My tribe grinds acorns into paste, roast the paste, and add it to goat stew. It adds a most delicious fragrance and flavor, sort of the way saffron does.
This channel is so weird, I hadn’t watched anything even remotely similar to this channel and got this in my recommended, Ive now watched like 10 episodes. Something about it is drug like...
One of these popped up in my recommendations a few months ago. Never seen anything like it. Subbed after watching one video. Had no idea such fruits existed around the world.
because hes showing truths nobody has even thought of beyond whats shown and told. its nice to see this kind of content because learning about things ive never seen before is exciting.
We have always leeched the tannins from our acorns in cold running water. We leave them in the shell, and change the cold water 3-4 times daily for several days. The result is acorns that aren't bitter at all, no set in tannins either. We then crack them, and remove the dark brown skin. Voila, ready to roast or grind into flour
@@Web3Dverse I do plan on looking for some weeviled acorns this fall, actually. I was planning to see if i could raise the grubs. Also, the grubs are pretty tasty when fried with butter but they do pop like popcorn. They taste better than the acorn itself, so I usually am pretty okay with weeviled acorns :)
I've eaten a couple as a kid. They most definitely have to be thoroughly blanched to get rid of the tannins otherwise they are horrifically bitter. But they are extremely nutritious and can be relatively palatable if properly prepared.
I remember an episode of Ray Mears' ancient British cooking where he processed acorns by cracking them, putting them in a river to leach the tannins, then ground them and put hot rocks into the paste to cook it. The consistency was like chunky peanut butter, it looked delicious and he claimed it was nutty and hearty if memory serves.
when I was a kid, there was a kid on the playground who broke open a red oak acorn and ate the orange insides and said it tasted like cheese. it did not taste like cheese...
If you manage to grab some cork oak acorns, you'll see how sweet and tasty they are roasted, boiled or milled to flour. Cured ham Pata Negra is made from pigs fed with cork oak acorns
I've heard of an old small species of pig down south that are fed on acorns & have a good flavor as a result? Like to find a place where feral hogs have been eating them and shoot a few for the freezer for the holidays.
This is another one from my childhood,, the Tribe(s) native to this area included acorns as a major part of their diet. As a matter of fact it is fairly common to find grinding rocks- large boulders with holes ground into them where the members of the tribe would grind the acorns into a flour to be leached and further prepared for consumption. We actually have an Acorn festival held in this area for as long as I can remember where the various culinary applications both traditional for the lowly fruit of the Oak. :) Great video, as Always Jared!
It is a pretty fun , but reltively small festival, though it used to be kind of gimmick-y nd cheap, it had in recent years gotten better. The most common way of preparing the acorns after leaching the tannic acid from the ground acorns it was prepared into a kind of bread.
It is, what I can remember of it, it was very similar to quick breads such as spice loaf, but that may just have been how our Teacher at the time prepared it and less to do with actual tradition.
Also if your boiling out the tannin use two pots, the nuts should be placed in water that is already boiling putting them in cold water sets the tannin and makes it more difficult to remove.
Acorn is the contraction of oak + corn. The word corn was used to describe any grain and even material in small pieces, such as the salt chunks used to make 'corned beef'.
My grandma used to make an acorn jello type dish. …it is kind of grayish in color, and you eat it sliced with a seasoned soy sauce based dipping sauce. It is delicious, and my mom doesn’t know how to make it from scratch. You can buy a powder now at the Asian grocery store, but it isn’t nearly as good as grandma’s. Try to get your grandma’s/family recipes written down before it is too late! 😢 Edit: Cool! I wrote this comment before I saw the Korean acorn jelly 🥰😁👍.
Out of every content creator I've started watching during the quarantine, this guy has held my attention the most-- hope he continues making content and gets loads more viewers!
You made acorn brittle! Have you tried hickory nuts? Kind of hard to shell, but delicious. One of the best tasting nuts you can get. Not generally available commercially, because they are so hard to shell. The shells are very hard, and the insides more convoluted than black walnut.
You can actually make a stew from trees. White oak acorns that have the tannic acid leached out are dried and crushed, make a tea from pine needles, and use some pine cambium (inner white bark). Mix the pine needle tea with the acorn flour and top off with pieces of cambium and it's nice to clean your palette after a meal, it's nice and nutty and sweet. because cambium has natural sweetness from plant sugars.
+Jared Rydelek I actually watch at least one every night before I go to sleep!! Usually I watch a few. There's a couple I've seen multiple multiple times. You are like infotainment-asmr
When I was 8 years old me and a couple of friends picked up an acorn from someone's lawn. Grabbed a Rock and bashed the shit out of it. We each took a piece of the yellowish meat inside and chewed. I was the first one to speak and I said.... If I die my mother will kill me! It was so bad all three of us thought that we were poisoned and in danger of imminent death! Hahaha!
@@nathanchalecki4842 Indeed. Just about every Tom, Dick and Howard knows that olives have to be cured before they’re eaten. The curing process gets rid of the bitter substances within the fruit and turns the olive fruits into the zesty, savory delicacies we know and love
In northern Thailand one can find Acorns for sale roasted,at the country markets. There tiny. I'm not sure about the whole process,there's some conflicting info;the lady at the market told my gal that she doesn't boil them before roasting them but my gal's sister tried just roasting them and it didn't work. Either way,they're still in their shells. They're roasted until the shell is almost charred and breaks open. The heat seems to have converted the starch to sugars,they're really sweet. So good! I could eat a Kilo of them. They're called Bakgaw (low a). One will see them being roasted in big Woks and can buy bags of them still warm.
