Showing posts with label Nuts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nuts. Show all posts

Ginkgo

Scientific Name(s): Ginkgo biloba
Abundance: rare
What: leaves, nuts
How: leaves raw, tea; seed/nut roasted
Where: woods, landscaping
When: leaves in spring, summer, fall; nut in summer
Nutritional Value: leaves are medicinal, nuts have calories
Dangers: the fruit STINKS and contains assorted, somewhat dangerous chemicals. Do not let the raw fruit pulp come in contact with bare flesh, mouth, or eyes.

Medicinal Summary
Leaves - improves blood circulation; improves memory; may reduce dementia (eaten, tisane)

Leaf Arrangement: Leaves are unique, fan-shaped, and arranged alternately along the stem.

Leaf Shape: Ginkgo leaves have a distinctive fan shape, typically measuring 2 to 3 inches in length. Often displaying a cleft in the middle.

Leaf Margin: Leaves have a lobed or bilobed margin.

Leaf Color: Foliage is bright green in the summer, turning golden yellow in the fall.

Flower Structure: Ginkgo trees are dioecious, meaning there are separate male and female trees. Male flowers are small, catkin-like structures.

Flower Color: Flowers are small (1/8") cones growing on 1"-2" spikes, being either green or yellow.

Fruit (Seed): The fruit is a large, fleshy seed surrounded by a foul-smelling outer layer. The seed is about 1 inch in diameter. They onlt form on female trees and ripen in the fall.

Bark: Bark is typically light gray and smooth on young trees, becoming rougher and more deeply furrowed with age.

Height: Ginkgo trees can grow to be 50 to 80 feet tall.

Hairs: Leaves and stems are generally smooth, without noticeable hairs.

Branching Pattern: Ginkgo trees have an open, spreading growth form with distinct branches.

Ginkgo leaves.
Ginko2

Close-up of Ginkgo leaf.
GinkoMaleLeaf

Ginkgo trunk.
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Young Ginkgo tree.
Ginkgo

Unripe Ginkgo fruit (female trees, only).
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Close-up of Ginkgo fruit. When yellow/orange, soft, wrinkly, and falling from the tree it's ripe.
Ginkgo

Ginkgo fruit (ripening in the fall).
2014-11-02 12 13 29 Ginkgo foliage and fruit during autumn at the Ewing Presbyterian Church Cemetery in Ewing, New Jersey
By Famartin (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

Ginko nuts after removing outer fruit (female trees only).
GinkoNuts

Ginko trees, native to Asia, are now common landscaping plants. Due to the mess and smell of the ripe nut outer coating, usually only male forms of the tree are used. Ginkgo are ancient trees dating back 270 million years and is considered a "living fossil" and a single tree can live 1,000 years. Individual ginkgo trees are either male or female, with only the female producing fruit. The fruit ripens in the summer as approximately grape-sized yellow fruit. This fruit pulp smells really bad, something like a cross between dog poop and vomit. This pulp is discard because the real treasure is the large seed it contains. Wear rubber gloves when digging the seed out of the ginkgo fruit or else your hands will stink for days. Scrub any pulp off the seeds with plenty of running water. The seeds/nuts are then roasted as the unroasted seeds are still somewhat toxic.

Ginkgo leaves have a long history of being used to treat issues with blood circulation, memory, and dementia. The easiest way to use them is to chew a leaf into a pulp and then suck on this pulp for 10-20 minutes. Tea can also be made from the leaves.


Buy my book! Outdoor Adventure Guides Foraging covers 70 of North America's tastiest and easy to find wild edibles shown with the same big pictures as here on the Foraging Texas website.

Shagbark Hickory

Scientific name: Carya ovata
Abundance: uncommon
What: nuts
How: raw, roasted
Where: Woods, Landscaping
When: fall
Nutritional Value: Vitamin A,E,K,B6; fats, minerals
Other uses: Wood is great for tool handles

Leaf Arrangement: Leaves are compound, alternating along the stem.

Leaf Shape: Compound leaves typically consist of 5 to 17 leaflets. Each leaflet can measure 3 to 8 inches in length. Leaflets are opposite, except for the single, tip leaflet.

Leaf Color: Foliage is generally green, with variations among hickory species.

Flower Structure: Inconspicuous, small greenish-yellow flowers are arranged in catkins (1"-1.5" long spikes).

Flower Size: Individual flowers are tiny, about 1/8 inch in size.

Fruit (Nut): The fruit is a hard-shelled nut enclosed in a husk. Nut size varies among hickory species but can range from 1 to 2 inches.

Bark: Bark appearance varies among hickory species, ranging from smooth to rough, with furrows and ridges. Shagbark hickory (Carya ovata) bark appears as peeling, vertical strips

Height: Hickory trees can vary widely in height, from 30 to 100 feet, depending on the species.

Hairs: All parts are hairless

Wood Color: The heartwood color varies from pale to reddish-brown, depending on the hickory species.

