How to Harvest and Shell Black Walnuts

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • This is the easiest way I've found on how to remove the hull and crack black walnuts. Learn how to identify the trees and nuts, then the easiest method to process the black walnut fruit.
    Check out my other videos, bookmark this channel by subscribing, it’s free!
    / @diane_r
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @ExaltedWarrior
    @ExaltedWarrior 5 лет назад +99

    I used to think that buying nuts from the store was expensive, but after seeing all the time and labor that goes into them, the price doesn't seem so bad. Great video!

    • @user-bb3je8il1c
      @user-bb3je8il1c Год назад +3

      They have machines for most of the hard work.

    • @galeparker1067
      @galeparker1067 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@user-bb3je8il1cI think commercial Walnuts are from English Walnut trees..... 👃✌️🥰🇨🇦

    • @regenamann_0005
      @regenamann_0005 11 месяцев назад +1

      I feel the same way about
      Baking~as I buy
      Expensive exotic
      Flours---millet; quinoa; coconut etc. *It cost me image of expense to make a loaf of bread!"

    • @user-bb3je8il1c
      @user-bb3je8il1c 11 месяцев назад

      @@regenamann_0005 was trying to be a smart ass now that I have reread it, I could have said that different lol have a great night

  • @markr6754
    @markr6754 3 года назад +6

    My wife and I just confirmed that that nuisance tree with those nasty citrus fruits are in fact valued Black Walnut trees. We’ve lived in Ohio for 25 years and only now come to realize this thanks to the NextDoor app and some kind neighbors. I’m ready to cut open some of these and try my luck at processing them. Thanks for the video...hulling the nuts was the part that many keep leaving out.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  3 года назад

      You are welcome, Mark. They are tasty. My grandmother used to put a piece of a black walnut on her Christmas sandtart cookies.

  • @ElainesCountryHome
    @ElainesCountryHome 4 года назад +36

    I remember doing this as a child. We would pick up black walnuts on the side of the road. We usually got a couple of bushel baskets full. It was our job to peel and shell them. My mom made a lot of good things with them, though. Thanks for sharing this, it brought back a lot of memories.

  • @coop5329
    @coop5329 5 лет назад +42

    I earn my living growing and gathering foods for a handful of fancy restaurants. Black walnuts are one of my fall/winter staple products, so I am doing this on a small commercial scale. I handle the black walnuts almost the same way as shown here with one big improvement on the vise--I finally invested in a Grandpa's Goody Getter, and it speeds up the cracking incredibly. If you can get your hands on one, you can crack the hardest nuts quickly and in quantity. I don't know if they are still for sale/being made and full disclosure, I have no ties whatsoever to the maker. I also crack hickory nuts with it. It has made a big difference in my fall season income as well as being a lot easier on my hands and arms.

    • @BeachsideHank
      @BeachsideHank 5 лет назад +6

      www.grandpasgoodygetter.com/

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад +6

      Thanks for the helpful comments. The contribution to the video is appreciated.

    • @davidgreathouse2442
      @davidgreathouse2442 4 года назад

      They were still being made about a year ago. I use mine for all kinds of nuts, from hazel nuts and pecans to the largest walnuts. It works very well.

    • @michaeltewes7833
      @michaeltewes7833 2 года назад +1

      @@BeachsideHank very nice video !
      Those nuts are almost impossible to break open without destroying the meat inside

    • @thedillestpickle
      @thedillestpickle 2 года назад +3

      Is there any use for the husks? They seem to have a strong dye that might be useful.

  • @susanforte7034
    @susanforte7034 2 года назад +7

    In 1962 (age 12) I spent 6 weeks with a family in France about an hour out of Paris. Their little farm was called "Les Broux", which meant something like "juice of the walnuts". They made a potent after-dinner liqueur out of the walnuts, harvesting them in July when they were small and tender. They quartered the whole nut, husk and all, using a penknife, and added them to a mixture of grain alcohol (and I think some red table wine), water, tea leaves, and sugar in a large covered barrel. They stirred the fermenting mixture every day, and after a few months, strained the liquid. Once aged, the product was jet black and clear, and extremely strong. I can't describe the taste other than sweet with strong tannins (at 12, I didn't have much frame of reference).

    • @geezermann7865
      @geezermann7865 2 года назад +1

      Thanks for that interesting story. That must have been potent, as you say. And I am only two years behind you in age.

    • @karabean
      @karabean 10 месяцев назад

      Now that would be a video I could really get behind

  • @jbal6097
    @jbal6097 4 года назад +21

    What a process!!! There’s a couple of trees in our back yard and I thought about harvesting them, but now I’m just thinking I’ll let the wildlife have them, unless I get desperate. Thanks for the info. Good thorough video!

  • @rjuren
    @rjuren 5 лет назад +9

    Excellent instructional video. Clear and to the point. I hate when people are too wordy. You made this so clear to understand and covered all the important points. I have a tremendous harvest of black walnut and may just try this now.

    • @TiaraPoodles
      @TiaraPoodles Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/Fi3UQnel_Fk/видео.html

  • @helenvarner5787
    @helenvarner5787 Год назад +3

    My Grandpa used to give us a large burlap sack full of walnuts to take home. He had a lot of trees! I never knew how much work it was processing them.😮❤😊

  • @davidhall8874
    @davidhall8874 5 лет назад +17

    Boy this brings back memories of my Grandfather teaching us grand children to do all of this fifty years ago!

    • @graphguy
      @graphguy 5 лет назад +2

      Out on Uncle Louie's farm there were hundreds of Black Walnut trees that we harvested from and hunted in those pristine 200 acres.
      A great memory.

    • @zippythechicken
      @zippythechicken 5 лет назад +2

      yeah i can remember my dad showing me when i was little... we had a tree but we never really harvested them but since he did when he was a kid he showed me how... they are seriously messy though and will stain your hands for a long time.

