Christmas traditions and the Great Nut Famine

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MamaSheepdog

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We finished up our Christmas shopping today. Since I was a kid part of our holiday tradition is buying mixed nuts in the shell- you know, walnuts, almonds, hazelnuts, Brazil nuts. We put some in the stockings, have some in a bowl... the kids crack them all over the house, leaving a festive confetti of small shell shards... it wouldn't be the Christmas season without them.

Grocery stores always have a big bin of them in the produce section, and Costco always has them in big net bags, but no. Von's, no. Trader Joe's, no. Finally found packaged ones at Albertson's, but had to buy each type separately, and they didn't even have Brazil nuts. Brazil nuts were my Mom's favorite, and she was always so pleased when we managed to get one out of the shell in one piece, that I always proudly gave her the "perfect" ones. <sigh> To top it all off, I didn't even get the fun of scooping them from a bin.

So was there a massive nut crop failure that nobody bothered to mention or what? I'm telling you, it was just too weird- and it became like an obsession, driving all over town to find nuts, of all things. Our perseverance paid off in the end, but maybe that just proves that we are the nuts!
 
Thanks, Bramble- and a very Merry Christmas to you- I hope your day is filled with blessings. Our kids are super excited because we get to go to church on Christmas day this year! Happy Birthday, Jesus!

Btw, do you find it strange to think of a wintery Christmas, because a summery Christmas seems bizarre to me... not that it's exactly arctic here in California, but still...
 
Hubby has been on a nut kick lately. The two stores nearby we frequent just stock the bags, but there's a fruit market we go to over in MD that has bins. Hungy likes it as it's mix your own instead of premixed so he can weight his favorites. That festive confetti trail you speak of so lovingly drives me nuts :lol: but eh, hubby enjoys them so what's a wife to do.

Because of milking times we're limited when we can get to church, but plan to do a 2:00 Christmas Eve service. They always do a candlelit version of silent night at the end, which is pretty cool. The church seats around 1200 I think, so it's a lot of candles. Sami wasn't really old enough to enjoy it last year, but this year I think she'll really love all the candles.
 
I would so love a white Christmas, and Summer heat makes hot cooked lunch a real chore sometimes. I love Christmas Eve Mass at church they sing lots of very old carols, and the children dress up and do a Nativity play. Then on the way home we like to drive past the houses with their christmas lights on. I just love Christmas.
 
kotapony":1hbf2qwu said:
That festive confetti trail you speak of so lovingly drives me nuts :lol: but eh, hubby enjoys them so what's a wife to do.

We-e-ell, there just might be a touch of gentle sarcasm in my statement... pine needles, nut shards, and the vacuum- ahh, the Glory of Christmas! :lol: Thanks to the indoor cats, I don't have to deal with any tinsel! (Can't use it.)

Because of milking times we're limited when we can get to church, but plan to do a 2:00 Christmas Eve service. They always do a candlelit version of silent night at the end, which is pretty cool. The church seats around 1200 I think, so it's a lot of candles. Sami wasn't really old enough to enjoy it last year, but this year I think she'll really love all the candles.

We had our candlelight service last Sunday- we had a service in the morning, and another in the early evening. Not as dramatic as your church, I'm sure- we had maybe two dozen people, but it was beautiful! Hubs read some scripture, and DD baked sugar cookies for our fellowship time after the service. :)

Bramble Hedge":1hbf2qwu said:
I would so love a white Christmas, and Summer heat makes hot cooked lunch a real chore sometimes. I love Christmas Eve Mass at church they sing lots of very old carols, and the children dress up and do a Nativity play. Then on the way home we like to drive past the houses with their christmas lights on. I just love Christmas.

The closest we've come to a white Christmas is snow the day after- but it is always cold enough to have a fire in the fireplace! A wonderful local family has a Christian Retreat, and one year they had a living Nativity, with assorted animals including a calf, baby goats, and of course, a lamb. We all had cocoa and sang carols. The calf spilled DD's cocoa on her dress!

We love the lights, and always enjoy driving around to look at them too.
 
1200 people in one church wow I think we would only have enough seats for 50 - 100 at best.<br /><br />__________ 23 Dec 2011, 08:00 __________<br /><br />A real nativity now that would be special.
 
I remember eating nuts like this around Christmas as a child. We don't do it now, but I wonder if eating nuts has some connection to chestnuts, like in "Chestnuts roasting on a open fire...."?
 
I'm pretty sure most nuts are a fall harvest, so they became a traditional repast- big treat after many months without! Speaking of chestnuts, I bought 50 of those, too. Yup- I counted! I figured we could each have 10. Anyone ever roast chestnuts before? I can't wait to try them.
 
MamaSheepdog":295a4z6n said:
I'm pretty sure most nuts are a fall harvest, so they became a traditional repast- big treat after many months without! Speaking of chestnuts, I bought 50 of those, too. Yup- I counted! I figured we could each have 10. Anyone ever roast chestnuts before? I can't wait to try them.

