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walnuts
I have walnut trees on my property and not sure what to do with them
at harvest time .Do i just gather them and let them dry out?they seem to just rot away when i do.Any info would be appreciated. |
john ) writes: > I have walnut trees on my property and not sure what to do with them > at harvest time .Do i just gather them and let them dry out?they seem > to just rot away when i do.Any info would be appreciated. I spread butternuts and walnuts on newpapers in a spare room. The husks dry out, turn brown, become brittle, and can be broken away from the nuts with your hands after a few weeks. It doesn't hurt the nuts. The nuts aren't rotting. Was out gatheirng walnuts today and plan to go back at it tomorrow. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-FreeNet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
Elizabeth Naime > wrote in message >. ..
> What sort of walnuts do you have? I collect black walnuts, which dry > just as William described. Black walnut hulls are an excellent natural > dye, and currently I'm drying walnuts just for the hulls. The meat is > really rich and super-walnutty, truly wonderful, but a serious pain to > extract as the shell is very thick and the nutmeats are small and don't > fall out of the shell. > > I would think any walnut, including the thin-shelled ones, would dry > much the same way; if you are having trouble with the nut itself going > bad, try removing as much of the hull as possible before drying or early > in the drying process. For black walnuts rubber or similar gloves are a > necessity, because the hulls are a dye and WILL stain your hands. I > don't know about other walnut hulls as dyestuff, but I'd probably wear > my "walnut gloves" when hulling them just for the heck of it! > > On the off chance that what you have are black walnuts, save those nasty > staining hulls when they're dry. A local textile fanatic would surely > love to have them! This year I'm planning on completely drying out the > hulls I don't use this season and putting them up in quart or > half-gallon jars with the Tilia. Of course, preserving dyestuff is going > to be much simpler than preserving foods, since I'm not planning on > ingesting the dyebath! > > > ----------------------------------------- > Only know that there is no spork. As a matter of fact they are black walnuts.maybe you can email me on the specefics on what i can use them for as im not sure what you mean by usin the hulls .I had planned on eating them for the nuts. |
Elizabeth Naime > wrote in message >. ..
> What sort of walnuts do you have? I collect black walnuts, which dry > just as William described. Black walnut hulls are an excellent natural > dye, and currently I'm drying walnuts just for the hulls. The meat is > really rich and super-walnutty, truly wonderful, but a serious pain to > extract as the shell is very thick and the nutmeats are small and don't > fall out of the shell. > > I would think any walnut, including the thin-shelled ones, would dry > much the same way; if you are having trouble with the nut itself going > bad, try removing as much of the hull as possible before drying or early > in the drying process. For black walnuts rubber or similar gloves are a > necessity, because the hulls are a dye and WILL stain your hands. I > don't know about other walnut hulls as dyestuff, but I'd probably wear > my "walnut gloves" when hulling them just for the heck of it! > > On the off chance that what you have are black walnuts, save those nasty > staining hulls when they're dry. A local textile fanatic would surely > love to have them! This year I'm planning on completely drying out the > hulls I don't use this season and putting them up in quart or > half-gallon jars with the Tilia. Of course, preserving dyestuff is going > to be much simpler than preserving foods, since I'm not planning on > ingesting the dyebath! > > > ----------------------------------------- > Only know that there is no spork. As a matter of fact they are black walnuts.maybe you can email me on the specefics on what i can use them for as im not sure what you mean by usin the hulls .I had planned on eating them for the nuts. |
Elizabeth Naime ) writes: > What sort of walnuts do you have? I collect black walnuts, which dry you might want to look at http://ecsong.ca (Eastern Chapter, Society of Ontario Nut Growers) for interesting info on black walnuts and butternuts. there are photos of specialized nut crackers, but a metal mechanic's vice is recommended. I have one on the bench in my workshop and find it much better than the hammer and axe head method. It took me an hour's cracking with the axe-and-hammer to get enough butternut meat for one pie. Not to mention the bruised fingers. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-FreeNet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
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Angela Dougherty ) writes: > The next task was breaking open the shells without destroying the actual > nutmeats. We tried vise-grip pliers and hammers, but eventually broke > down and bought a serious nutcracker. This is a problem even for the nuts themselves. Before the seed can sprout and grow the nut has open and it takes more than one freezing-thawing cycle in the ground for the nut to crack open so the seedling can get out. That's why nut sould be planted in teh fall. I've read it takes some black walnuts nuts two years in the ground before the shell opens and the seed can grow. Perhaps putting the nuts in a freezer a few times will open them. Must try that. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-FreeNet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
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