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Nut Identification


liuzhou

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Excuse my profound ignorance, but does anyone know what these nuts are? I bought them on a whim, but they were unlabelled and the supermarket staff were in their usual fog of senselessness.

 

They are rock hard, so I'm guessing they need cooking in some way.

 

395380165_20191002_1726271.thumb.jpg.44a58dcd648328a83c6ec43a99cddee9.jpg

 

577711454_20191002_1727512.thumb.jpg.affb3508f3f900f30b4190b82f7b5510.jpg

...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

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9 hours ago, liuzhou said:

Excuse my profound ignorance, but does anyone know what these nuts are? I bought them on a whim, but they were unlabelled and the supermarket staff were in their usual fog of senselessness.

 

They are rock hard, so I'm guessing they need cooking in some way.

 

395380165_20191002_1726271.thumb.jpg.44a58dcd648328a83c6ec43a99cddee9.jpg

 

577711454_20191002_1727512.thumb.jpg.affb3508f3f900f30b4190b82f7b5510.jpg

Shea nuts?

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25 minutes ago, cdh said:

Look like pine nuts... but they never get rock hard... are you sure they're not some sort of beans?  They get rock hard. 

 

Technically, they are seeds, but often described as "nuts".

 

24 minutes ago, Kerry Beal said:

Other guesses would be palm kernels or argan - but they don't look quite right for those.

 

You are getting closer.

...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

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5 minutes ago, liuzhou said:

 

Technically, they are seeds, but often described as "nuts".

 

 

You are getting closer.

Ok then - pilli nuts (manila nuts) is my last offer!

 

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1 hour ago, liuzhou said:

OK. They are jackfruit seeds (or nuts).

Very interesting.  I have heard of this, and may have to consider keeping the seeds next time I buy jackfruit.  Please do let us know the results!

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6 hours ago, donk79 said:

Very interesting.  I have heard of this, and may have to consider keeping the seeds next time I buy jackfruit.  Please do let us know the results!

 

Ok. I took a handful of them and gave them a test boil for 30 minutes. After letting them cool, I tried them. Yes, sort of chestnut-y and quite pleasant. I can see me using them in a chicken Chinese dish usually made with chestnuts.

 

Sadly, I don't have the equipment to try oven roasting them, but I'm sure that would work too. I'm told 20 minutes at 200ºC / 400ºF does the job.

It's also possible to pan roast them. Maybe I'll try that later.

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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

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