PECAN | How Does it Grow?
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- Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2017
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You’ve NEVER seen a harvest like this! Watch how pecans - America’s native nut - get from a Georgia orchard to your table in time for Thanksgiving.
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Our father planted one 5 years before I was born, but when I was old enough to remember It was a huge tree already! I'm 21 now and we always harvest the pecans every October - November to make pecan pie. I love that tree so much!
wow.
They are good trees in terms of the nuts and appearance, but you probably don't want to park your car under one of them. The sap they shed is awful, as you probably already know.
My great grandfather planted two on family property 60+ years ago. I'm hoping to harvest some with his great great grandsons this year.
My grand parents had several trees. My Grandfather sent us some every year. He would feed the cattle pinto beans and pigs,pears. Brings back memories, tears.
Your father was a smart man you lucky
I am European, but lived in the US for a couple years and fell in love with Pecans. I try to incorporate them in different dishes, but my favorite is to roast them with maple syrup and a pinch of salt for 15 minutes and then add them to salads! Thanks for the great overview of the Pecan world.
ever make cinnamon sugar pecans?
I am going to have to try that recipe of yours.
Add them to salads -- that's a great idea!
So many fairs and flea markets there is often vendors selling candied ones. And them hot out of the pan…oh talk about piece of heaven
Have you tried pecan pie?
5:46
I like how Antoine's Superior Nuts were exhibited alongside great inventions
She is an incredible teacher. There is no bias in her show. Happy to have found this channel!
I agree! And the US needs to stop attacking China all the time or China might be forced to buy the pecans from somebody else!
Each episode is beautifully constructed. You can see the amount of time, research, effort, work and sacrifice they put in, for us at home to gain knowledge from where our foods really come from. Keep it up!!!
Thank you for such a beautiful comment, John!
I'm in south central Texas, Pecan trees everywhere. We don't buy them because you can literally pick them right of the ground in many parks, and a couple colleges.
Yes! The state tree of Texas!
hope it remains so for you
I live in south south Texas and I have a pecan tree in my backyard. 😀 I say peCON. 😆
Heck yeah! Used to go out with my grand mother to get them by the box load! Gotta love Texas
In Vernon County Missouri there are thousands of Pecan trees, we collect boxes of them, but most are the smaller variety, still very tasty
I really enjoyed this video. I'm from southern Louisiana and we had 5 pecan (pronounced pah-cawn) trees in the backyard. The old ladies down the block paid the kids 25 cents for every pound we would shell.... and got free pralines in return. I miss those days. Oh and I climbed those trees at Oak Alley on a school field trip.
I now live in Georgia & wish you published a filming schedule. I'll bet I'm not the only one that would love to meet you in real life & watch you guys film.
BTW - I was pleasantly surprised when I saw your videos on the PBS app!
Great memories! Incredible how many connections you have to points in the video. (Yes, we're on PBS digital!)
I eat Pecans not pah Cawns . No wonder they have such a hard time getting established in the USA . You make them sound gross!
@@MichaelRei99 ...you pee in a can. Thus it is in fact pah-cawn.
You've never had a fresh pecan until you've accidentally eaten some of that bitter brown stuff that separates the nut halves. :P
I concur your statement.
Very interesting. I never knew about Antoine, it makes pecans even more special to me.
Why, are you related to him?
@@Menstral That's a strange question. If the person was related I think s/he would have said so. It would have been something to be proud of.
We had pecan trees in our farm here in Brazil, I spent so many good moments under the tree with my family eating the nuts. My sister and I used to gift packs of pecan to our teachers, it was very especial and unique, they loved it. Sadly the trees had some desease and died. There are still some saplings in our farm and now I know why they aren't the same.
Thank you Americans to bring this awesome tree to Brazil, and thanks for the great video. I love your work.
What beautiful memories - thank you for sharing!
Que legal. De Qual cidade você é?