Thought you would enjoy this....

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stephanie-j-stiavetti/post_1335_b_788618.html

Despite the fact that, when I lived in Salt Lake City a few years ago, chestnuts littered the ground every winter, I'd never thought to pick one up and eat it. I'd passed roasted chestnut vendors around Union Square in San Francisco, and while the idea sounded interesting, for some reason I just never partook or thought about making roast chestnuts myself. I've always considered winter to be Homemade Chicken Soup Recipe soup and stew season, so the idea of roasting nuts just seemed like a strange idea.

Flash forward to last week, when I noticed that a tiny vendor at the farmers market was selling organic chestnuts for $3 a pound. I'm not sure what made it click (maybe it was the smooth, shiny brown hulls, or how they just felt so uniquely wintery as I ran my fingers through the bin full of lacquered-looking nuts), but all of a sudden I felt the visceral urge to eat these things. So I bought a bag.

Once I got the chestnuts home, I had no idea what to do with them. I had no open fire, as the song notes, and my oven has no broiler. A quick Google search provided me with all the answers I needed. I also learned that roasted chestnuts are low in fat, high in fiber, and carry a notable amount of vitamin C. They contain manganese, potassium, copper, phosphorus, magnesium and iron, among other nutrients, and 100 grams of chestnuts contain 213 calories. A few sources even noted that chestnuts can help prevent the common cold, apparently a result of the high vitamin C content. Interesting.

Turns out that making roasted chestnuts is ridiculously easy. You just flip on the oven -- or open fire, if you're so inclined -- cut an X into each nut to prevent then from exploding, and roast them for half an hour. And here is where I got myself into trouble.

Never one to miss an exciting explosion, I decided to leave one chestnut without the aforementioned X-shaped cut because I wanted to see what would happen. Maybe I should have learned from my failed exploding potato experiment when I was a kid, which resulted in me spending two hours scrubbing burnt tater bits out of the nether regions of my mother's oven. Please don't call me obtuse. I prefer the term adventurous.

So I leave one nut un-X'ed, a grand, glimmering beauty of a chestnut. Perhaps the most perfect of all the ones I'd bought. I figured, what better specimen to sacrifice? I slid the tray of chestnuts into the oven, excited to see what would happen next. After about two minutes I got distracted, so I started doing something else.

As I was sliding a dish into the dishwasher about 10 minutes later, a deep, booming shotgun went off in the room. I hit the floor, the dish fell and shattered, and I bumped my head on the edge of an open cupboard. Dazed and confused, I looked around the room to figure out what the heck had just happened. After a few seconds of disorientation, the unmistakable odor of burnt chestnut assaulted my senses and the room started to fill with smoke.

I opened the oven, and yes indeed -- there were bits of burnt chestnut everywhere. Not only that, but the force of the blast had blown five or six other chestnuts out of the pan, and they were now scattered all over the place, including stuck in the lower heating element of the oven. I cursed loudly, and then I had to laugh. This is exactly the explosion I've been hoping for -- I just wish I'd been better prepared.

The non-exploded chestnuts were delicious. Insanely delicious. Sweet, nutty, and incredibly tender, they were one of the best winter snacks I've ever eaten. I had considered sprinkling them with powdered sugar, but there was no need. They were perfect au naturel.

And guess what? I spent about an hour cleaning out all the chestnut shrapnel, which got into every nook and cranny of my oven, and whenever I baked something for the rest of the week, the kitchen smelled like roasted chestnuts.

How to Roast Chestnuts

1. Buy, gather, or otherwise acquire one pound of chestnuts. Any variety will work.

2. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

3. With a small, very sharp knife, cut a good-sized X across the curved side of the chestnut (not the end of the nut where it was attached to the tree). Make the X big enough that is spans the entire side of the nut so that it will be easier to peel away the skin after roasting.

4. Place chestnuts X-side up in a baking dish large enough to leave a little space between them. Bake for 30-35 minutes.

5. Remove roasted chestnuts from oven and set aside to cool. Once they are cool enough to handle, peel back the skin of the nut and enjoy. They're best hot and require no salt or sugar to taste wonderful.
 
ROFL!!! What a great article! I can't wait to try them now. Maybe I should have bought more than 50. We have Horse Chestnuts growing in the canyon- I wonder if those are edible? No idea of the Latin name, Maggie, so don't even ask! ;)
 
Hahahaha! Figures, Maggie- if I'm trying to feed it to the buns, I need the Latin name, but you know that one straight off! LOL! Good thing, too, because if the chestnuts are as delicious as reported, I might have poisoned us all!!!
 
OneAcreFarm, that's too funny!!!!! :lol:

We've always had nuts and tangerines at Christmas... though looks like this Christmas, we've got satsumas instead. I need to get some mixed nuts. The kids picked up pecans behind our auto mechanic's garage the last time we were there, so we're eating those right now.

I've never had a chestnut, I don't believe. I don't even know that I've ever seen them for sale.
 

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