Another interesting nut is the beech nut. Raw consumed it can be toxic, if too many are ingested. As a short snack when going for a walk they are great. They can be roasted and increase massively in flavor and lose their toxicity. In post war Germany they were picked not only for their nutrients to live through the famine, but also to make oil out of them. The oil was then used for lamps. I think the taste of beech nuts is better than that of the acorn. As a kid we would regularly eat them (eastern Germany)
If you ever come across a good pine cone you should remove the pine nut from them :) it's surprisingly easy. You get a thicc pine cone and smash it on a rock and the pine nuts come out. You can find the tutorials on UA-cam lol.
Toast it well above a fire, and the pine nuts will just shake out. Many trees have tactics to set seeds after after a forest fire, especially pine trees (redwood can't germinate without fire)
I've had acorn jelly. It didn't really have much flavor, and what flavor it did have was slightly unpleasant. It was packaged with dipping sauces, such that when eaten as intended, one pretty much only tastes the dipping sauce, with the acorn jelly being a purely textural/nutritive element. I believe the dish is simply a relic from an era when people in that area did not have much in the way of available food, but had an abundance of acorns, and so processed those acorns into a form that could provide some nutrition to keep them from starving. I imagine it survives to the present day primarily on tradition rather than merits of the dish itself.
If you think of acorn jelly dishes (there's also a version where the jelly pieces are tossed and coated in dried seaweed sheet flakes, sesame seed oil, salt, sugar, and sesame seeds - tastes very good btw) as similar to say, salads, then I think that gives a better idea of the jelly. Most lettuce leaves, spinach and cucumbers aren't really that "tasty" eaten just as a bowl of greens with no salad dressing or dipping sauce or seasoning, right? But if you toss them in a tasty seasoning - then you have a tasty and nutritious dish. Or perhaps a better comparison is cooked rice, which is also rather plain on its own, but provides high calories like the acorn jelly. All you need to do is add seasonings, toppings etc. for a tasty, filling and nutritious meal. I think the reason for using acorns is the abundance of them in a country with many, many mountains, where people could just collect them from mountainsides (which weren't good farming land so they were left wild) which were everywhere around them. Acorns have a lot of calories as well as nutrients, so in the past, they would have definitely been a good food supplement, collected in the fall and eaten in the colder months.
@@WeirdExplorer Bondaegi smells truly awful. I don't know about the taste. I am guessing it came about as a byproduct of the silkworm/silk industry, as a fairly cheap animal protein. It isn't popular at all nowadays whereas the acorn jelly is still very popular. Also, unlike bondaegi acorn jelly does not smell at all, and is vegan. I would say it has hardly any taste, or maybe a very faint bitter taste. However the acorn jelly seasoned dishes are very tasty, vegan friendly, and not at all an acquired taste.
@@SY-ok2dq The bondaegi that comes canned has a woody, earthy taste, with the texture of extra soft wood. If you did not look at what you were eating you'd have no idea it was a bug (I did not know I was eating bugs until I was about 5 years old when I noticed the legs) There is the slightest crunch but due to its canned nature it is overall kinda mushy. That's all I have to say. I haven't eaten one since I was 5. So inaccuracies in my description may exist.
@@bigtimbolim Don't the worms feed on mulberry leaves? Do they eat the twigs too (giving them that woody taste)? The cooked bugs sold fresh at stalls in some holiday areas etc. in those big steaming vats, smell horrible. Maybe canned ones smell less. I wonder if it's because they are cooked whole, with their guts and heads. Or perhaps boiling makes the smell worse. They kind of remind me of small brown cockroaches up close, which along with the overpowering smell, is enough to make you lose your appetite.
Acorns of any variety can be eaten as long as you leach out the tannins first, but large acorns are definitely best just due to the labor involved with shelling all those acorns. I have made acorn flour several times and the best way I've found to leach tannins is to make a smoothie out of acorn meats and water (just throw them in a blender). Let the acorn grits settle in the fridge, pour off the water and replace it with fresh water, and then repeat daily for a week or two until the slurry is relatively tasteless. Press out the water, dry in a low oven or food dehydrator, and then use like chestnut flour. Fantastic for cakes, cookies, and roux (for stews, as previously mentioned).
It’s best to avoid the red oak acorn altogether. They are two year acorns, which is why they have much more tannin. To tell the difference between red and white oak, look at the leaves. White oak has lobed leaves, red oak has points on the leaves. The longer you soak them and the more you change the water, the better they will taste.
We use the acorn mash that deer hunters use to get deer to the stands to fatten out market hogs for our dinner table along with corn, soy, whey or milk and veggies waste. Makes a good pork carcass.
@@lucaschneider9515 He used to have the Cannibal Holocaust theme for awhile (not the same as in this video), so it's possible that its another horror movie theme/song
I was told by a person who knows trees very well and he cringed when I mentioned doing anything with white oak. He said that black oak was the best one to use medicanally at least, im not sure if that also applies to the acorns I imagine it "wood" ha but if you come across a black oak that may be and interesting part 2 to this vid. Love your stuff I do learn alot!