There is so much about black history that revolves around farming that goes untold.
you have to be a genius to invent grafting pecans trees. ive tried it 3 times succeeded 1 time
no reporters were harmed in the shaking of this pecan tree... : )
Hahaha! But a cameraman was almost run over when I drove the tractor (I thought he would move and he thought I would stop!). But for the record: NO ONE has yet been harmed in the making of this series. ;)
I like how you said no one has been harmed... *yet*
Do be careful. I want this series to continue :)
The bigger trees are okai.... it’s the smaller ones that get harmed by the shaking. My family in Chihuahua use long poles but since we had patience the trees are over 23 years now and have hard to reach places
The harvest is in less than two weeks now
October is harvest month for Pecans
@@TrueFoodTV You're So cute!!
Once again; a really interesting video. Here in the UK, Pecans are quite popular as an alternative to walnuts and commonly used in brownies and other cakes. I assumed they were in the Walnut family because the leaves look quite similar but it turns out they are related but not that closely. One thing I never realised was that they are native to the US so thanks for teaching me new things; that's why I love this channel.
I always love hearing the info you have to share -- thanks, Thomas!
I grew up in Houston. I would go to the park with my family and climb pecan trees just to pick them. They’re everywhere
Yes! The state tree of Texas! Lots of native pecans there.
Very nice documentary video about little Pecan nuts. Nicole's presentation keeps me curiously watching nut story.
Thanks for watching!
How do they keep squirrels from harvesting it first
I’m an Australian, at University I went to a party, growing in the front yard of the house in Sydney was as “Pea Can” tree, I’d never heard, let alone seen a nut or tree. There were nuts laying on the ground, I pigged out and took some home after the party. Being the person I am, I put the nuts I took home in pots, Lo and behold, the nuts sprouted. In due course I planted the little plants along the creek bank in the nature reserve near my parents home. Fast forward 40 years, that nature reserve is now a mature pecan forest, from which I garner heaps of nuts each year. I hang old CDs in the branches to deter the Sulphur Crested parrots from stripping the trees. I also hang pieces of old hose in the branches, the birds think they are snakes. I have been known to use a catapult to deter the birds. My great luck is the trees have good nuts and the creek is feed by garden run off so doesn’t suffer much drought.
Why CDs?
@@user-pn8tm5eq3u Hi User, I use the old CDs hanging from fishing line or para cord, via a small hole drilled in the edge. They twist with every breeze and reflect random shafts of light, it spooks the parrots so I get my share of the nuts. The parrots don’t land in the trees and eat the nuts.
The scene with the umbrella is a very nice touch.
thanks :)
So whose idea was it to do that scene? I notice that the camera operator had to stand pretty far away because they didn't have cover of their own. ;)
We watch a documentary and we see an artist.
You'll need that umbrella pecans when they fall they hurt and the limbs always fall no matter what
Dream Big 9
gaaaaaah, your videos are so constantly delightful. If someone looks up the definition of charisma, it should just point to this channel.
thank you so much! :)
@@TrueFoodTV you are looking awesome
So we're bad people if we dont have charisma?
@@AM-lz2jr No?
@@verdatum Then don't put charisma on a pedestal. Judge people for who they are on the inside, not what they show or don't show on the outside. many people have trouble with charisma, and they're taken to be unlikable because of that unfortunately. On the other end you have evil politicians with a lot of charisma.
Thanks, Antoine, the brilliant slave! And thanks for this awesome video. I love pecan pie.
Es Zee enslaved person*
*human
I wish there was more information on Antoine. Thank you, I would’ve never known.
I wish there was too!
Victoria Marie he and his family worked for free to build something someone else claims. Same story. Surprised he got any credit all patents and trademarks went to others...
Awww so PC of you.
@@scrolex what does that even mean
Mania it means give it a break already
This was very interesting to me. I grow and harvest hickories and black walnuts. These look a heck of a lot easier to crack open.
Iso Fleecie black walnuts are the hardest thing to crack even with a hammer, pecans don't take any effort.
Yep, just a bit of hand strength. Black Walnuts, back in the day, now, not so much :)
I noticed one thing. The videography keeps on improving!
B L E A K Oh, Mariahhh
Austin L. Yaass
That's right,all the shots are perfect.Good work with editing also.
Thanks spielberg im sure she was worried about your opinion
watch her latest - chickpeas! its so beautifully made !