  • @NorthShoreJoe
    @NorthShoreJoe 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for the helpful video. I have 9 Black Walnut Trees and 5 Hickory Trees on our property here in West Virginia. It's the first week of October. You can hear the nuts falling all over the place. I'm teaching my 8yo Grand Daughter that the trees are giving us free food. She set up her Bench and Sandbox and started husking with me. She named her "Store" The Nut Palace....

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  2 года назад

      That's so cute. She is going to have a fond memory of her time spent with you.

  • @treelife365
    @treelife365 3 года назад +28

    Great video! I find it's much faster just to roll each one under a heavy boot until the seed pops out, then throw it in a 5 gallon bucket with the others (once you've stomped on a bunch). When the bucket is about 1/5 full, swish them around with water and they come out extremely clean (they are abrasive and scratch the meat off each other when being swirled aroun)!

  • @OzziesOddities
    @OzziesOddities 2 года назад

    I crack in the vice the same way. One thing I like is that you got the beautiful walnut trees from below, a nice sight.

  • @edwaite07
    @edwaite07 4 года назад +57

    I discovered long ago that if you wash the walnuts, then pour the water on an area of grass, the night-crawlers will come shooting out of the ground. Collect them and rinse them off, they will be good for fishing.
    Also I know that walnut trees and tomato plants do not co-exist

    • @GrumpyGenXGramps
      @GrumpyGenXGramps 3 года назад +11

      It’s illegal in all states, but if you pour the husks, the water (leaves work too) into a small pool of a fish containing stream, all the fish will float up and you can easily grab them with just your hands. If it is a faster flowing stream, they will recover pretty fast. This works best in a larger pool of slow moving streams, creeks or branch. Like I said tho, it IS illegal but is also a good thing to know in a survival situation or if the world continues to go sideways.

    • @kcb5336
      @kcb5336 2 года назад

      @@GrumpyGenXGramps that’s amazing!

    • @brianedwards5113
      @brianedwards5113 2 года назад +1

      Can you elaborate on walnut trees and tomato plants not co-existing? I've been having problems with my tomato plants and there happen to be walnut trees that loom over.

    • @annefernysupdates6617
      @annefernysupdates6617 2 года назад +3

      @@brianedwards5113 There is a chemical in the rind that can leach into the soil killing or stunting the growth of some plants

  • @sueeddieoconnor7700
    @sueeddieoconnor7700 2 года назад

    best information on black walnuts … thank you for this video

  • @markklosterman5331
    @markklosterman5331 4 года назад +4

    Never a better tasting vanilla ice cream complement.

  • @marlanerenner5835
    @marlanerenner5835 11 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent detailed, instructor video! Thank you for taking the time to share it with the world!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  11 месяцев назад

      I'm glad you enjoyed it!

  • @papasteve215
    @papasteve215 7 лет назад +37

    Great video. Thanks, 60 years ago when I was just a little fella my grand mother would gather the walnuts into the gravel driveway and when the cars ran over them the hulls were removed from the nut shell. But like I say that was 60 years ago and the cars had different tires that were more balloon like. But it worked great. After a few days she would just gather the nuts, shell them and she made the best cakes with those walnuts.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +8

      Good to hear you enjoyed the video. Thanks for the compliment and telling about a fond memory.

    • @AlexAnder-yj1qs
      @AlexAnder-yj1qs 5 лет назад +5

      Wholesome RUclips comments right here.

    • @sherylhuffman9200
      @sherylhuffman9200 5 лет назад +3

      Papa Steve I remember hand cranked black walnut ice cream . That was so good .

    • @mistyman591
      @mistyman591 4 года назад +1

      Thats the way my dad did it

  • @Janetdavenporttdk10
    @Janetdavenporttdk10 5 лет назад +1

    Counting our next door neighbors tree, I grew up helping 'harvest English Walnuts from 3 trees yearly. We waited for the rains to start causing them to drop. If the tree was ready you would see the hulls splitting open before they hit the ground. When the amounts falling daily, start increasing, my Dad would get his long 'limb trimmer' out. Without cutting the branches, he'd grab hold of one and shake it bring any more ready to drop down , hopefully breaking the nuts away from the green outer shell...then like you did... remove and wash the rest of the of the green off. With not much sun in the Fall in Oregon, our walnuts were laid out on old window screens - in the basement, in two different attic spaces, and in the area/ room at the top of the stairs on the second floor. I don't remember any being set up in our bedrooms but they would be all over the house, including the hallway on the first floor. And it seemed to me they were left drying for at least a month, my brother and I got to keep the nuts regularly turned and rolled around during the drying time. After that we used a nutcracker to open the shells.

  • @scottweaver1766
    @scottweaver1766 4 года назад +28

    My grandmother had us dump all the hulls on the gravel drive way leading to the house, and than pick up the dehulled shells prior to to first snow. Then the cracking would commence. If we wanted wallnuts in fudge for Xmas we had to earn it.

    • @iceblueeyes9455
      @iceblueeyes9455 2 года назад

      Yeah we would sack up hundreds and when hull turned black we would dump out on gravel road an d he would roll over them. We put our gloves on ans rubb them clean then dry them

  • @kijihigh6826
    @kijihigh6826 10 месяцев назад +1

    I have just recently learned about natural walnuts from the wild. I had never seen them like this. I have begun harvesting them and now have learned an easy process to shell and clean them for an attractive appearance. At first it was a tedious process but I have mastered my own technique and now it is a lot of fun. I am now giving away packages of black walnuts as gifts. Black is really beautiful!!!

    • @kijihigh6826
      @kijihigh6826 10 месяцев назад +1

      Meant to say that I have learned an easy process to remove the husks, remove the inside residue and clean them up for a beautiful attractive appearance. Well with it! Not so difficult once you learn a quick technique.

    • @cheryllariccia2332
      @cheryllariccia2332 10 месяцев назад +1

      Any chance you want to share your method? This is the first year I’ve collected any from my yard and now I’m in the trial and error phase! Oh boy!

