Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Carrie L.
Golfball Gourmet
2476
Thu Oct 12, 2006 8:12 am
Extreme Southwest & Extreme Northeast
Carrie L. wrote: I don't think I ever realized how vastly more wonderful walnuts taste directly from the shell.
Carrie L.
Golfball Gourmet
2476
Thu Oct 12, 2006 8:12 am
Extreme Southwest & Extreme Northeast
Redwinger
Wine guru
4038
Wed Mar 22, 2006 2:36 pm
Way Down South In Indiana, USA
Thomas wrote: I have a large English walnut tree that overproduces every two years--this was one of them.
I also have trouble with squirrels...
Carrie L.
Golfball Gourmet
2476
Thu Oct 12, 2006 8:12 am
Extreme Southwest & Extreme Northeast
Redwinger wrote:Carrie,
Walnuts, schmalnutz, what I need to know is what kind of salt is that?
Turkey 'Winger
Carrie L.
Golfball Gourmet
2476
Thu Oct 12, 2006 8:12 am
Extreme Southwest & Extreme Northeast
Stuart Yaniger wrote:I think that's a terrific idea. Mind if I steal it?
Carrie L. wrote:
I'm extremely envious of you having your own walnut tree. What's for dessert?
John Tomasso wrote:Thomas wrote: I have a large English walnut tree that overproduces every two years--this was one of them.
I also have trouble with squirrels...
I have a similar situation with our almond tree - seems to have one good year, and one off year. I wonder why that is?
We don't have squirrels, but we have to fight off the crows.
Mark Willstatter wrote:John Tomasso wrote:Thomas wrote: I have a large English walnut tree that overproduces every two years--this was one of them.
I also have trouble with squirrels...
I have a similar situation with our almond tree - seems to have one good year, and one off year. I wonder why that is?
We don't have squirrels, but we have to fight off the crows.
Left to their own devices, many fruit trees do the alternating year thing. The the biochemical details are beyond me but in my layman's understanding, the energy needed by deciduous plants to set fruit buds and to support the following year's fruit production is collected from sunlight via photosynthesis in the leaves and stored in chemical form as sugars in the roots. In years of heavy fruit production, all that energy goes to ripening the fruit and the plant is too wasted to produce the following year. The next year, no fruit, lots of energy in reserve for the next year. And so on. In many cases the pattern can be evened out by thinning the fruit but few people want to tackle that on a large tree.
Bernard Roth wrote:You should try fresh almonds from the shell, shortly after harvest - not the kind you buy in a bag at the grocer.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Mark Willstatter wrote:Jenise, answering for Thomas, the English walnut *is* the commercial walnut you buy in the store, native to Europe. That's as opposed to California's native walnut, the black walnut. The black walnut has great flavor but also a thick shell (that is a real pain to open) and smaller meats - the reasons you don't see them in stores. Black walnut is adapted to New World soil-borne diseases (oak root fungus, in particular) and so as a rule, English walnut is grafted onto black walnut rootstock in California, in much the same way as vinifera grape varieties are grafted onto New World rootstock for phylloxera resistance. The graft usually makes walnuts easy to identify when you see them from the highway in CA's Central Valley - the rough black walnut bark next to the ground with the smoother English walnut bark above.
On a separate walnut-related subject, when I worked in the area, I used to buy my walnuts from Teri Harvey (actually, her father, I think), owner of the infamous Grandpere Vineyard and also a few walnut trees. There are still some walnut trees in the Shenandoah Valley of Amador County, although not nearly as many as there used to be. Walnuts and lamb used to be the main agricultural products of the area. The sheep have almost disappeared in the face of the grape's profitability and the walnuts are going the same way.
Cynthia Wenslow
Pizza Princess
5746
Mon Mar 27, 2006 9:32 pm
The Third Coast
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
Thomas wrote:Mark, I also have a black walnut tree on the other end of the property. I've tried opening them but never could and then I had to carry the black stain on my hands for weeks!
I've run over the black walnuts with my tractor to crack them open. When it works, the nuts of course are inedible, as they are crushed with the shell... The result, I have no idea what they might taste like, but would love to know first-hand.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Mark Willstatter wrote:Jenise, answering for Thomas, the English walnut *is* the commercial walnut you buy in the store, native to Europe. That's as opposed to California's native walnut, the black walnut. The black walnut has great flavor but also a thick shell (that is a real pain to open) and smaller meats - the reasons you don't see them in stores. Black walnut is adapted to New World soil-borne diseases (oak root fungus, in particular) and so as a rule, English walnut is grafted onto black walnut rootstock in California, in much the same way as vinifera grape varieties are grafted onto New World rootstock for phylloxera resistance. The graft usually makes walnuts easy to identify when you see them from the highway in CA's Central Valley - the rough black walnut bark next to the ground with the smoother English walnut bark above.
On a separate walnut-related subject, when I worked in the area, I used to buy my walnuts from Teri Harvey (actually, her father, I think), owner of the infamous Grandpere Vineyard and also a few walnut trees. There are still some walnut trees in the Shenandoah Valley of Amador County, although not nearly as many as there used to be. Walnuts and lamb used to be the main agricultural products of the area. The sheep have almost disappeared in the face of the grape's profitability and the walnuts are going the same way.
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43588
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Larry Greenly
Resident Chile Head
7033
Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:37 am
Albuquerque, NM
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