Yes!! I remember the runaway boy living in a hollowed out tree in the Adirondacks and making flour from acorns. He didn’t tell us that he processed them in any way so when I ate one it was bitter. He also tanned hides in a water filled oak stump. At 63 I still remember that book from my childhood.
Burr Oak purportedly is the sweetest with the least tannins. I live in a region that predominantly oak, but the Burr Oak is not common here. I know of one such tree in our region, but it's about a 35 mile drive from where I live in Arkansas.
도토리 묵 (acorn muk) is Korean food that is made out of 100% acorn power. You should try this. You can get this powered from Korean store and mixed with water and let it set, than cut it into bite size... Acorn Muk, mostly, does not have flavor, so you need to use some kinds of sauce of your liking.. How they make acorn power is by cracking, let it sit in water for 4-5days (during this time change water 2-3 x a day), let it dry, than make a power out of it.
While nuts are fruit, acorns are true nuts. As well as hazelnuts, chestnuts and betelnut. Almonds, walnuts, cashews, pistachios are all the pits of drupes Others like peanuts and brazil nuts are just seeds of fruit.
I am loving your videos. In fact, i may have set some sort of weird fruit explorer watching record. I came across your videos three days ago and have probably watched between 6-8 hours of your videos in that time. Pretty much my total media consumption. Lol... anyway thanks for what you are doing.
Acorns are bitter, you have to powder them and then boil or soak the bitterness out of them. Another way to get rid of tannins is to put some egg white in the water when you boil them, and the egg soaks up the tannins. You need to press all the water out, and make a cake out of the pulp. We have butternuts where I live, although a fungus has decimated their numbers, they taste much better.
In south Korea, we make a kind of 'jelly' with starch of acorn. it's called '도토리묵(Dotori-mook; Dotori=Acorn)', and it tastes interesting. I prefer add some soy sauce.
Awesome. How about '참외(Chamwae)'? It's kind of melon, but it has crunchy nuance.(and also it has yellow color). I am your fan from Korea. I hope you find the ultimate fruit.
lightly peoccessed acorns by boiling husked acorns is a good addition to chestnut for stuffing at thanksgiving. also good with pecans and wallnuts stuffing with raisinns and cranberries,
I watched a video by the hacksmith where they collected acorns for planting or something and the squirrels got their revenge and ate their power supply to the entire building. Do NOT take a squirrel’s food. 😂
I can't find the comment but someone asked me why would my mother kill me if I was already dead. About my Acorn story when I was 8 years old. Well number one I was afraid of my die and number two that statement is from an 8 year olds logic. I was in second grade and none of us knew anything about the world but I knew that my mother would kill me if I died. And when I tell that story most people laugh because they get why it's funny and that an eight-year-old has no logic or reason and would say something like that. There is no logical reason or logical answer to that question because it's just a funny thing that happened when I was 8 years old.
when i was a kid , my friends and i used to collect these and take out the worms and pet them..lol...they'd usually die soon even if you care for them...they smell sooo bad...ew
In like second grade I used to do the same thing but me and my friends would put them into my tin lunchbox and bring them to my house only to open the lunchbox and find them dead
As a kid born and raised in So. California I always assumed acorns were just things invented for cartoons. Wasn’t until just recently that I learned that not only were they real but they were commonly eaten in some parts of the country. Interested in trying these one day hopefully.
It is extremely rare, but it does happen to some Quercus infectoria trees, one out of hundreds, to have sweet acorns, tastier even than chestnuts here in my island.
Quarcus arizonia white oaks can be consumed quite a bit with no real negitive effects also can be eaten right after they fall of the tree they are very small and almost no bitterness wasp larve found in them are also eaten and taste like what some say is butter. Maybe try these ?
It looks like when you prepare pinhão, the seed of Araucária tree, commonly eaten in southern Brazil. But you usually cook them whole and then open them, usually with your mouth, and you usually not candy them, you eat them salty, althought candied pinhão looks like a good idea.
Acorns were certainly used by Native Americans, but in the eastern US the maın starchy food was the Amerıcan chestnut; in many forests, they constituted 25% of all forest trees and they produced enormous quantities of very nutritious nuts. In about forty years they were almost all gone (though they survive as shrubs that grow a couple years till killed back); all that was left was acorns. Animals also fed on the chestnuts and had to adapt to their absence. There are a few groups of trees surviving within the old range, and also some in the Pacific Northwest, from seeds brought here before the blight hit. That would be another interesting thing to try! For information on efforts to bring back the American Chestnut: acf.org/
I want to tell you how to peel the husk from oak. First, take approximately a kilo or less of oak on a large pot, I mean a large wall, and leave it on the fire after filling it with water and leave it for about half an hour or less. After that, you peel the husk with your hand. Then you see the husk cleaned by the oak fruit. I mean there is a crust on its fruits. It separates and sticks to the 4 with the strong main peel, then you eat the oak free of the double peel, I mean, I mean it is ready to eat, please try this. You do not need to leave the fire because it usually explodes and burns. I mean you pour a quantity of water on large walls and fill the walls with a small amount of oak and leave it on the fire for about half an hour as needed and after that you see the oak fruit peeled and clean. You just have to cut the oak and eat the fruit. After this process you can cut it with juicer or something else or You make flour from it, and you use it as bread. In this way, the oak does not explode, is not burnt, or is not strong. It is soft to eat.