    • @monicap65
      @monicap65 4 дня назад

      ​@@kijihigh6826would you mind sharing what you learned please😊

  • @kennyhagan5781
    @kennyhagan5781 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for the information, I have used the husks to make wood stain and dyes. The wood is beautiful when used in making furniture and is a nice hard wood. I also like the nuts in ice cream with a bit of toffee.

  • @return2basics242
    @return2basics242 11 месяцев назад

    Excellent video!
    I collected 3 bushels of black walnuts last year, hulled them, scrubbed them clean individually, let them dry out for about 2 days, then put them in 5 gallon buckets to wait until I could hear them rattle when you shake one (as another video I watched said to do) to crack some open and enjoy them.
    Not a single one ever rattled (meaning that the nut was no longer still a jelly like state). Finally, out of curiosity, i cracked a couple open about a month ago, late August/early Sept only to discover they've apparently gone bad. They don't taste very good.
    I think I made a couple mistakes:
    1) I didn't cure them long enough before putting them away for winter,
    2) the area I stored them was probably too warm
    3) stacking them together in buckets left no room for airflow.
    That was alot of work with zero results. If that was a food source that I was truly dependent on, that could've been a tragic mistake and huge waste of time and energy.
    I've just picked up my first half a bushel today to try again. Hopefully I'll get some yummy walnuts this time

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  11 месяцев назад

      Sorry to hear that last year's crop didn't work out for you. I would get them out of the shells after curing them for 4-6 weeks. When I was a youngster in the 1970's, my grandmother always had sand tart cookies at Christmas. Each cookie had a piece of a black walnut in the center. There were no computers, cell phones, only 3 channels on TV, not too much to do on a long dark evening. I know my grandfather didn't shell those nuts, there were likely bought from some local who made some pocket change by collecting, processing and selling them. A lot of folks talk about black walnut cake that their grandma made. If you were to take a nut out of the shell without curing it, you will notice that it is kind of wet and doesn't taste so great. You could try sampling one once a week while they are curing and see how the taste changes as they dry out a bit.

  • @pdog5731
    @pdog5731 7 лет назад +4

    My Grandma used to have me pick them up off the ground underneath the tree when the outer hulls had turned dark. Still had to wear gloves so our hands wouldn't get stained. She made the best black walnut cake with them!

    • @daisyj4035
      @daisyj4035 4 года назад

      Do you have the recipe? Sounds like a great family recipe to share

  • @travelersworldcafellc7036
    @travelersworldcafellc7036 5 лет назад +1

    no narrative no nonsense! nice work for real thanks. No big story or pics of your dog or any of that.. actual information.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад

      You are welcome. I try not to waste your time.

  • @tracytuttle9437
    @tracytuttle9437 5 лет назад +36

    Omg that is so much work! No wonder they’re so expensive in the store.

    • @Copyright-di4we
      @Copyright-di4we 4 года назад

      Harvesting is a bitch too. We don't have this exact species of walnut where I live but around here we hit the nuts hanging on the tree with long sticks, and oftentimes we have to climb the tree to get to the rest of them. Then just pick them from the ground.

    • @SuzanneAllison
      @SuzanneAllison 4 года назад

      @@wendelltidwell830 You should show us a link to your website...then we can check it out.

    • @margarettburns7035
      @margarettburns7035 4 года назад +3

      They have machines to do all that.

    • @ronvalley1973
      @ronvalley1973 4 года назад

      i bet that brazilian walnuts are picked by people getting one dollar per hour, it is the middle man making all the peanut butter.......

    • @euphoria156
      @euphoria156 3 года назад +2

      @@ronvalley1973 - Hey Ronnie- Because of currency difference, $1 could be a lot of money in some countries but yes that is still not enough for labors

  • @beebob1279
    @beebob1279 3 года назад +2

    Curing 4-6 weeks is just in time for Christmas cookies. Black Walnut cookies are my favorite

  • @DougDeCarlo
    @DougDeCarlo 4 года назад +4

    The diagonal pliers work great - thanks! After hulling, a spiral drill bit for stirring paint is a good way to agitate the nuts.

  • @OhioGirl-bu2kv
    @OhioGirl-bu2kv 7 лет назад +1

    When I was younger, my Dad and me used to go next door to our neighbor's house (after asking her permission) to collect black walnuts out of her yard.
    My Dad's mother used to make Black Walnut Cake.
    He always wanted to make it but didn't know how.
    We collected black walnuts and a friend of his made Black Walnut Cake.
    I thought it was pretty good.
    I just recently collected some black walnuts to try and make Black Walnut Cake.
    I used to watch my Dad husk the walnuts.
    He would wear thick gloves because the outer shell once cut open, would stain whatever you are wearing.
    Then he would take a hammer and break open the shell to get the walnuts.
    Great video.
    Thanks for posting.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  6 лет назад +1

      Thanks for sharing the memory. I've never had Black Walnut Cake, reading the comments, it seems that it was a favorite for many people. My grandmother made Christmas cookies (Sandtarts) and put a piece of a black walnut in the center of each cookie.

  • @pokermel
    @pokermel 5 лет назад +7

    I haven't been near a walnut tree in many years. But just watching this video immediately reminded me of that distinctive odor they have. I could smell it through the video, lol.

  • @juliepepe256
    @juliepepe256 5 лет назад +1

    Im from Pennsylvania and lived there for yearssss and then moved to montana and never saw these again until today....it felt just like home

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад

      Hey Julie, it's great to hear that the video took you down memory lane. If you want to see more Pennsylvania scenery, lately I've been hiking along the Delaware & Hudson canal with a group. We are planning to do all 108 miles of it. I've taking pictures, making slideshows and posting them on my channel.

  • @stewsstructures83
    @stewsstructures83 5 лет назад +141

    Just a quick note if you use a bucket of water to clean the nuts any that float are usually bad and not worth the time to process !!!

    • @budholloway9868
      @budholloway9868 4 года назад +2

      Thanks that was gonna be my questions.funny that the squirrels know which ones have nut inside

    • @slaphappysmokey1
      @slaphappysmokey1 4 года назад +1

      So, we treat it like gourd seeds? Sinkers are all goodm floaters won't produce a plant next sow time?

