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stupid question here, HELP
HOW DO YOU DEHUSK BLACK WALNUTS??
please help stupid lil me
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11-04-2008 07:31 PM
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The Following User Says Thank You to evrita For This Useful Post:
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Put them on your driveway and run over them.
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to crazylady For This Useful Post:
ahippiechic (11-04-2008),Anig2u (11-04-2008),cpbaby (11-05-2008)
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Originally Posted by
crazylady
Put them on your driveway and run over them.
yep,this works great!
Please spay or nueter your pets and support your local pet shelter
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doesn't that crush the walnut too??
and
do you dry them out first and if so how?
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Put on some sexy music, and drop some singles?
Stand on the roof, and drop them?
Got a ping pong table????
Last edited by jedmatters; 11-04-2008 at 07:45 PM.
Reason: I have to add: I have never heard of black walnuts!
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The Following User Says Thank You to jedmatters For This Useful Post:
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Found these ideas...
***One method of dehusking which I've heard of, but not tried personally, is to
put the walnuts in a sack (canvas or burlap) on your driveway and drive over
it repeatedly with your vehicle. There's no risk of cracking the nuts, as
anyone who's tried to open a black walnut knows well.
*** In my spare time, I'd patiently crack open the nuts with my geology
hammer, then use one of those sharp dental tools (the variety a hygenist
uses to clean one's teeth) to poke around and pluck out the meat. After a
few weeks of occasional dedicated work, I'd have a nice cache of black
walnuts to store away.
***Cracking open and picking out is easy. You have half of the equation of
ease as I also use dental tools. But the other half of the equation of ease
is to use a vise-grip, I use a medium sized Vise-Grip which takes 1 second
to crack a nut, no mess, no splatter when held inside a container.
***If the husks are very green then just keep them in a squirrel free
container for about
2 weeks and when easy to pull off by hand wearing rubber gloves.
***We have a black walnut nut cracker. It's a pair of angled, serrated
vise jaws mounted on a board, operated by about a one foot handle. A
full stroke of the handle closes the jaws about 1/4", just enough to
crack the shell of the nut.
The more you complain, the longer God makes you live.
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Black walnuts are from a common native tree unlike the English walnuts found in stores. The challenge is getting at the nutmeat or kernel. Black walnuts have tough hull or husk and an extremely hard shell. But for those willing to put in the effort, the reward of gathering and processing this native delicacy is well worth the time. Tony Bratsch, horticulture educator with University of Illinois Extension offers some tips for preparing walnuts.
Collection time for walnuts begins late September to early October. Harvest black walnuts as soon as the outer husk softens, but is still green. The best quality nutmeat is light in color and milder in flavor. If you can leave a finger depression in the husk, the nut is mature. Most people wait until nuts start to drop before gathering. However mature nuts can be shaken from tree limbs or dislodged with a long pole.
Proper gear is important in walnut handling. Wear gloves. The outside husks will stain just about anything. Walnuts were used in the past for dying cloth and baskets. You may even want to wear your favorite football or bike helmet. Style isn't the goal here.
There are many ways to remove green or partially decomposed husks. One way is to pile the nuts in a gravel driveway and drive over them a few times. The husk will slip off, but the shell will stay intact. Another method is to drill a 1-5/8 inch diameter hole in thick plywood. Use a heavy hammer to force the nut through, shearing off the husk. A 2 x 4 or heavy foot can be used to roll off the husk.
Once the husk is off, wash the unshelled nuts in a bucket to remove excess juice and debris. Unfilled nuts will float and should be removed. After washing, the unshelled nuts need to be dried and cured, if they aren't going to be cracked right away. To dry, spread out freshly husked and washed nuts in thin layers in a well-ventilated area out of direct sunlight for several weeks. Once dry, unshelled nuts can be stored in a cool, dry place in mesh bags, burlap sacks or baskets for up to a year.
Black walnuts have a hard shell. Hand-held nutcrackers seldom work. A hammer, a block of wood, a vise or big rocks are better choices. Special pressure-type crackers efficiently crack individual nuts end to end.
Nut shells can be pre-conditioned before cracking. Start by soaking nuts in water for one to two hours; then drain and keep the nuts moist overnight in an airtight container. If shells still seem brittle, soak them in hot tap water just before cracking.
Another approach is the personal frustration therapy technique. Place about 100 nuts in a burlap or heavy-duty sack. Strike the sack with a mallet until the nuts are broken into a mass of shell and kernel fragments. Then hand separate.
Allow freshly extracted nutmeat to dry for a day or two before refrigerating in a moisture-proof container. Nutmeat can be frozen in jars or freezer bags, and will keep two or more years.
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Just a hint if you are going to store them. Toast them on a cookie sheet for a few min first. It will cure the oils and help keep them from going rancid over time.
**** The views and opinions stated by kids=stress are simply that. Views and opinions. They are not meant to slam anyone else or their views.To anyone whom I may have offended by this expression of my humble opinion, I hereby recognized and appologized to you publically.
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The Following User Says Thank You to stresseater For This Useful Post:
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we always spread them out on screens to dry then we run them through an antique corn husker. spread them out to dry again.
Then we just sit back and wait for dad to get them all cracked...
all winter long.
WEAR GLOVES! your hands will be yellow for a long time if you don't.
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