecans, both of which are borne on native trees. Black walnuts were fairly common in lower Michigan and a sturdy specimen shaded my best friend's backyard, littering the grass in autumn with rough-shelled nuts encased in thick, yellowish-green hulls that ooze a smelly brown juice as they soften. As the naturalist Hal Borland wrote in our book A Countryman's Woods, "anyone who picks or hulls walnuts has dark-dyed hands that do not bleach back to normal color for weeks." Pecan country, however, seemed as remote to me as the Amazon basin. The largest and longest-lived tree in the important walnut-hickory family, the pecan thrives on the rich, moist bottomlands of the Mississippi River Valley, from Illinois to the Gulf of Mexico. And 30 years passed before the eloquent story-teller John Madson, a frequent Audubon contributor, pointed his outboard into a slough on the Missouri side of the big river, leading me to a stand of towering pecans where dark-brown nuts up to 2.5 inches long littered the forest floor.
They were impressive trees indeed. A 300-year-old pecan might stand 200 feet tall with a straight trunk 8 feet in diameter and produce up to 1,000 pounds of nuts per year. The fruits, clustered in groups of 3 to 6, are covered with thin husks that break into four sections to release the nuts in September or October. Unlike walnut, which is worth its weight in gold, pecan wood has relatively few uses. But it is no exaggeration to say that Carya illinoensis is one of the most valuable cultivated plants of North American origin. Wild pecans (and walnuts, too) still reach the marketplace. But most of the pecans we consume today come from thin-shelled varieties grown on plantations in the Southeast.
That's a good thing. As Borland noted, the oldtime way of harvesting wild pecans "now seems unbelievable. Nut-gatherers went through the woods, chose the largest, heaviest-bearing pecan trees, and when the nuts were ripe they cut them down. Then they put boys to work picking the nuts from the fallen giants. Not until those magnificent pecan trees became scarce did they cease cutting them and begin grafting and planting new trees that are grown in orchards like oranges."
!--/end tags-->


Pecans !! I love it
Pecans !! I love it..in fact everyone does. These are very nutritious and at the same time very tasty too. I always enjoy eating it while studying or in party like you said. I have never any idea about their origins, and i have learnt a lot from this blog about these Pecans which i love. Nice blog and looking forward to read more like this.
Regards
Fortune Cookies
# Spray every part of the
# Spray every part of the infected plant, paying special attention to the intersections and the undersides of leaves where pests like to hang out and lay their eggs. However, be cautious not to spray when the weather is too hot, as vegetable oil can burn plants in hot weather. If you are unsure whether it is too hot, test a leaf or two with the spray, then wait a day and check the leaf for damage before you spray the entire plant. Reapply once a week until those little buggers have hit the trail!
__________
ccna security
Best Pecan Pie Cheesecake
Best Pecan Pie Cheesecake presented by Bed and Breakfast at Ponder Cove. buy mitaban
Actually I am a nut
Actually I am a nut lover...I guess I am goin gto love this new stuff!
classifieds |ads|double bathroom vanities
This is truly a great read
This is truly a great read for me. I have bookmarked it and I am looking forward to reading new articles. Keep up the good work! WoW Accounts
Just saying thanks will not
Just saying thanks will not just thongs be enough, for the phenomenal clarity in your writing. buy itunes gift card online
Nice
That's a good thing. As Borland noted, the oldtime way of harvesting wild pecans "now seems unbelievable.
Cool
They are a very obscure, yet very tastey mixed nut! I know that not everyone likes them, but I do certainly have a taste for them. Thanks and keep up the great work. My Site: Kettles and Toasters
are these nuts edible? they
are these nuts edible? they look so crunchy. and wow! i never taught a pecan live that tall and long?!dating advice | dating ideas
Happy to see your blog as it
Happy to see your blog as it is just what I’ve looking for and excited to read all the posts. I am looking forward to another great article from you. After skimming through your website.Baton Rouge Computer Repair
Reply:
Thank you so much for a very intelligent and refreshing article. Great job!
Reply:
Well written. Interesting as always.
Reply:
Very useful information, thank you!
Reply:
Thanks for sharing the information.It is definitely going to help me some time.
Reply:
Very helpful blog.. Thank you for the information.
Reply:
It’s really a very good article. I noticed all your important points. Thanks!!
Yeah! I love pecans a lot. I
Yeah! I love pecans a lot. I use to enjoy eating this stuff - very tasty and nutritious as well. This is my best beer-mate every time I watch movies late at night. Seeing the pictures above, I can't help to say yum, yum!
I like your blog particularly, this post. Keep me posted and thanks for the share!
Salt Water Trolling Motors
wow. they really look
wow. they really look crunchy. i am going to check them at the groceries later.
utility truck bodies | truck body
I am decide to put this into
I am decide to put this into use one of these days.Thank you for sharing this.To Your Success!
Hello, my name is Danyel
Hello, my name is Danyel Chermon I'm a clinical dietitian. If you love pecan and you can't stop eating don't worry I have a solution for you.
Cheers,
Thank you for this good
Thank you for this good post
my blogs : how to finger a girl | how to eat a girl out