    • @leeheagney1713
      @leeheagney1713 4 года назад +1

      Also the water can be use to get fishing worms!

  • @coolbeans7349
    @coolbeans7349 Год назад

    this was so informative, id want this lady with me in a apocalypse!

  • @patriotamazon189
    @patriotamazon189 5 лет назад +12

    Use them ground shells to put in paint you are painting stairs or decks on boats. You let it dry and you will never slip.

  • @MW-xm1rc
    @MW-xm1rc 11 месяцев назад

    Grew up next to grandpa’s farm. Lots of nut trees. We would pick them up, put them threw a hand crank corn shelter then wash them in a big tub and spread them out to dry. Then into wire barrels. Then crack them next to the wood stove during winter.

  • @davekitching6081
    @davekitching6081 4 года назад +16

    Here in Ontario we just wait for a couple of frosts then the husk turnes to mush.

  • @carminesilverado
    @carminesilverado 4 года назад

    I was 3/4 into this video before I realized who you are and it is your voice and presentation that tipped me you are a retired school teacher I love your videos you guide students well thank you

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  4 года назад

      I'm not a retired school teacher, some people think I'm Jodie Foster too! lol. Thanks for watching the video and the compliment.

  • @KENNYKISS69
    @KENNYKISS69 5 лет назад +7

    i planted a tree in my yard when I was 6 im now 50 and the tree is about 130 feet tall im going to try this for the first time.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад +2

      That's cool, you have a very special tree. I was out for a walk in my local park and saw a couple of the walnuts have dropped to the ground.

  • @laZOETje
    @laZOETje 3 года назад +2

    Thanks! Definitely an acquired taste. We planted one for my Dad and he has since passed away. Didn’t get any nuts. So I am refinishing his desk and using some walnut stain from the hulls and the rest for ink. So much work. Grandma always made banana bread with black walnuts. Broke a tooth on a hull. But I’ll try to make one for old times sake.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  3 года назад +2

      You are welcome. Sorry to hear of your Dad's passing. It seems that many of us have memories of baked goods made with these nuts. My grandmother made Christmas sandtarts that had a piece of Black Walnut pressed into the middle.

  • @raymondsimpson7433
    @raymondsimpson7433 5 лет назад +16

    Trust me when i say i have been eating these all my life, they make the best divinity in the world hands down. Now the ones that were black and you said no good are in fact good, the best way to prepare them is pick them up put them in a bucket and let them turn black and dry up then you just put some gloves on and roll them in your hands and the husk will just fall off, then clean them with a brush. Next crack them with a hammer and let them sit for a while in a dry place then finish getting the nuts out that's the hard part lol.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад +2

      I think you are missing the point, the dried up black walnut in the video is from the prior year. It's no good, the squirrels didn't pick it up either. If you took the time to crack it open there will be no nut. I'm showing an obviously bad nut. I'm not arguing that your way is wrong.... just trying to show a nut you shouldn't waste your time cracking.

    • @raymondsimpson7433
      @raymondsimpson7433 5 лет назад +5

      @@Diane_R walnuts like that are usually good down here, we pick them all up and if we crack a bad one we discard it, all I was saying is just because it's black don't mean it's not any good lol if I pick one up and it feels really light I will throw it away

    • @Alwis-Haph-Rytte
      @Alwis-Haph-Rytte 5 лет назад +3

      That's how my neighbor use to do them too, but he used a small vice to crack them. A vice doesn't shoot shells or whack fingers, LOL

    • @raymondsimpson7433
      @raymondsimpson7433 5 лет назад +1

      @@Alwis-Haph-Rytte lol I know about the finger whacking, them are some tough nuts lol

    • @themost6260
      @themost6260 4 года назад +2

      Bro please 😫🙏🙏💓 tell me that Black walnuts tatse good than English or Californian walnuts????

  • @backyard.gardenrows
    @backyard.gardenrows 5 лет назад +1

    Just processed my second batch of the year today! We have about 6 smaller trees and one older one on our property and these poor trees and bending and snapping from how heavy they’ve been carrying this year. Squirrels are in heaven!

  • @joemyerson8646
    @joemyerson8646 4 года назад +3

    Interesting and informative. I am in New England, and I've got several large black walnut trees at the edge of my yard.

  • @NorthernRiderOffroad
    @NorthernRiderOffroad 3 года назад +1

    Im just getting started. Theres some great advice here. Thanks for sharing. My whole yard is black walnut trees. I had no idea till now theyre edible

  • @olderendirt
    @olderendirt 7 лет назад +5

    I love the tip for using a bench vise. I knew that in the 1800s the brown water from soaking leftover green skins was used to make hair dye and then happened to find a lock in an old family Bible so I'm pretty sure that's what it is. I used the dye on some white doilies and they came out a beautiful ecru color. I'm ready to harvest mine now so this has been very helpful. Black walnuts, especially with chocolate, are ambrosia to me. Thank you.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +2

      You are welcome. I've never tried making dye. Since walnut trees and the brown water is supposed to be toxic to some plants, I've experimented and dumped the brown water on some weeds. The weeds just laughed. I've read that a lot of native plants aren't bothered by the toxins.

    • @bobshepard9751
      @bobshepard9751 7 лет назад

      olderendirt s

    • @olderendirt
      @olderendirt 6 лет назад

      I wouldn't use the dye on my own hair or something that would come into bodily contact a lot because of the toxins, but other things probably wouldn't be bad. Common sense being key.

  • @christinae.burlison936
    @christinae.burlison936 4 года назад +1

    Best video on this subject. Thanks!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  4 года назад

      You are welcome, Christine!

  • @elained2448
    @elained2448 7 лет назад +45

    Thank you! I've got a couple black walnuts and the fruit is dropping. When I was a kid, we had an English walnut tree by the horse arena. My horse would break those open for my dog who patiently waited. It was hilarious to watch but not so wise to interfere with their bonding moments

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +8

      You are welcome. Wish I could have soon your dog and horse. lol.