The Kumeyaay Indians here in San Diego make a flat bread with the acorns from the native Live Coastal Oak tree. They sell the bread at Pow Wows. I heard it is not good.
4:12 Squirrels have a similar intolerance to tannins, the difference being they know how to ferment them storing or burying them. Yes, I’m making the implication that squirrels are actively use information and not acting solely on instinct.
I one time tried armenian oak tree acorns, and they where filled extremly with tannins, I boiled them changing the water after a while, and every time the water would come out as murky as a puddle of mud. I now know that white oaks do well for cooking with, Its too bad there are none growing wild out where I live. I wonder if garry oak acorns will do well? I'm glad to see that acorns aren't bad if the right species are used though.
Red oak are also used a lot for cooking, but do have much higher tannins. It might be possible to leech out all the tannins of that type, but probably isn't worth the trouble unless you're starving in the woods
+Jared Rydelek for how much tannins were in them, I don't think I would have hade enough water to make them any where near edible, I'd rather just keep the water to drink with.
If you enjoyed this video, you may enjoy this one on where Brazil Nuts Come from: ua-cam.com/video/M7VPrwkU5jA/v-deo.html
Why not try bur oak acorn
Well Brazil nuts obviously come from New Zealand 🤪
My tribe grinds acorns into paste, roast the paste, and add it to goat stew. It adds a most delicious fragrance and flavor, sort of the way saffron does.
Fascinating. What tribe are you a part of, what country?
White Mountain Apache in the mountains of Arizona, U.S.A.
Jordanne Elaine that’s actually awesome as fuck
Jordanne Elaine ♥️👍🏼
Lol same
your videos strangely give off this ...bob ross energy???? its really enjoyable and comfy to watch!!!
This is so astute
couldn’t have put that better myself tbh i totally agree
This is incorrect. He savagely calls out many fruits that he finds unenjoyable.
This channel is so weird, I hadn’t watched anything even remotely similar to this channel and got this in my recommended, Ive now watched like 10 episodes. Something about it is drug like...
Surreal, the word is surreal. That’s the word I was looking for.
Right? I can't stop watching these.
One of these popped up in my recommendations a few months ago. Never seen anything like it. Subbed after watching one video. Had no idea such fruits existed around the world.
because hes showing truths nobody has even thought of beyond whats shown and told. its nice to see this kind of content because learning about things ive never seen before is exciting.
This is a rabbit hole i was not prepared for....
We have always leeched the tannins from our acorns in cold running water. We leave them in the shell, and change the cold water 3-4 times daily for several days. The result is acorns that aren't bitter at all, no set in tannins either. We then crack them, and remove the dark brown skin. Voila, ready to roast or grind into flour
The hollow acorns should float in water, allowing you to sort out most of bad ones.
@@Web3Dverse WEEVILS ARE ADORABLE
@@Web3Dverse I do plan on looking for some weeviled acorns this fall, actually. I was planning to see if i could raise the grubs. Also, the grubs are pretty tasty when fried with butter but they do pop like popcorn. They taste better than the acorn itself, so I usually am pretty okay with weeviled acorns :)
@@derpychicken2131 😯
@@tnapeepeelu Chickens like bugs I guess 🤣
Ever since I learned that acorns weren't poisonous I've wanted to eat them.
I've eaten a couple as a kid. They most definitely have to be thoroughly blanched to get rid of the tannins otherwise they are horrifically bitter. But they are extremely nutritious and can be relatively palatable if properly prepared.
You might be a squirrel? Have you checked?
@@OpinionatedMonk LMFAO. Might be.
@@654wsj same here in Cyprus, some oak trees have sweet acorns, perfect for consumption roasted or boiled, just perfect.
I remember an episode of Ray Mears' ancient British cooking where he processed acorns by cracking them, putting them in a river to leach the tannins, then ground them and put hot rocks into the paste to cook it. The consistency was like chunky peanut butter, it looked delicious and he claimed it was nutty and hearty if memory serves.
when I was a kid, there was a kid on the playground who broke open a red oak acorn and ate the orange insides and said it tasted like cheese. it did not taste like cheese...
If you don't keep you cheese in the fridge they aren't that different...
Yoooo same, tho I personally thought it tasted more like a creamier pecan.
If you manage to grab some cork oak acorns, you'll see how sweet and tasty they are roasted, boiled or milled to flour. Cured ham Pata Negra is made from pigs fed with cork oak acorns
good to know, thanks!
We have a few cork oak tree , do they still need to be washed to get rid of the tannin ?
Sofia Diogo well I want some of those corn oak acorns
I've heard of an old small species of pig down south that are fed on acorns & have a good flavor as a result? Like to find a place where feral hogs have been eating them and shoot a few for the freezer for the holidays.
This is the delicious Jamon Iberico (Iberian Peninsula Ham) you find in Spain. The pigs are raised on the acorns from the cork oak trees.