Branching Pattern: Hickory trees typically have a straight trunk with a spreading crown.

Hickory nuts.
Hickory
hickory2.jpg

Shagbark hickory (Carya ovata) tree.
ShagbarkHickoryTree

Shagbark hickory (Carya ovata) tree bark.
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Top of Shagbark Hickory leaf.
HickoryShagbarkLeafTop

Bottom of Shagbark Hickory leaf.
HickoryShagbarkLeafBot

Flowers of Shagbark Hickory (taken March in Houston, TX).
ShagBarkHickFlowers

Water hickory (Carya aquatica) nuts are too bitter to eat.
WaterHickoryNuts

Water hickory bark (inedible hickory).
WaterHickoryBark

Hickory leaves. Note the compound leaf has nine or less (but always and odd number) leaflets while a pecan leaf will have 11-17 leaflets.
HickoryLeaf

Texas distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture. The marked counties are guidelines only. Plants may appear in other counties, especially if used in landscaping.
HickoryTX

North American distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture.
Hickory

Related to pecans and walnuts, Shagbark Hickory trees aren't nearly as common but when found the nuts are quite tasty. Only the Shagbark species of hickories are edible whereas the Water Hickory (Carya aquatica), though more common, are too bitter to eat.


Buy my book! Outdoor Adventure Guides Foraging covers 70 of North America's tastiest and easy to find wild edibles shown with the same big pictures as here on the Foraging Texas website.

Lotus

Scientific Name(s): Nelumbo lutea
Abundance: uncommon
What: nuts, tubers
How: nuts raw, roasted, pounded into flour; tubers raw, roasted, candied, baked.
Where: still water
When: nuts fall, winter; tubers late summer, fall
Nutritional Value: nuts protein, carbohydrates; tubers starch
Dangers:none...well, occasionally alligators in Texas.

Leaf Arrangement: The leaves are peltate, meaning the leaf's stalk attaches to the center of the leaf blade, and they rise well above the water surface on long petioles.

Leaf Shape: Leaves are circular and large, commonly measuring 18 to 36 inches in diameter.

Leaf Venation: The venation is radiate, sometimes called orbicular. Veins start from the point where the petiole attaches to the underside of the leaf and run out to its edge, sometimes branching between stem and edge.

Leaf Margin: Margins are smooth and entire, forming a distinctive rounded shape without indentations.

Leaf Color: A bright green on the upper surface, often with a waxy coating that can repel water.

Flower Structure: Flowers are large and solitary with numerous petals, rising above the water on stout stalks, typically 12 to 18 inches across.

Flower Color: The blooms are a soft yellow, with a central cone-like structure that houses numerous carpels.

Fruit: The fruit is an aggregate of nuts nestled in a pit in a funnel-shaped receptacle which becomes woody and conical as it matures. Each nut is visible through an opening in the top of the funnel/cone.

Seed: Seeds are large, hard, and ovoid, about 0.5 to 0.8 inches in length, with the capability to remain viable for up to 100 years.

Stem: Stems are actually elongated petioles that are thick and waxy, reaching heights of 3 to 6 feet above the water surface.

Hairs: There are no hairs on the stems (petioles) or flowers; both are characterized by a smooth surface. The top side of the lrge, round leaves are covered in microscopic hairs that impart a hydrophobicity to the the leaf surface, but are too small to feel by touch or see by the unaided eye.

Height: The plant can reach an overall height, including the flower stalks, of up to 8 feet above the water level.


Lotus plants. In shallow water they often stand out a foot or more above the water.
LotusGrove2

Lotus

Close-up of a lotus leaf. They are intact circles, unlike the cloven form of regular water lily pads. Lotus pads can grow to over two feet in diameter. Microscopic, hydrophobic hairs on the surface of the lotus pads cause water to bead up and run like mercury.
LotusLeaf

LotusLeaf

Small lotus pad in spring. Note the two lighter hemispheres mark at it's center.
SmallLotusLeaf

Lotus tuber. Raw it tastes kind of like a potato.
LotusRoot

Lotus flowers are large, up to a foot across and the number of seeds they contain can vary.
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Lotus seed pod ready for picking.
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A perfect lotus nut, ready to be shelled.
Lotus

A shelled lotus nut. You still have to remove the green, baby plant before roasting and eating otherwise the nut will be bitter.
Lotus

Lotus seedpods and nuts after drying in the wild.
LotusPods-Seeds

Cracked lotus nut. The small, green plant germ (plant embryo) is very bitter and must be removed. The nuts are very hard to crack.
CrackedLotusNut

Texas distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture. The marked counties are guidelines only. Plants may appear in other counties, especially if used in landscaping.
LotusAmericanTX

North American distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture.
LotusAmerican

Common in many shallow, still water, lotus are often mistaken for some sort of large water lily. The main differences between lotus and water lilies are lotus "pads" are round & intact whereas water lily pads have a cleft or gap in the pad and so aren't a complete circle. Also, lotus pads grow up to a foot out of the water on strong stalks while lily pads stop growing at the surface of the water. Lotus seedpods look like weird, green showerheads pointing up at the sky while green and then drooping face down towards the water when brown and dry. The tubesrs are thick, long, segmented and MUCH tastier than water lily tubers!