    • @lordmaximus4602
      @lordmaximus4602 5 лет назад +1

      @@Diane_R manifesting ^_^

  • @cserohs
    @cserohs 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for a very well laid out and straightforward video

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  2 года назад

      You are welcome, Craig.

  • @parbar12
    @parbar12 5 лет назад +3

    If you wait, the hulls turn black, rot and are loose. rub them off. let nuts dry for 6-8 weeks or more. the nutmeaty shrink a little from the shell , a little easier to get out. I have given away 13 brown grocery bags so far, and have kept 3 for myself. one tree. other tree, very few. used to dye stuff as a child, now it is just my fingers!

  • @ckoudsi617
    @ckoudsi617 3 года назад +1

    Cool! They are in Cambridge, MA now. I went on a walk with my son and his wife and we found a bunch of them (at Fresh Pond).

  • @gig777
    @gig777 4 года назад +62

    The black gunky walnuts that look bad are alright to harvest. They look bad, but they are perfectly good. I actually prefer them since they are very easy to hull.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  4 года назад +6

      I was trying to show last year's dried up nuts. In hindsight, I should have pointed that out. Some people do prefer to let the hulls turn black. I chose to show removing the green hulls, that is the preferred way by professional growers. Either way is fine, it's a personal preference.

    • @patricksarama4963
      @patricksarama4963 4 года назад +4

      They also have the most protein of any tree nut

    • @marknussbaum8394
      @marknussbaum8394 4 года назад +4

      The black gunky walnuts produce a stronger flavored nutmeat, which most people don't care for. If you hull green walnuts and wash them, you can process them immediately or dry them and hull them later, but they'll have a milder flavor with few or no bitter nutmeats. But, it's a question of personal preference and taste.

    • @beckywebb1916
      @beckywebb1916 2 года назад +1

      @@marknussbaum8394 Thanks! I always wondered why some walnuts tasted bitter.

    • @gaylescovel7308
      @gaylescovel7308 2 года назад +1

      @@beckywebb1916 , i always wondered about that too. So i never cared for walnuts as they were always bitter when i had them. Now i know why. There are places that will hull them for you n keep the hulls to make iodine.

  • @bnghjtyu767
    @bnghjtyu767 4 года назад

    I have a five gallon bucket of walnuts that have not been cracked in my shop that's been there over 20 years I had some out just the other day looks like about 1 out of 8 nuts are dried up and no good the rest are fine. unbelievable that long Of time.one of the adults when I was a kid I always said you'd starve to death eating walnuts. However They are so good it's such a gift from God.

  • @Tom-yc8jv
    @Tom-yc8jv 7 лет назад +347

    I have found it's 10 times faster, just training a group of squirrels to do all this for me. I pay them for their work with peanuts...

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +15

      And you are keeping those squirrels out of the bird feeder. Brilliant! Hee Hee, thanks for the humor Tom.

    • @greysilverback3924
      @greysilverback3924 7 лет назад +23

      Tom Champman ,lol. You can also let the squirrels eat the nuts and harvest the squirrels .you can empty their stomachs and have crushed walnuts along with meat.Its a win win.

    • @Know-How-Now
      @Know-How-Now 7 лет назад +5

      Or you can make squirrel pot pie! lol!

    • @slapusille
      @slapusille 6 лет назад +9

      Tom Champman hilarious! My squirrels taunt me by leaving the shells on my deck

    • @sublimesquirrel
      @sublimesquirrel 5 лет назад +2

      I do the opposite to my squirrels😂

  • @DanielSnedden
    @DanielSnedden 7 лет назад +2

    Great video. I have tried harvesting these before but could never get good results. It is a lot of work. Thanks!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +1

      You are welcome. It is a lot of work, however, they do taste really good and it is hard to find black walnuts for sale. Cracking them open help you find your inner squirrel! lol.

  • @thomasgarrison3949
    @thomasgarrison3949 7 лет назад +83

    Thanks for the info about the husks killing plants, I dumped my husks on a unwanted Poison Ivy patch, I hope it kills the Poison Ivy!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +15

      Let us know if it kills the Poison Ivy. I tried putting it on some weeds and they laughed at it. Some native plants are immune to it.

    • @stupidman9774
      @stupidman9774 7 лет назад

      it wont kill plants or grasses,
      only other long lived trees.

    • @thomasgarrison3949
      @thomasgarrison3949 6 лет назад +44

      It killed the Poison Ivy, grass & weeds!

    • @thomasgarrison3949
      @thomasgarrison3949 6 лет назад +18

      It killed the Poison Ivy, grass & weeds.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  6 лет назад +13

      Thanks for the update Thomas.

  • @mykehunt2430
    @mykehunt2430 3 года назад

    I just discovered a few black walnut trees at the edge of my yard . I can’t wait to harvest

  • @chrisflack1366
    @chrisflack1366 5 лет назад +4

    I pour about 50 gallons in my driveway and we just drive over them for several weeks. When the husks turn are black and dry i just pick the nuts up from around them and put them in a bucket.

  • @NickijoeCanuck
    @NickijoeCanuck 3 года назад +1

    I had no idea! thanks for an informative video. I now appreciate the process of harvesting walnuts more.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  3 года назад

      You are welcome. Harvesting black walnuts is a lot of work, that's why they more expensive than the English Walnuts. There are some processing plants in the mid west for commercial growers.

  • @robertcarmody194
    @robertcarmody194 5 лет назад +6

    We had several walnut trees around our house in Arkansas when I was a kid. We would collect the walnuts when they fell and dump them in a low spot in the driveway and let the cats drive over them. In a day or so we would collect them, clean the hulls off the nuts, and wash them in well water. Then we could crack them at our leisure.