This is another one from my childhood,, the Tribe(s) native to this area included acorns as a major part of their diet. As a matter of fact it is fairly common to find grinding rocks- large boulders with holes ground into them where the members of the tribe would grind the acorns into a flour to be leached and further prepared for consumption. We actually have an Acorn festival held in this area for as long as I can remember where the various culinary applications both traditional for the lowly fruit of the Oak. :) Great video, as Always Jared!
Acorn festival? That sounds fascinating. Cool to hear that these are still being enjoyed out there.
It is a pretty fun , but reltively small festival, though it used to be kind of gimmick-y nd cheap, it had in recent years gotten better. The most common way of preparing the acorns after leaching the tannic acid from the ground acorns it was prepared into a kind of bread.
+izonker Yeah. I've had the jello like stuff they sell at Korean restaurants, but never the bread. I'll have to track it down, it sounds interesting.
It is, what I can remember of it, it was very similar to quick breads such as spice loaf, but that may just have been how our Teacher at the time prepared it and less to do with actual tradition.
izonker
Also if your boiling out the tannin use two pots, the nuts should be placed in water that is already boiling putting them in cold water sets the tannin and makes it more difficult to remove.
Good tip, thanks Dennis!
i see what you did there. :P
@Holden Mcgroine I see what you did there too, Holden
Bugs are just extra protein. ;)
I once ate a whole bowl of rice with weevils without noticing, then ate a whole bowl of soup with rice with weevils, without noticing
Free protein!
@@catpoke9557 I think you have a problem...
@@csweezey18 They're tiny bro, you can't taste them
I’m Texas we have scorpion flour for baking but I’ve heard of cricket and locust too
Acorn is the contraction of oak + corn. The word corn was used to describe any grain and even material in small pieces, such as the salt chunks used to make 'corned beef'.
My grandma used to make an acorn jello type dish. …it is kind of grayish in color, and you eat it sliced with a seasoned soy sauce based dipping sauce. It is delicious, and my mom doesn’t know how to make it from scratch. You can buy a powder now at the Asian grocery store, but it isn’t nearly as good as grandma’s. Try to get your grandma’s/family recipes written down before it is too late! 😢 Edit: Cool! I wrote this comment before I saw the Korean acorn jelly 🥰😁👍.
Out of every content creator I've started watching during the quarantine, this guy has held my attention the most-- hope he continues making content and gets loads more viewers!
I'm just thankful I live in pecan country.
salted roasted pecans are so so good
There's good eating on a pecan tree, had one in my Fresno, CA backyard as a kid
i have a road nearby my house that is lines with pecan trees and they are always littered with squirrels lol
You made acorn brittle!
Have you tried hickory nuts? Kind of hard to shell, but delicious. One of the best tasting nuts you can get. Not generally available commercially, because they are so hard to shell. The shells are very hard, and the insides more convoluted than black walnut.
You can actually make a stew from trees. White oak acorns that have the tannic acid leached out are dried and crushed, make a tea from pine needles, and use some pine cambium (inner white bark). Mix the pine needle tea with the acorn flour and top off with pieces of cambium and it's nice to clean your palette after a meal, it's nice and nutty and sweet. because cambium has natural sweetness from plant sugars.
You make me laugh, teach me something and entertain me every time. "it'll blister your insides"
+Emily Briggs Thanks Emily! So nice to see that you're still watching these things. hah.
+Jared Rydelek I actually watch at least one every night before I go to sleep!! Usually I watch a few. There's a couple I've seen multiple multiple times. You are like infotainment-asmr
When I was 8 years old me and a couple of friends picked up an acorn from someone's lawn. Grabbed a Rock and bashed the shit out of it. We each took a piece of the yellowish meat inside and chewed. I was the first one to speak and I said.... If I die my mother will kill me! It was so bad all three of us thought that we were poisoned and in danger of imminent death! Hahaha!
hahaha
"Your body knows that it's wrong; you shouldn't be doing it 😂
i did that too and my parents weren't upset, instead they couldn't stop laughing.
You think thats bad.. ever tried eating an olive straight off a tree? Omg
@@nathanchalecki4842 Indeed. Just about every Tom, Dick and Howard knows that olives have to be cured before they’re eaten. The curing process gets rid of the bitter substances within the fruit and turns the olive fruits into the zesty, savory delicacies we know and love
I like how the intro looks and sounds like an old school documentary.
as a fruit hunter, you shouldn't mind worms too much. fruit worms can be nutritious
Pro survival tip, you can use the cap of the acorn as an impromptu whistle with specific finger placement.
good to know
Wait you really didnt know that?
Krystal Blaze You wouldn't know that if acorns aren't from your area
I guess I will just hollar
And loud as hell! I taught all of my kids that.
Next series: Weird Bug Explorer
I use to make acorn flour all the time. They make some of the best cookies I have ever had.
Glad I found your odd little channel. I'm not sure why I enjoy watching you try fruit but it brings me some sort of comfort lol
I just love your personality, you're adorable. Thank you for the videos and your time making them.
In northern Thailand one can find Acorns for sale roasted,at the country markets. There tiny. I'm not sure about the whole process,there's some conflicting
info;the lady at the market told my gal that she doesn't boil them before roasting them but my gal's sister tried just roasting them and it didn't work. Either
way,they're still in their shells. They're roasted until the shell is almost charred and breaks open. The heat seems to have converted the starch to sugars,they're really sweet. So good! I could eat a Kilo of them. They're called Bakgaw (low a). One will see them being roasted in big Woks and can buy
bags of them still warm.
