Gathering
and
Storage
"Of nuts there are... the hickory nut found in great plenty in
some years and which the Indians gather in large quantities
and
use not only as they find them - they have a very sweet taste - but
also extract from them a milky juice used in different foods and very
nourishing."
-Rev. David
Zeisberger - Ohio, 1779
Not all hickory nuts are created equal. Different species have unique
characteristics, and individual trees - even in the same species -
often have
noticeable and significant differences in nut taste, size, shape, shell
thickness, meat content in individual nuts, and quantity of nuts produced. Although
variation is the rule,
there are a few general guidelines to help decide which trees are
likely
to produce "good" nuts for a specific use. Shagbark (Carya ovata) nuts
are generally
small,
thick shelled and excellent flavor, while the similar Shellbark (Carya
lacinosa) nuts are usually much larger, and also thick shelled and
excellent
flavor. The nuts of shellbark and shagbark have relatively less meat
and more shell than the others listed, but the taste is excellent. The
Pignut (Carya glabra) has thin shelled nuts that usually
have a lot of meat, and the taste when raw can vary from bitter and
nearly
inedible to sweet and tasty. The Bitternut (Carya cordiformis)
has nuts that are thin shelled with lots of nut meat, but are bitter
and considered inedible. Interestingly, a significant portion of the
hickory nut
shells identified at archaeological sited are listed as bitternut
hickory,
and assuming correct identification, this suggests a valuable use for
the bitternut mast that I have not explored yet. To be sure of a yummy
product, I recommend gathering sweet pignut (try them to see if they
are tasty before gathering a bunch) or Shellbark or Shagbark. There are
other species of hickory in the United States, but these are the only
ones I have foraged. If you can not find enough hickory trees or the
mast crop fails a year, remember that pecans are a hickory and should
work for this process.
Nuts
can be gathered as
they fall between mid-September and the middle
of November. Squirrels
and chipmunks carry the
nuts away from trees that have the best tasting nuts first and stash
them in secret hiding places, and can clean the nuts up almost as fast
as
they fall. I have discarded 10 gallons of nuts that were leftover from
the previous year and they disappeared in less than three days - with
not a single chewed or whole nut in sight. I like to gather about every
three days while the nuts are falling to be sure I get a share of the
crop or, if that is not possible, pick one day when most trees have
dropped most of their nuts and have multiple producing trees located.
The nut eating rodents know which nuts taste best, and will often
leave the ground covered with bitternut hickory nuts while scrounging
to the last morsel of the shagbark hickory nuts next to it, and they
can
also tell which nuts are fresh and which ones are rotten by smelling
them, so if you gather too late, the few nuts that remain will be
almost all rotten. Hickory nuts have a four-sectioned husk that loosens
as it dries. Usually they are starting to loosen when I gather them and
I remove the husks while gathering, but if they are stuck tight, a week
spread out in a dry location protected from rodents will loosen them.
Hickory
nuts do well in long term storage - an important
consideration when evaluating the value of any seasonal food
resource. There are a few general rules for
storing them safely. Most modern nut munchers like to dry the hulled
nuts and store them dry, but I have found that damp storage has some
advantages and the nuts actually taste sweeter in the
spring after a
winter of cool storage in a storage pit in the ground or in a bucket
sealed to keep the moisture in. For bucket storage, I like to soak the
nuts for about two days with a few changes of water and then drain the
water and let them dry until the surface is not wet. Then seal them in
the bucket and keep in a cool (35 to 50 degrees F) but not freeze-prone
place, or bury the bucket deep enough that it will not freeze
(about two feet underground should be enough), but remember that when
the ground is frozen you may not be able to easily access them. Storage
pits are beyond the scope of this article, but historic accounts
describe particular construction features that facilitate access to the
contents during the frozen months. When
burying the nuts, be sure to put them in a cloth bag so they will be
easy to retrieve, and locate the storage pit in a well drained
location. Nuts
that are stored cool for two or three months after soaking will get
sweeter during storage than they were in the fall, and will sprout if
they are planted and kept warm (70 to 80 degrees F) - but if they
freeze solid the embryo may be killed
and the nut will then rot when it thaws. One disadvantage to damp
storage is that when the temperatures warm in the early summer, nuts
left in the ground will sprout and die since they cannot reach
sunlight. If you want to store long term, drying to below 10% moisture
content and storing at 35 to 40 degrees F will keep up to half of the
seeds viable for up to 4 years (see report by
Bonner, www.nsl.fs.fed.us/wpsm/Carya.pdf). The photo below shows
sprouted shellbark nuts freshly dug
from the storage pit at the beginning of the second week of June. I
suspect that they would remain dormant if kept cool in a refrigerator,
but I have not experimented with that yet.