    • @thisguy8916
      @thisguy8916 2 года назад

      You had cats that drove? ruclips.net/video/5fvsItXYgzk/видео.html

  • @gaylescovel7308
    @gaylescovel7308 2 года назад

    Well! I have successfully read thru every reply comment. Learned some really good stuff too! Got a good laugh. Grampa's goodie getter n a corn sheller were the best. Tincture was another, die for wood/cloth/spun wool. Oh n a wine recipe but no measurements. Was worth all the reading time. Especially liked the stories n complaints were humorous except for one. Which was handled quite well!
    Edit to add: can compost too!!!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  2 года назад +1

      I love reading the fond memories so many people associate with Black Walnuts. My grandmother put them on top of her Christmas sand tart cookies. Of course there is no one right way to process them. I went with the method used by professional growers. I do think the taste varies a bit from tree to tree, on how soon you remove the hulls and how long you allow them to dry out.

  • @darylefleming1191
    @darylefleming1191 5 лет назад +5

    I am surprise you didn't mention about the stain of the black walnuts. Black walnuts have a deep rich flavor.

  • @Habschick1971
    @Habschick1971 10 месяцев назад

    Great video. Thanks for the information . Very helpful.

  • @larryscott3982
    @larryscott3982 4 года назад +12

    Wow. I was all about trying to process a bunch.
    Not anymore

    • @jennifers7037
      @jennifers7037 4 года назад

      I put them in a bag and step on it. 5 minutes and a whole bucket is clean. Only the washing takes more time. 🤭but it goes quick with a hard brush.

    • @larryscott3982
      @larryscott3982 4 года назад

      Jennifer s
      They’re plentiful and it makes sense to harvest them. I love them.
      But this looked a bit too much per pound. I might give it a try, but it’s probably a skill to get it done quickly and well.

    • @jennifers7037
      @jennifers7037 4 года назад +1

      @@larryscott3982 i never did it before. First time was hard but when I fou d out how quick it went by stepping on them I hot me two other buckets. 😁 girst rinsed it a few times with water and then brushed them with a hard naimbrush. Dried them one hour in the oven and tjey lay/hang drying in a net. I never even tasted them so hope I like them. 😳

    • @matthewpeterson1784
      @matthewpeterson1784 3 года назад

      @@jennifers7037 Well how were they? Did you like them?

  • @michellemillians8430
    @michellemillians8430 3 года назад +1

    I want to thank you SO much for this information!! I've been doing it wrong all along!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  3 года назад

      You are welcome, Michelle. It's my pleasure to help.

  • @tahanlaoboy
    @tahanlaoboy 5 лет назад +8

    The raw black walnuts hull can apply to the skin cancer and heal fast too it create the heat on the skin, but don't worry about it

    • @debbiee6535
      @debbiee6535 5 лет назад +1

      Add more on this skin cancer thing, please

  • @fernandomorales2310
    @fernandomorales2310 5 лет назад +2

    I was doing a siding job at a home and the home owner doesn’t even know how to process it and neither did I now I’ll come back and pick some up thanks

  • @billgrandone3552
    @billgrandone3552 7 лет назад +4

    I remember my family and friends filling gunny sacks with the fruit and driving over them slowly a few times. Gloves and old clothes are mandatory because the green "juice' really permanently stains. We would crack the nut with a ball peen hammer. We also picked hickory nuts, much smaller but easier to open.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +1

      That sounds like a fond memory, thanks for sharing it.

  • @margueritezerbest5269
    @margueritezerbest5269 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for this video. We have a lot of walnuts this year. I want some for baking but didn't know when to harvest. 2020

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  3 года назад

      You are welcome, Marguerite. Best wishes for the walnut harvest.

  • @squirrelhillfarm9070
    @squirrelhillfarm9070 5 лет назад +13

    The rotting hulls make good leather and trap dye I just put hulls in a half bucket of water then set traps in for a couple of weeks

    • @bexaidacandelaria5128
      @bexaidacandelaria5128 5 лет назад +2

      Squirrel Hill Farm
      Ues I thought so ! How long does the dye last? How do you make your dye?

    • @helenhighwater5313
      @helenhighwater5313 5 лет назад

      Also an ingredient in furniture stain/polish. The hard shells are pulverized and used as an abrasive.

    • @squirrelhillfarm9070
      @squirrelhillfarm9070 4 года назад

      Bexaida Candelaria try here for better details
      www.cascity.com/forumhall/index.php/board,57.0.html
      - I use a bit of alcohol mixed in the fermented hulls for leather.

    • @squirrelhillfarm9070
      @squirrelhillfarm9070 4 года назад

      Part of my reply disappeared- try here for leather dye questions
      www.cascity.com/forumhall/index.php/board,57.0.html

  • @tinkmarshino
    @tinkmarshino 6 лет назад

    outstanding I had forgotten exactly how (my mother showed this to me when I was a kid back in the 60's) Now I can go and harvest the walnut trees here this year.. Vancouver washington

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  6 лет назад

      Thanks for sharing the memory.

  • @Dba5675
    @Dba5675 7 лет назад +3

    You forgot the part about making ice cream with thee black walnuts. LOL

  • @carolkid1358
    @carolkid1358 7 лет назад

    We have a walnut tree in our yard and my husband is going to follow your instructions. Thank you.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад

      You are welcome. I just came back from a walk and saw they are starting to drop from the trees.

  • @sandywhat2429
    @sandywhat2429 3 года назад +10

    I now understand why they're so expensive. Pain in the butt to get to.

  • @pwammann1
    @pwammann1 4 года назад +1

    Excellent comprehension of the topic! Thanks for posting! There must be a better way to remove the shell other than with pliers!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  4 года назад +1

      You are welcome, Philip. There are large processing plants in the mid west. The bits of shells are used for sand blasting material. Some people have mentioned in the comments a "cracker" you can buy for small scale processing. I haven't tried it. The shells are really hard.

  • @Windyhillfarm71
    @Windyhillfarm71 7 лет назад +9

    You can use the hulls to make a wood stain after they turn black. You can also make a walnut tea out of the hulls that is good for stomach problems. I have 250 anchors of black walnut tress.