Sounds like pinons
Another interesting nut is the beech nut. Raw consumed it can be toxic, if too many are ingested. As a short snack when going for a walk they are great. They can be roasted and increase massively in flavor and lose their toxicity. In post war Germany they were picked not only for their nutrients to live through the famine, but also to make oil out of them. The oil was then used for lamps.
I think the taste of beech nuts is better than that of the acorn. As a kid we would regularly eat them (eastern Germany)
If you ever come across a good pine cone you should remove the pine nut from them :) it's surprisingly easy. You get a thicc pine cone and smash it on a rock and the pine nuts come out. You can find the tutorials on UA-cam lol.
Toast it well above a fire, and the pine nuts will just shake out. Many trees have tactics to set seeds after after a forest fire, especially pine trees (redwood can't germinate without fire)
This is a staple food for my tribe in central California
I've had acorn jelly.
It didn't really have much flavor, and what flavor it did have was slightly unpleasant. It was packaged with dipping sauces, such that when eaten as intended, one pretty much only tastes the dipping sauce, with the acorn jelly being a purely textural/nutritive element.
I believe the dish is simply a relic from an era when people in that area did not have much in the way of available food, but had an abundance of acorns, and so processed those acorns into a form that could provide some nutrition to keep them from starving. I imagine it survives to the present day primarily on tradition rather than merits of the dish itself.
Tradition and maybe an acquired taste. I'm guessing thats the case with canned Beondegi (silk worm pupa) as well.
If you think of acorn jelly dishes (there's also a version where the jelly pieces are tossed and coated in dried seaweed sheet flakes, sesame seed oil, salt, sugar, and sesame seeds - tastes very good btw) as similar to say, salads, then I think that gives a better idea of the jelly. Most lettuce leaves, spinach and cucumbers aren't really that "tasty" eaten just as a bowl of greens with no salad dressing or dipping sauce or seasoning, right? But if you toss them in a tasty seasoning - then you have a tasty and nutritious dish. Or perhaps a better comparison is cooked rice, which is also rather plain on its own, but provides high calories like the acorn jelly. All you need to do is add seasonings, toppings etc. for a tasty, filling and nutritious meal.
I think the reason for using acorns is the abundance of them in a country with many, many mountains, where people could just collect them from mountainsides (which weren't good farming land so they were left wild) which were everywhere around them.
Acorns have a lot of calories as well as nutrients, so in the past, they would have definitely been a good food supplement, collected in the fall and eaten in the colder months.
@@WeirdExplorer Bondaegi smells truly awful. I don't know about the taste. I am guessing it came about as a byproduct of the silkworm/silk industry, as a fairly cheap animal protein. It isn't popular at all nowadays whereas the acorn jelly is still very popular.
Also, unlike bondaegi acorn jelly does not smell at all, and is vegan. I would say it has hardly any taste, or maybe a very faint bitter taste. However the acorn jelly seasoned dishes are very tasty, vegan friendly, and not at all an acquired taste.
@@SY-ok2dq The bondaegi that comes canned has a woody, earthy taste, with the texture of extra soft wood. If you did not look at what you were eating you'd have no idea it was a bug (I did not know I was eating bugs until I was about 5 years old when I noticed the legs) There is the slightest crunch but due to its canned nature it is overall kinda mushy. That's all I have to say. I haven't eaten one since I was 5. So inaccuracies in my description may exist.
@@bigtimbolim Don't the worms feed on mulberry leaves? Do they eat the twigs too (giving them that woody taste)?
The cooked bugs sold fresh at stalls in some holiday areas etc. in those big steaming vats, smell horrible. Maybe canned ones smell less. I wonder if it's because they are cooked whole, with their guts and heads. Or perhaps boiling makes the smell worse. They kind of remind me of small brown cockroaches up close, which along with the overpowering smell, is enough to make you lose your appetite.
Float the acorns on top of water to figure out which ones have bugs in them! The ones that float will have them
I didn't know that acorns are a fruit. You learn something new every day!
Excellent! =) Who knows why candied acorns aren't more widely available! You make em look and sound delicious! =)
Love your channel man. So interesting and as a professional cook very useful. Plus the opening music is always great!
Acorns of any variety can be eaten as long as you leach out the tannins first, but large acorns are definitely best just due to the labor involved with shelling all those acorns. I have made acorn flour several times and the best way I've found to leach tannins is to make a smoothie out of acorn meats and water (just throw them in a blender). Let the acorn grits settle in the fridge, pour off the water and replace it with fresh water, and then repeat daily for a week or two until the slurry is relatively tasteless. Press out the water, dry in a low oven or food dehydrator, and then use like chestnut flour. Fantastic for cakes, cookies, and roux (for stews, as previously mentioned).
It’s best to avoid the red oak acorn altogether. They are two year acorns, which is why they have much more tannin. To tell the difference between red and white oak, look at the leaves. White oak has lobed leaves, red oak has points on the leaves. The longer you soak them and the more you change the water, the better they will taste.
hi jared. its your big fan Slimy here. I’m coming back to this video because it’s so good
Discovered you channel recently...Fantastic work that you are doing 👍
thanks!
