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The 2008 crop is in short supply, but has the best flavor and size in years.

Order Piñon Nuts for the family Thanksgiving celebration

 

 

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About edible pine nuts

Pinon nuts &
Italian pignolia

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Differences of Pinon nuts, Italian pignolia and the Nevada Pine nut.

The correct pronunciation of Pinon is "pin - yon". This is not a second spelling. Watch for this misspelling - you might be mistakenly buy Nevada pine nuts..

Pine trees are common, less known perhaps is the fact that some members of the pine family also bear edible seeds or "nuts". Out of the 100 recognized species of true pines, only a `few produce nuts of sufficient quality and desirable flavor to make them worth eating.

Pine nut varieties that have different names are from different species of Pine trees. Pine nuts from New Mexico called Pinon nuts are called Pinon or Piņon by Law in New Mexico. Pinon is a name derived from the Spanish word for pine nut. Pinon nuts come specifically from the pine tree species: pinus edulis. They taste different from other varieties. The pinon pine tree is a two-needled pine which grows wild in high desert mountian areas of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah. These edible nuts are not to be confused with the "single needle" pine tree from Nevada. The pinon nut grown primarily on Indian reservations in the Southwest United States is normally roasted in the shell. Their availability is rather scarce, and the pinon nut must first be removed from the shell prior to consumption. New mexico Pinon nuts are very difficult to harvest, hence their cost.

Pine nut development in North America is modest in comparison with that in Europe. The Italian pine tree, with superior timber, is larger and grows faster than the stunted pinon of the southwestern United States. Italian stone pine plantations are well established in Mediterranean Europe, while the American pinon remains mostly neglected and uncultivated.

About European Pine nuts

The most common in Europe is the "pignolia" nuts of the Italian stone pine, grown for the most part in Spain, Portugal, Italy, and North Africa. In Italian stone pine harvests, the trees are shaken to remove the kernel. Once removed, they are dried further before being processed in a milling station to remove the kernel from its hard outer shell. The kernels and shells are separated by sifting; the testa, or thin skin which still covers the kernel, is then removed. Thereafter, the kernels are graded and sized. Superior, unblemished, shelled kernels, both large and small, are reserved for the export market; the remaining kernels are sold locally or utilized in prepared foods. Although pignolia nuts may be eaten out of hand, raw or roasted, they have the distinction of being the only nuts used predominantly as ingredients for cooking. For many centuries in European cookery, they have been blended with meats, fish and poultry, and have been used in many different sauces.