Spent part of my youth growing up on a pecan orchard in northeast Louisiana. For many years, after the cotton harvest,,, pickers that picked the cotton after the machines were done, would show up to pick up pecans with their cotton sacks for 3 cents a pound. That's how I earned my spending money using a tater sack that the pecans were packed in for shipping. My dad helped build the first tree shaker for the orchard on a milk truck chassis. After that automation started to pick up big time and soon the field hands were not needed, shaking, sweeping, collecting, sorting and packing was accomplished by man operated machines. It was tough and grueling work at times but it is still part of my life and helped me learn that I had to work for what I wanted but still have happy memories. Nicole Cotroneo Jolly, you are doing a good job and really like your style. bon appetit
Nicole Nicole Nicole... How do I not love your videos? The musics so gentle, the videography clearly awesome. And the content? Fills my brain. Thank you for another great information for us. 💗
Thank you!
Wow! This is the first time I see a pecan from it’s source! So amazing!
Glad you enjoyed it!
"In America we love DEEZNUTZ" hah got'em
I have to say, it's really a pleasure watching your videos. From the journalistic/documentary style and sense of humor to seeing the operations behind what it takes to support these produce I love it all! Keep it up!
I grew up picking them off trees and eating a full h-e-b grocery bag with the family on the porch : ) so good plain.
I really love your hosting. I’m not really into farming but you made every episode interesting. You can simply invite others to share the same enthusiasm you have with every discovery in each episodes. 👍
Love this vid the most! Takes me back to my childhood where my grandpa and I would collect pecans and then sit on the front porch, cracking nuts, eating them and drinking jamaica! ❤
What a wonderful memory! Thanks for sharing it with all of us.
I am a person in the year 2022 who lives in the Gila Mountains. I planted a pecan tree in my backyard a few weeks ago and it is really doing well. It is a grafted Pawnee Pecan. I am surprised to see flowers on it already. I guess the people who saw this video and planted trees in 2017 are enjoying a great harvest by now. I didn't know that pecan trees lived for centuries. That's a gift that keeps on giving.
bro, you planted it few weeks ago and it has flowers. is that normal?
@@rafaelbohorquez8135, it beats me? The flowers were male. Now they are gone. There has been a lot of strong hot dry wind that has been brutal on my plants. I will plant another one next spring so I can get some cross-pollination.
I liked pecans in ice cream.
This is my first video that I'm seeing of hers and I love her style!
Kaiya Jones you should check all of her videos, they're awesome
Thank you, Joel! Welcome, Kaiya - happy to have you watching!
same
This show is so underrated
Texan here, the pecan is our state tree. No shortage of pecan lovers here. Those tasty nuts are snacked on all year long in the lone star state. Austin is full of pecan trees on every street I LOVE when fall rolls around and I can collect snacks all over the city.
Lucky!!
I love that she stood under the tree with an umbrella. Is there an end to her adorableness???!!!! omg! so prescious!!!
*Another great coverage documentary! I wish you had a bigger channel, because your work is AWESOME!!!* 💙👍😎🍺🍻🍺
thank you!
Amazing! You did it again, scoring on so many levels: botany, agriculture, history and even a little humour! I laughed so loud when we teleported with you to Pennsylvania. Thank you for another great job!
Thank you!! Such great feedback.
My grandmother lived in Jacksonville Florida, she had pecan trees on her property and I remember every year having a multitude of pecans at my leisure, That was a great great time and a great memory.
Thank you for this great video I appreciate it.
GREAT VIDEO!!!
Entertaining and informative!
I have several pecan trees in my front yard in Kansas.
Thank you for helping me to understanding the history and present of this amazing nut!
Thumbs down for what?!!! The Almond gang getting worried or something 🤔
Yes sir we r
Nah fam. . .I want pecan milk. I wanna know how it'll taste different °¬°
For the hostess.. horrible way to present farming show ..
Let's take a moment to thank Antoine for his great knowledge of grafting pecans.
You are my favorite channel I have found in a long time bc I am a huge gardener and enthusiast of gardening
You're the best Nicole. An excellent narrator, interesting topics, you make the subjects fun and informational. Well done!
Thanks Roberto
Stuckey's always promoted pecan candy and other pecan goodies in the 50's -70's. I guess they were ahead of their time.