I'll stick with the relative of the oak, the chestnut. Tasty and won't ruin your kidneys.
We use the acorn mash that deer hunters use to get deer to the stands to fatten out market hogs for our dinner table along with corn, soy, whey or milk and veggies waste. Makes a good pork carcass.
Lots of personal stories in the comments, really nice
if i saw even one of those tiny worms in food i was making i'd shit my pants, you're a brave soul!
Acorn flour,
Be sure to wash out in a stream for a long while to get rid of bitter tannins.
Thanks Jared always wanted to try these, but learning through your explorations is all I needed. I was gonna make acorny joke but I stopped myself
🤣
I like the music thanks for the video.
do you know the name of the song?
@@lucaschneider9515 He used to have the Cannibal Holocaust theme for awhile (not the same as in this video), so it's possible that its another horror movie theme/song
@@captainmggabeau397 Bit of a late reply but if anyone's still interested, the music comes from the intro to the 1981 movie "The Black Cat" :3
I was told by a person who knows trees very well and he cringed when I mentioned doing anything with white oak. He said that black oak was the best one to use medicanally at least, im not sure if that also applies to the acorns I imagine it "wood" ha but if you come across a black oak that may be and interesting part 2 to this vid. Love your stuff I do learn alot!
Love the painting behind you. A sad commentary on humanity.
Anyone here remember reading My Side of the Mountain as a kid?
ZebulonTV such a good book!
Yes!! I remember the runaway boy living in a hollowed out tree in the Adirondacks and making flour from acorns. He didn’t tell us that he processed them in any way so when I ate one it was bitter. He also tanned hides in a water filled oak stump. At 63 I still remember that book from my childhood.
Burr Oak purportedly is the sweetest with the least tannins. I live in a region that predominantly oak, but the Burr Oak is not common here. I know of one such tree in our region, but it's about a 35 mile drive from where I live in Arkansas.
Awesome! Thanks for sharing..im going to use this recipe at christmas..perfect
Thank you so much for this video! I am going to make this tomorrow
you should have way more subs
true
You're eating acorn?! Hi, Scrat!
+Alice Pearce haha!
도토리 묵 (acorn muk) is Korean food that is made out of 100% acorn power. You should try this. You can get this powered from Korean store and mixed with water and let it set, than cut it into bite size... Acorn Muk, mostly, does not have flavor, so you need to use some kinds of sauce of your liking..
How they make acorn power is by cracking, let it sit in water for 4-5days (during this time change water 2-3 x a day), let it dry, than make a power out of it.
While nuts are fruit, acorns are true nuts.
As well as hazelnuts, chestnuts and betelnut.
Almonds, walnuts, cashews, pistachios are all the pits of drupes
Others like peanuts and brazil nuts are just seeds of fruit.
Betel nut is a true nut? That I didn't know.
I am loving your videos. In fact, i may have set some sort of weird fruit explorer watching record. I came across your videos three days ago and have probably watched between 6-8 hours of your videos in that time. Pretty much my total media consumption. Lol... anyway thanks for what you are doing.
So nice to hear that. Thanks Brent, plenty more on the way.
Acorns are bitter, you have to powder them and then boil or soak the bitterness out of them. Another way to get rid of tannins is to put some egg white in the water when you boil them, and the egg soaks up the tannins. You need to press all the water out, and make a cake out of the pulp. We have butternuts where I live, although a fungus has decimated their numbers, they taste much better.
In south Korea, we make a kind of 'jelly' with starch of acorn. it's called '도토리묵(Dotori-mook; Dotori=Acorn)', and it tastes interesting. I prefer add some soy sauce.
I've had that before, it does have an interesting taste
Awesome. How about '참외(Chamwae)'? It's kind of melon, but it has crunchy nuance.(and also it has yellow color). I am your fan from Korea. I hope you find the ultimate fruit.
masterHigar Thank you! Yes I have had that melon. Its rather common in the USA so I haven't reviewed it yet., I may in the future though. :)
lightly peoccessed acorns by boiling husked acorns is a good addition to chestnut for stuffing at thanksgiving. also good with pecans and wallnuts stuffing with raisinns and cranberries,
I watched a video by the hacksmith where they collected acorns for planting or something and the squirrels got their revenge and ate their power supply to the entire building.
Do NOT take a squirrel’s food. 😂
Yes, came at the right exact time!!
my English is not so good but I understand English and I love you r chanal and you also😃😃😃😃
The length of this video is just fine.
I can't find the comment but someone asked me why would my mother kill me if I was already dead. About my Acorn story when I was 8 years old. Well number one I was afraid of my die and number two that statement is from an 8 year olds logic. I was in second grade and none of us knew anything about the world but I knew that my mother would kill me if I died. And when I tell that story most people laugh because they get why it's funny and that an eight-year-old has no logic or reason and would say something like that. There is no logical reason or logical answer to that question because it's just a funny thing that happened when I was 8 years old.
The Majestic Pink Oak produces optimal acorns, which have a delicious mild hazelnut taste
I'm Choctaw Indian from Oklahoma , we still and always eat traditional foods. This is a fact with all natives
when i was a kid , my friends and i used to collect these and take out the worms and pet them..lol...they'd usually die soon even if you care for them...they smell sooo bad...ew
Rosa Pink gross lol
In like second grade I used to do the same thing but me and my friends would put them into my tin lunchbox and bring them to my house only to open the lunchbox and find them dead
As a kid born and raised in So. California I always assumed acorns were just things invented for cartoons. Wasn’t until just recently that I learned that not only were they real but they were commonly eaten in some parts of the country. Interested in trying these one day hopefully.