    • @reccocon3442
      @reccocon3442 7 лет назад

      Richard family farm Homestead : "acres"?
      Wow !
      Where are you folks to visit?

    • @DNGJustSnakes
      @DNGJustSnakes 7 лет назад +1

      You can make a tincture also that will heal broken teeth and cavities...may take a while but swish it in your mouth like mouth wash everyday for a couple months and it has been known to grow back teeth if there is still a root...

    • @disciplebill
      @disciplebill 7 лет назад +4

      Jack Of All Master Of None Nope. Can't regrow bones with plants. You've got one shot with teeth. No second chances. LMAO. Hilarious though.

    • @Mandyblue1984
      @Mandyblue1984 7 лет назад +4

      You can regrow bone with plants! How do you think you can heal from a broken leg or arm or whatever. All you need is calcium, one of the best calcium source is Alfalfa which is a plant. Also sea vegetables and Leafy green all high in calcium. Our bodies can do amazing thing. I don't know if this can regrow teeth or not, won't know until you try it.

    • @DNGJustSnakes
      @DNGJustSnakes 7 лет назад +2

      You can as long as there are original roots...oh..and your body grew the teeth in the first place and every bone in your body can heal itself...teeth are no different with the proper help..instead of dentists drilling out the roots and filling with a dam piece of epoxy...

  • @rlmccullough
    @rlmccullough 5 лет назад +2

    I have a Black Walnut in my yard in Central Alabama, Thanks for the advice!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад

      It's interesting to hear where people have reported that they have Black Walnut trees. When I did research for the video to find the range of the trees, it did not mention many of these locations.

    • @dogbiti
      @dogbiti 4 года назад

      I live in Montgomery and have several.They are really beautiful trees.

  • @beckyb8929
    @beckyb8929 7 лет назад +11

    Thanks for the video. I harvested 3 large basketfuls and have kept the cleaned nuts in the shell in my garage all winter. I tried shelling before with a hammer but the nuts didn't want to come loose. I left one basket out on the deck for the squirrels one cold winter day, assuming I'd never have the patience to shell more than one basket.... They were gone in a couple of hours. How do the squirrels shell these things!? I will get out my vise and see what happens!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +7

      You are welcome. It's most effective to start clipping away at the round end of the nut with the pliers.
      I've wondered about the squirrels too, they must have some really sharp teeth. They seem to magically know if a nut is bad and won't bother to shell it.

    • @BWeezy-sw1wy
      @BWeezy-sw1wy 6 лет назад +1

      Squirel teeth keep growing as they are worn down. And with their teeth being small they can build a high pressure on the shell with a small force. Actually my dogs have been getting some too and my vet claimed her teeth were still fine.

    • @jackwilcox5511
      @jackwilcox5511 5 лет назад

      B. Weezy v

  • @pamelacorona3665
    @pamelacorona3665 3 года назад

    Black walnuts ⚫ 🌳 are soooo good.
    My grandfather would sit patiently under the black walnut ⚫ 🌳 tree
    cracking the walnuts sharing them with me
    he was a patient Pisces ♓
    At 1:50 of your video I've never seen black walnuts that big.
    And I'm sure you know that the green hulls of a black walnut tree 🌳 kills ringworm.
    Thank You 🙋‍♀️

  • @edwardtsema7740
    @edwardtsema7740 5 лет назад +5

    The walnuts are also really fragrant.

  • @helenhighwater5313
    @helenhighwater5313 5 лет назад

    The farm ladies near our small town used to scatter the unhulled walnuts in the driveway and drive back and forth over them to split the hulls, some labor saving there. We could always tell who had been working with walnuts by the brown stains on their hands. We were happy to get some of the final product to put on home made ice cream. Yum!

  • @lisahenderson6562
    @lisahenderson6562 6 лет назад +7

    Fastest way to crack a walnut - give it to our Blue & Gold Macaw, done in about 3 seconds :-)

  • @edro3838
    @edro3838 2 года назад

    Great in brownies and fudge!

  • @jennifersvitko5997
    @jennifersvitko5997 7 лет назад +39

    If you keep the nuts in a mesh bag, uncracked, they can last for years. I have nuts that are 5 YEARS OLD and they are darn tasty, still.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +1

      I never tried to store them that long, thanks for the information.

    • @DavidSmith-fr1uz
      @DavidSmith-fr1uz 7 лет назад +6

      Yes. In fact, to a point, the dryer the nut, the tastier it is. Drying concentrates the flavor. The same thing for pecans.

    • @splash5974
      @splash5974 5 лет назад

      Do they taste like commercial walnuts, purchased from stores?

    • @feltingme
      @feltingme 5 лет назад +6

      Not just they are tasty, they are much healthier, if cracked right before eating. The minute we open them the fats in them start becoming rancid. Some nuts faster than others. I do not even bother buying Brazil nuts or hazelnuts not in the shell.

    • @M_Ladd
      @M_Ladd 4 года назад +11

      My nuts are fifty years old and I never store them in a mesh bag! As to how tasty they are you will have to ask the wife!

  • @textar12
    @textar12 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for the advice. I plan on trying to harvest some this October.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  4 года назад +1

      You are welcome, Lauren. Best wishes for your Fall harvest.

  • @forestdweller5581
    @forestdweller5581 7 лет назад +6

    For cleaning the hulls off, even when they are unripe you can fit a circular wire brush attachment on your power drill. Strips those babies nice and clean, although one by one.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +1

      Thanks for the suggestion Forest.

  • @dadeo8957
    @dadeo8957 4 года назад +1

    I’m exhausted just watching the process!

  • @chrischupp9760
    @chrischupp9760 5 лет назад +14

    I was wondering how you plant them. I collected some and didn’t wear gloves to take the nut out. Stained fingers for days afterwards

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад +5

      I never tried planting them, though in the wild, it's likely the squirrels plant the trees. Here's a link to a page that tells how to plant them: hortnews.extension.iastate.edu/2008/8-27/walnuts.html

    • @patriotamazon189
      @patriotamazon189 5 лет назад +2

      Pretend you are a squirrel.