Processing
"They break them with stones and pound them in mortars with water to
make a milk which they use to put in some sorts of their spoonmeate..."
-
Thomas Harriot - Virginia, 1590
Historical
accounts leave no
doubt that the hickory mast was a significant food source in early
historic
years, and the archaeological record suggests that they were a
significant resource to prehistoric people in eastern North America for
thousands of years.
Although we can only
make educated guesses about prehistoric methods and the foods that were
produced, we do have useable
clues from the historical, ethnographic, and archaeological record
that suggest tools, techniques, and end-products. While accounts
documenting early
historic processing sometimes provide a
starting point or some clues, we
must remember that most accounts were not recorded with the intent of
accurately documenting precise tools, techniques, and processes and
that the processes were often unfamiliar or incompletely understood by
the people who wrote about them.
Mass processing becomes
important
if we are to use hickory nuts as more than a nibble. Historical
accounts
often mention a large mortar and pestle made of wood as a grain and nut
crushing tool, and although a concrete slab and a rock to crush the
nuts will work for small quantities, a large
mortar like the one pictured is very efficient and worth the effort
required to make if mass production is the goal. The addition
of a buckskin or cloth cover with a hole cut in the middle for the
pestle helps with keeping the nuts and fragments from
flying out while
pounding.
If you are
concerned
about finding nut grubs in your broth, you should pre-crack each nut
or, faster and almost
as
sure, dump them in water and remove the ones that
float - the floating nuts are rotten.
Begin by pounding the nuts, shells and all (but not the segmented
husk), to a coarse meal. A quart of nut meal should be plenty for some
experimenting.
Preparation
With the nuts crushed, put them in a cooking vessel and add water about
twice the volume of the nut meal and bring this to a boil. Boil for at
least 30 minutes and you will have a weak but useable broth. After 2 or
three hours of simmering, the oils begin to separate and float to the
surface and the broth gets a hint of sweetness and a hearty nutty
flavor. I have cooked a batch for up to six hours with very tasty
results. If you were watching when you put the water and
nut meal
together, you may have noticed that the nut meats and shells sink. They
are
heavier than water, and this allows us to
separate the solids from the broth by ladling or slowly pouring off the
broth and then dumping the mass of shells and boiled meats into a
textile (an old shirt will work if you do not feel the need to twine up
a nice basswood bag) and wringing the rest of the broth out. The
remaining solids can be dried and then if passed through a small mesh
sifter, and most of what remains is nut meat with a small amount of
shells
that are small enough in size that I have eaten it with no problem
but most seem to agree that it has little taste or substance - probably
because most of the oils and nutriens have been removed by the boiling.
This process allows us
to extract nutrients efficiently and the liquid product is
nutritional, tastes great, and can be used in diverse types of recipies. The oil
floats on the
surface, and historical accounts suggest that it can be skimmed off and
processed further for storage by
re-boiling the oil alone to drive off any water that is mixed with it.
It should last longer in
refrigeration, but historical accounts mention the fact that the nut
oil becomes rancid. I have not done enough experimentation with the
oils to make any solid conclusions about uses or storage. I generally
do not try to seperate the oils from small batches partially because
the oils add to
the flavor of the broth.
Essentially the end product is hickory nut broth - often referred to as
"milk" by early writers. Various historical accounts suggest several
processes with the end product being referred to as broth, creme, milk,
juice, and tea to name a few. The broth is delicious and
nutritious as a drink, and the flavor is enhanced by the addition of a
little maple
sugar. It also makes a great soup or stew base, especially if you have
limited ingredients since the broth itself is nutritious and tasty. One
highly recommended dish is cornmeal/hickory mush made by adding
cornmeal to the hot broth until it thickens and then sweetening
to taste with maple sugar.