Amazing comment omg
I love the painting in the background in 2:35
Looks good. BTW, pecans are free in Texas. Pick them up from the ground, just like acorns!👍🏻
The best accorns are from Quercus ilex. My grandmother would roast them and they were very good.. this tree is common in Portugal.
you can use the acorn top as a whistle too.
I'll remember that next time I'm trying to impress the ladies.
It is extremely rare, but it does happen to some Quercus infectoria trees, one out of hundreds, to have sweet acorns, tastier even than chestnuts here in my island.
Quarcus arizonia white oaks can be consumed quite a bit with no real negitive effects also can be eaten right after they fall of the tree they are very small and almost no bitterness wasp larve found in them are also eaten and taste like what some say is butter. Maybe try these ?
It looks like when you prepare pinhão, the seed of Araucária tree, commonly eaten in southern Brazil.
But you usually cook them whole and then open them, usually with your mouth, and you usually not candy them, you eat them salty, althought candied pinhão looks like a good idea.
I've had it. It is the most buttery delicious nut I have ever eaten.
red oak acorns are actually used to tan leather, and make ink.
I was so curious about those :D thanks!
+melovescoffee Glad to hear it
I thought tannins usually get destroyed by boiling, do you really have to change the water? What exactly remains in there?
Have you heard of the coontie? Similar thing to acorns where they're toxic and have to be processed in order to be edible.
Acorns were certainly used by Native Americans, but in the eastern US the maın starchy food was the Amerıcan chestnut; in many forests, they constituted 25% of all forest trees and they produced enormous quantities of very nutritious nuts. In about forty years they were almost all gone (though they survive as shrubs that grow a couple years till killed back); all that was left was acorns. Animals also fed on the chestnuts and had to adapt to their absence.
There are a few groups of trees surviving within the old range, and also some in the Pacific Northwest, from seeds brought here before the blight hit. That would be another interesting thing to try!
For information on efforts to bring back the American Chestnut: acf.org/
I want to tell you how to peel the husk from oak. First, take approximately a kilo or less of oak on a large pot, I mean a large wall, and leave it on the fire after filling it with water and leave it for about half an hour or less. After that, you peel the husk with your hand. Then you see the husk cleaned by the oak fruit. I mean there is a crust on its fruits. It separates and sticks to the 4 with the strong main peel, then you eat the oak free of the double peel, I mean, I mean it is ready to eat, please try this. You do not need to leave the fire because it usually explodes and burns. I mean you pour a quantity of water on large walls and fill the walls with a small amount of oak and leave it on the fire for about half an hour as needed and after that you see the oak fruit peeled and clean. You just have to cut the oak and eat the fruit. After this process you can cut it with juicer or something else or You make flour from it, and you use it as bread. In this way, the oak does not explode, is not burnt, or is not strong. It is soft to eat.
That ending music makes me wanna go on a fruit destroying rampage.
You can toast and eat those acorn grubs, or eat them fresh (but they can bite if you aren't quick)
The snack that bites back.
It would be easier to leach out the tannins if you grind the acorns like a coarse coffee. Then soak. Maybe make granola with it?
The Kumeyaay Indians here in San Diego make a flat bread with the acorns from the native Live Coastal Oak tree. They sell the bread at Pow Wows. I heard it is not good.
4:12 Squirrels have a similar intolerance to tannins, the difference being they know how to ferment them storing or burying them.
Yes, I’m making the implication that squirrels are actively use information and not acting solely on instinct.
Yes they don't solely rely on Google!
I’ve eaten an acorn off the street when I was a lot younger and I remember it tasting like a vanilla Frappuccino
Your intro music- like the music from weird retro video talking about periods I saw in the 4th grade.
This is the type of acorn that is most abundant where I live.
Really very interested to know what those grubs were, they looked amazing
I had a look, I think it's the acorn Weevil, Curculio glandium, who would have guessed ¿
Yaaay! You pronounced pecan correctly!
I know lye is used to leech out the tannins in olives, wonder if it can be used for acorns?
I one time tried armenian oak tree acorns, and they where filled extremly with tannins, I boiled them changing the water after a while, and every time the water would come out as murky as a puddle of mud. I now know that white oaks do well for cooking with, Its too bad there are none growing wild out where I live. I wonder if garry oak acorns will do well? I'm glad to see that acorns aren't bad if the right species are used though.
Red oak are also used a lot for cooking, but do have much higher tannins. It might be possible to leech out all the tannins of that type, but probably isn't worth the trouble unless you're starving in the woods
+Jared Rydelek for how much tannins were in them, I don't think I would have hade enough water to make them any where near edible, I'd rather just keep the water to drink with.
+Raymond Kasper haha yeah much better idea
if it was the food your mother gave you as a child, and every bite reminded you of her, you would love it.
When he said that cold process is best for making it into flour, I immediately thought of Assassination Classroom when they made the acorn noodles.
Now this is my kinda content
I wonder how many acorn recipes come from the Old World?