    • @Celticpath
      @Celticpath 5 лет назад +5

      I made that mistake not too long ago. lol I'd never harvested them before. I found out really quick that the hull juice makes a great stain! My hands and nails were stained for a couple of weeks. lol Lesson learned! 😂

    • @nikkireigns
      @nikkireigns 4 года назад +3

      Joy Underwood I just did the same and my fingers look like I've been playing in dirt 🤣 I should have found this wonderfully detailed video first!

    • @ronvalley1973
      @ronvalley1973 4 года назад +3

      that is how they invented walnut stain for wood.....

  • @amandahood7809
    @amandahood7809 5 лет назад +1

    I have a beautiful large black walnut tree in my front yard here in ✋🏼MI 💙
    Thank you for the information. 🌳

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  5 лет назад

      You are welcome. It's a bit of work, but the black walnuts have good flavor.

  • @lisamedlin96
    @lisamedlin96 7 лет назад +3

    The pulp of the hull if rubbed on ringworm every day for a week will get rid of the ringworm permanently. My mom did this to both my elbows the second year I had ringworm on my elbows. And we used a sledge hammer to crack the nuts.

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +1

      Thanks for sharing, Lisa.

  • @49lucky
    @49lucky 3 года назад +1

    Might do it this year since covid everything is so expensive.. I use to get syrup from my black walnut trees.

  • @scotcompston
    @scotcompston 5 лет назад +15

    The halls of black walnuts actually have medicinal value as does the shell

    • @alancameron2433
      @alancameron2433 5 лет назад +6

      tincture kills parasites....re Dr.Hulda Clark

    • @SilverGorilla1776
      @SilverGorilla1776 5 лет назад +6

      Steven Compston
      My dad used juice from the hull to get rid of a ringworm I had when I was a kid. Still remember him stopping at a house in town and asking the man if he could have a few. I was maybe 5 years old. It turned my skin brown but worked.

    • @lindamoses3697
      @lindamoses3697 5 лет назад +5

      I heard the hulls have sulfur compound in them. That is why they can draw the infection from tooth ache and jaw deterioration from a bad tooth.

  • @xaraxania
    @xaraxania 4 года назад

    thank you, I've just harvested my first proper crop of nut here in the UK, I've never harvested them before and didnt know what to do, thanks

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  4 года назад

      You are welcome, enjoy the black walnuts.

  • @TheMissourian
    @TheMissourian 7 лет назад +85

    ...use the hulls to make dyes and wood stain.

    • @M70ACARRY
      @M70ACARRY 7 лет назад +5

      Dat dude I suspect you do.

    • @cyrilschulting863
      @cyrilschulting863 6 лет назад +4

      Missourian

    • @zurieljoshua
      @zurieljoshua 6 лет назад +4

      You may want to consider that you are a terrible person.

    • @Reub3
      @Reub3 6 лет назад +2

      lol
      busting all kiiinds of nuts. aaaall kinds!

    • @ArcadiaOccult
      @ArcadiaOccult 4 года назад +2

      Black and brown dyes I know! 😀

  • @CJ-ni1mu
    @CJ-ni1mu 2 года назад +1

    This is a very good video. I will be feeding my squirrels. I just want the shells. I make baskets.. The shells ground and soaked make the best basket dye!

    • @geezermann7865
      @geezermann7865 2 года назад

      Interesting. You use them for a dye? Is it permanent? Ha, yes, the squirrels. It is because of the squirrels burying the neighbor's walnuts in my yard that I have walnut trees that are 20-30 years old, and the squirrels still harvest them and bury them. They will even plant them in a pot or container I leave outside, and I always have new seedlings. They are very hardy and come back even after being cut down.

  • @jamesadams7131
    @jamesadams7131 4 года назад +3

    I live in Iowa and bought a house with a walnut tree. I'm new to this kind of tree and I'm not sure if it is a black walnut, but is the process the same?

  • @whathappened2230
    @whathappened2230 2 года назад +1

    Nice vid,thank you for this!

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  2 года назад +1

      You are welcome, Joe!

  • @rollinghomesteadandwildedi4204
    @rollinghomesteadandwildedi4204 7 лет назад +40

    Hi. You sound like Jody Foster :)

    • @Diane_R
      @Diane_R  7 лет назад +3

      Someone else has mentioned that I sound like Jody Foster.

    • @donyoder9248
      @donyoder9248 6 лет назад +2

      BushCraft and Wild Edibles in Central Wisconsin7

    • @bobbyc.1111
      @bobbyc.1111 6 лет назад +1

      yea, she does

    • @alrivers2297
      @alrivers2297 4 года назад

      Plot twist: It is Jody Foster. Notice that she never shows her face. Hmmm

  • @martymccann2167
    @martymccann2167 5 лет назад +1

    I have 2 black walnut trees in my yard in Michigan. They can yield a lot of nuts but last year was way down from the previous year. Great informative video but a lot of work. The squirrels get all of mine.

    • @swampcrawlerls1267
      @swampcrawlerls1267 5 лет назад

      I notice that trees produce different amounts every year. Could get lots one year and much less the next, followed by another high producing year.

    • @patdrewes5279
      @patdrewes5279 4 года назад

      I think winds can mess up your harvest by blowing blossoms away?

  • @SwheatCents
    @SwheatCents 5 лет назад +3

    You cam use the water after washing to find worms for fishing! Pour water were you have seen worms before and when they come up put them in a bucket of clean water to rinse them off. Then go fishing!

  • @prp1235
    @prp1235 4 года назад

    Excellent video! 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @JamesJohnson-ro2jq
    @JamesJohnson-ro2jq 4 года назад +14

    Make walnut stain with the hulls.

  • @michaelkramer1774
    @michaelkramer1774 2 года назад

    thats exactly how i did thousands of black walnuts tryed many ways over the years A TUFF NUT TO CRACK