So many things I learned from this video, goes to show how ignorant I am lol. That peanuts are not nuts but legumes, that pecan is national nut of US, that pecan is so high in oil (never seen pecan oil anywhere like almond oil you know, imagine how much oil can come out of it and how many ways we can use it in) and that even flowers are male and female. You are blowing my mind Nicole. Where were you when I was struggling with my school and college assignments ;) your videos are becoming more professional day by day. Its time some major network took you guys in. Thanks for a great video. Its a pleasure to watch.
Violet, you always make my day with your generous feedback. Thank you so much! Sending big hugs to you!
TRUE FOOD TV Your welcome Nicole! Xox
this comment just made my day❤
I found this channel and have become a big fan. So educational and your enthusiasm and smile are wonderful. I planted a pecan tree when I lived in Texas. It was just one 18" stick in the ground and never seemed to do anything. After about 2 years of mowing around it I decided I'd just run over it with my lawn mower which I did! It cut a slit in the "trunk" but otherwise didn't seem to do anything. The next year it took off and grew in length and girth. It eventually grew into a very large tree with a wye trunk where the split was. By the time we moved 25 years later it was producing nuts in huge quantities which we sold for a handsome amount. A very messy tree but well worth it.
Wow thank you good episode. Several comments.
1. In the Midwest where I am from (over 40 yr ago), we used the "Pe-cahn" pronc.
In Western Tidewater VA, where I live now, the locals say "Pe-can", emphasis on the first syllable. I use to tell people that "Pe-cahn" is the nut, and "Pe-can" is what you take in the boat when you go fishing.
2. Don't buy shelled pecans. In the shell tastes better, they are easier to store for long periods.
3. The wood is beautiful. I was a forestry major. It's really pretty grain, with color variation. Don't stain it. Oil and let it age. Some specialty yards might carry it. If you know of a tree coming down, you might get someone to cut it into "flitches" if you have wood worker friends. Insect damage sometimes leave stains that look great in furniture.
4. You can also grind or chop pecans in the off season and put them in bread, muffins and similar yeast based products. I've done that.
Awesome video !
Love how thoroughly you cover your subject and your personality is infectious!
Thank you and the umbrella scene with shower of pecans was my favorite!
Thank you, David -- you always leave such lovely comments.
Love your vids!! And this journalistic style
thank you!
Journalism is not a style it is a job and you need to study it , which clearly, she hasn't .
Мені сподобалося також. Успіхів у роботі😉
You are amazing, could You make this kind of video about mango fruits?
This is my favorite one yet! I love the little history in there too in regards to the person behind the cultivation!
I'm so glad you enjoyed it!!
I love watching your videos, they’re like relaxing in a way. Can you also do a video about how do coconuts grow? My family just started planting coconuts, i wanna know how does it work since the farm is in a remote province area. Thanks ❤️
you radiate such good vibes!!
thank you!
Gabriel Rawlings @ she is beautiful!!!
I said the same thing while reading your comment...
TRUE FOOD TV you guys are awesome!!! Blessings!
Le
I'd love to see an episode on green tea! Thank you Nicole! Thank you for your team for educating us while keeping us entertained! Kudos!
I'm so glad you enjoy the videos! Yes, tea video(s) coming soon!
By far this is my favourite video of your channel.. Music, Energy, Narration, i loved it..
Can't say I'm all that impressed. I grew-up with a pecan tree in my back yard as a kid. Right next to almond, fig, orange, apple, apricot, cherry, lemon and walnut trees. :)
Your style of presentation is soo good. It's like watching a musical sitcom but very informative
This is my number one favorite nut, by far (especially when they are candied pralines lol).. I actually just happened to buy some Maple pecan granola this morning, too..
My favorite too!
Growing up in Texas we had 2 pecan trees in the backyard. Every year we would fill up buckets full of them. Made great snacks. We would add them to salads, Chocolate fudge, trail mixes, and pies. I felt a little nostalgic watching this video lol.
Glad to bring you a little piece of home! ;)
Absolutely splendid. Amazing what I’ve forgotten over time about your wonderful videos. You are so adorable and charismatic.
Dwayne, you're too kind!
Today 11/17/17 I predict and mark my words, you will end up with a show in the food network channel or something similar as big as food network. I can see it happening sooner than you think. Best wishes for you, this is one of my favorite RUclips channels.
