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11/09/09, 11:52 AM
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"Slick"
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Moving from NM to TX, & back to NM.
Posts: 2,341
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So what can you do with acorns from Live Oaks in TX
The live oaks have dropped lots of acorns. I peeled a couple and tried chewing them up. Not very tasty! Is there some way of cooking or roasting to make them more palatable?
Or should I just stick with other nuts.
Seems liek a it would be a useful emergency survival food.
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All our pain and all our tears will be no more.....
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11/09/09, 12:16 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Idaho
Posts: 2,986
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In a nutshell, acorns have to be processed before they are edible. You can Google this, but basically I think it involves soaking, mashing and washing them to remove the tannins.
If you or someone you know has pigs, they will gorge themselves on them; no processing needed. I also had a goat that occasionally ate them.
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11/09/09, 01:39 PM
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Five of Seven
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Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Arkansas Ozarks
Posts: 3,048
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A lot of wildlife will come to eat the acorns, too. I've watched deer and squirrel eating them as fast as they can find them.
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11/09/09, 01:41 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: South of DFW,TX zone 8a
Posts: 3,554
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"Agriculture is our wisest pursuit, because it will in the end contribute most to real wealth, good morals, and happiness."
Thomas Jefferson to George Washington 1787
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11/10/09, 02:13 PM
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Knitting Rocks!
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: North East Texas
Posts: 5,783
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My goats love them. I like to gather them for adding to the feed.
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11/10/09, 09:14 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Carthage, Texas
Posts: 12,261
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The Native Americans would dehusk them, crush them, and put them in baskets, and let the flowing water of a stream slowly leach out the tannins.
White oak acorns are one of the best... having one of the lowest amounts of tannins, so less leaching is needed.
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Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. Seneca
Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival. W. Edwards Deming
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11/11/09, 03:25 PM
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"Slick"
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Moving from NM to TX, & back to NM.
Posts: 2,341
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Thanks for the blog post, it gave a lot of good info. In the blog was a link to further info about treating them. Here is the very basic info I gleaned.
Low heat dry - prevent mold and bug larvae from growing.
Remove shell - various ways
Boil in water - to remove tannin. {might keep the water for tanning}
Grind up - And make your biscuits.
Not going to try it this year, but maybe next year. Of course, if one was hungry enough, I suppose I could eat them even with all the tannin still in them. Since I'm not that hungry now... I'll pass.
__________________
We will meet in the golden city, called the New Jerusalem,
All our pain and all our tears will be no more.....
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11/11/09, 10:07 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,730
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A recipe I have said to use acorns from oak species that have rounded lobes on the leaves, not the ones that have the sharp, pointy lobes. They have less tannic acid that you have to leach out. I guess the question comes down to how much boiling, crushing, changes of water, etc. will take out an acceptable amount of acid taste and yet leave enough nutrition in to make the whole process worthwhile.
My recipe says to boil them, discard the water, crush them a bit, dry them in a 200 degree oven, and then grind or mash them into a corn meal consistency. Taste them after they come out of the oven. The recipe says if they are still too acidic, you can boil them once or twice again.
I expect we will be trying this as part of dd's living history project if we can find any acorns. We had strange weather this past spring and summer and there are very few acorns and nuts to be had here.
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11/11/09, 10:16 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 3,917
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So has anyone here ever actually eaten anything made from acorns?
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11/12/09, 07:12 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: N. Ca
Posts: 99
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I've had corn/acorn muffins, they were really quite good. We had very few acorns this year on our front yard tree, after a huge crop last year. I'd love to try this. I recall that the local native americans used to store the crop for a year before processing, I wonder if that was to allow the nut to dry?
Last edited by rightathome; 11/12/09 at 07:14 PM.
Reason: typo
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11/12/09, 10:05 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Virginia
Posts: 3,917
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iI asked because I must have had a hundred pounds of acorns in my back yard this year. I was aware of the process of leaching the tannins, but wondered if it was really worth the effort in a non-starvation situation.
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