You're too kind, Jorge! I'm so glad you enjoy the videos.
+Jorge Moreno I'm thinking the same, She's a very talented TV presenter
Not of she keeps saying pea can
TRUE FOOD TV This should be a good Netflix documentary!
TRUE FOOD TV hope you can show us how vanilla beans grow sometime :-) happy holidays
This was very interesting! I never thought about how pecans grew and I'm glad I watched this video. Keep it up and you deserve a lot more subscribers :)
thank you!!
I grew up in the American south along the Mississippi river, and the pecan trees were plentiful and native there. As kids, we would collect these nuts in five gallon cans, and earn good pocket money (for a kid) doing this. BTW: I love your videos.
Pecans are my favorite nut, but very expensive here. Need to locate varieties for maritime zone 7. And thank you so much Antoine!
Always excited when a new video is uploaded! Thanks for the awesome content ! Very fun and informative !
You're very welcome!
Im from south asian country call sri lanka this is the first time i heard this pecan nut thanx for the information can some one explain me what it use for??
Mahikantha boange of course we can. I’m from Texas so these nuts are plentiful here. Pecans are mostly consumed by itself. They have a very good taste. And like she mentioned we use them for pies during thanksgiving( a holiday very important to us here in the US, which is actually this upcoming Thursday.) if you ever get a chance to eat a Texas pecan pie take it!
Pecans are often baked into desserts (with lots of sugar) or eaten plain. Have you had walnuts before? They are very similar.
Mahikantha boange so good on your own. Even if you just dip them in honey it's so good. They're bit expensive but well worth it you can talk almost any dessert with them even ice cream. definitely try before you die
Mahikantha boange I don't know if you speak Tamil or not, but I found the Wikipedia page for pecans in Tamil: ta.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E0%AE%AA%E0%AF%87%E0%AE%95%E0%AF%8D%E0%AE%95%E0%AE%BE%E0%AE%A9%E0%AF%8D?wprov=sfla1
Unfortunately, I couldn't find a page for it in Sinhala, so hopefully you know Tamil! Much love to Sri Lanka, from Israel. 🇱🇰🇮🇱🇱🇰🇮🇱🇱🇰🇮🇱🇱🇰
Wikipedia: Pecan.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video! So much great information and well covered. Thank you.
Thanks so much for watching!
When I was a kid my mom and I would walk through the park for hours picking up pecans, we would come home and crack them, it took days but we had enough pecans to make desserts for Christmas. Lots of work but incredible memories!
I did hear it hear first! I love how I learn new things from your channel - please keep them coming?
thank you! you got it!
Lovely episode nicole. Loving every episode. Thank you for bring such precious knowledge. Cheers!
thank you so much!
Randy Hudson has a beautiful voice and accent. I could listen to him all day long.
My aunt and uncle also grow Pecans in Shreveport from 4 trees that are over 100 years old and sell them to local stores and people
Oh those trees must be beautiful!
Nice video, so interesting and well made 😊
Thank you!
Andrew!!! I just realized it was you -- THANK YOU so much for providing such a stunning track for this episode. It's a gorgeous piece of music that really elevated our footage. You're the best. -- Nicole
Yes, Andrew. The very best!
Hey can you mention which track was this, I have been listened to almost all your tracks on Spotify, but can't find this one.
Taha Kachwala it’s called “almost winter”
Pralines 😋 (I prefer pecan over walnut. There something about walnut that I am not a huge fan of..)
Mmmmmm, pralines
Pekans are a little better tasting than walnuts but the walnuts are much healthyer than pekans.
There is a world of difference in black walnuts and English walnuts
You are so damn charming and such a good narrator/reporter. I could honestly watch you explain how pain dries if you smiled. Glad to see the channel keeps growing!
You're too kind! Thank you, Nelson!
I got into eating pecans year round a couple years ago. I'm a Georgia resident, so I was interested in native foods. I use to pan-fry them with butter and mix them into scrambled eggs. Now I just toast and salt them. My favorite nut by far. I hope a domestic market can take off so pecans are a bit cheaper. They're an expensive habit of mine.
informative and very entertaining as always.
thanks for the upload
thanks for watching!
Didn't know the Chinese are going Pecan over this nut! Good for the farmers
when i was a kid we had a huge beautiful pecan tree in our yard and me and my brother would gather them up every year and share them with our friends and neighbors. i would make pralines with my aunt and that was so much fun.
it's also really interesting to think about the fact that oak alley is where the first pecan tree was grafted. oak alley is right down the road from where i am.
I hope she'll have more shows . So much positive aura from her ♡
Thank you!
You have inspired me to try and make more things pecans. Great video
Yes!! Thank you!
Your videos make me smile, help me fight depression. Thank you
I'm so glad you enjoy them. thanks for watching!
Thanks again Nicole!!! Amazing video I'll make sure to get my self some pecans here in Guatemala. Please keep the amazing job ! 🤗
Thanks so much!
I’m starting to get addicted to this storyteller. Best thing i watched today again
I really LOVE this channel :) more videos please :)
thank you!
You are unique! Educational video are Awesome
thank you so much!
This was really informative. The video was really well edited, the sound design was beautiful, and the script was really well written.
Wow! Such lovely video. A treat for the mind AND the eyes because it's always so well put together like a piece of art. I sing your praises all the time with each video and have yet never felt like I should stop. You guys are amazing! I appreciate you all.
I appreciate you, Sheldon! Thanks for such a lovely endorsement of what we do.
I'm an Indian and never heard of it before thanks for the knowledge..
Btw it looked to me like a walnut
gaurav arya Same
I also think they look like walnuts
I am from jammu kashmir and we have acouple of these peacan walnut trees
Pecan nuts are tasty. Companion with such nuts is good cup of coffee.
Always interesting and informative videos, with a positive vibes to them too. Always learned something new on your videos. Long may it continue!
Thank you so much!
Nicole Jolly really shined in this episode; the host felt genuine. The scene where she and the farmer crack nuts and we see the strength of the pecan farmer's grip is enjoyable. And the scene where she drives the tractor comes across as less acted than it was purely experienced and reacted to. Made me smile :)
Thank you! I'm glad the fun I was really feeling came through!
Thank you for mentioning the pronunciation of pecan. Love this video.
Thanks for watching!
@@TrueFoodTV why change the pronunciation...? Leave it to murica I guess huh??? Honestly pretty obnoxious... even the person harvesting the product said it properly yet you continue to butcher it. Why?
Butter pecan ice cream is the best.
Mmmmmmmm
That is some quality cinematography. I appreciate the efforts.
My neighbor has a huge peacan tree. Every year we go help collecting them in 10 gallon buckets.
now we need a movie or a book about Antoine, a man deserve a full investigation of his life and his amazing achievement. and really thank you for mentioning his name.
Awesome video.
Im a Chinese and a PECAN lovers too
felix liew 哦,你们在中国也有长山核桃吗? 我住在美国的时候常常吃长山核桃。它们非常好吃!
Jonah Safern 哈哈😄
我是Malaysian Chinese. My greatgrand father was from Guangzhou.
Besides Pistachios walnuts and cashew nuts, Pecan also famous in the south east asia region. They are really delicious nuts👍👍👍
In Malaysia .. we dont have pecan tree. We got lots of Durian trees. Hopefully TrueFood can make a video how durian tree grow😁😂😂😂
felix liew Oh, wow! Yeah, I'd love to see a video on durians. I hope they also make one on mangosteen. Mangosteen is delicious. I've never had durian, but I'd like to try it sometime.
Jonah Safern in Malaysia we have plenty of diff varieties or durian trees and mangosteen tree. The newest update durians tat we export to china is 猫山王。bitter sweet . U either love it of hate it
Japanese mangosteen also a new breed in Malaysia. With the shape of a heart with sweet n crunchy flesh. Wish u can try it.
I wish i can share u some photos...
I didnt know chinese people can like pecans!
Love this video, sooo informative. Learning things is my favorite pass time while I'm cooking, sewing or simply relaxing.
I"m so happy you enjoyed it, Karen. I hope you watch some of our other episodes too.
TRUE FOOD TV oh yeah, definitely.
We have so many producing pecan trees in our yard planted by squirrels. They're nice in cookies and muffins