Lotus nuts were a much-beloved food of Native Americans due to the flavor and high-energy content. After cracking and removal of the small, bitter, green plant embryo the seeds can be eaten raw, roasted, roasted then pounded into flour, or candied. Toasting, boiling, then mushing up the seeds gives a hearty porridge that reminds me of Malt-O-Meal.

Lotus tubers can be somewhat of a challenge to harvest. The tubers grow during the summer at the end of the lotus runners. Follow a pad stem or seedpod stem down to its base runner then follow this runner to its end. These tubers can be eaten raw, roasted, or candied by boiling in a concentrated sugar solution. Mix a little ginger in with the lotus root when you candy it for a real treat!


Buy my book! Outdoor Adventure Guides Foraging covers 70 of North America's tastiest and easy to find wild edibles shown with the same big pictures as here on the Foraging Texas website.

Pecan

Scientific name: Carya illinoinensis
Abundance: plentiful
What: nuts
How: raw, cooked
Where: pecan trees
When: fall
Nutritional Value: carbohydrates and protein

Leaf Arrangement: Alternate arrangement of compound leaves.

Leaf Shape: Odd-pinnate compound leaves with typically 9 to 17 leaflets.

Leaf Size: Individual leaflets are usually 2 to 6 inches in length, depending on location along the petile.

Leaf Color: Green foliage, with variations in shades.

Leaf Margin: Serrated leaflet margins.

Vein Patterns: Pinnate venation pattern on each leaflet. Center vein may not be perfectly centered on leaflet.

Flower Structure: Inconspicuous, appearing as long, drooping catkins.

Flower Color: Male catkins are yellow-green, while female flowers are reddish.

Fruit (Pecans): Large, brownish, football-shaped seeds (nuts), with lengths ranging from 1 to 2 inches, encased in a thick green husk. Husk usually splits open along four long seams to reveal a mottled, brown-shelled nut.

Seed Size: Pecans are typically 1 to 2 inches in length.

Bark: Gray to brown, with peeling, deep furrows and ridges as the tree matures.

Pecan nut
Pecan

Ripe pecan nuts on tree.
pecans

Almost-ripe pecans (picture taken early August in East Texas).
BabyPecans

Pecan tree.
PecanTree

Texas distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture. The marked counties are guidelines only. Plants may appear in other counties, especially if used in landscaping.
PecanMap_TX

North American distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture.
PecanMap_NA


What truly needs to be said about pecans in Texas?
Best. Wild. Food. Ever!


Buy my book! Outdoor Adventure Guides Foraging covers 70 of North America's tastiest and easy to find wild edibles shown with the same big pictures as here on the Foraging Texas website.

Pickerelweed

Scientific name: Pontederia cordata
Abundance: uncommon
What: young leaves, seeds
How: young leaves in salad or cooked; seeds raw, roasted, or ground into flour
Where: shallow water
When: early summer to fall
Nutritional Value: nuts high in starch
Dangers: It is best to cook water plants to kill any bacteria or other water-born parasites

Leaf Arrangement: Primarily basal with alternate presentation along the stem.

Leaf Shape: Elongated heart-shaped with a pointed tip, measuring 4 to 10 inches in length and 2 to 6 inches in width.

Leaf Venation: Exhibits parallel venation, extending from the base to the pointed tip.

Leaf Margin: Entire, with smooth edges that conform to the heart-shaped outline.

Leaf Color: A deep green, often exhibiting a glossy surface.

Flower Structure: Arranged in a dense, spike-like raceme with each flower having 6 petals fused into a tube at their base, forming a structure 4 to 9 inches long at the top of the stem.

Flower Color: Typically blue to purple, sometimes pink or white, with distinctive yellow markings at the center.

Fruit: A small, three-celled, oblong capsule that carries multiple seeds.

Seed: Small, disc-shaped, numerous, suited for water dispersal, typically less than 0.1 inches in diameter.

Stem: Sturdy, erect, and can grow up to 4 feet in height, often partially submerged in water.

Hairs: Absent; surfaces of both leaves and stems are smooth.

Height: Ranges from 1 to 4 feet above the water surface.  


Pickerelweed plants
Pickerelweed1

Pickerelweed2

Pickerelweed flower stalk with a few flowers beginning to bloom.
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Pickerelweed flower
PickerelweedFlower

pickeralweedFlower

Pickerelweed leaf.
pickeralweedLeaf

Texas distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture. The marked counties are guidelines only. Plants may appear in other counties, especially if used in landscaping.
PickerelweedTX

North American distribution, attributed to U. S. Department of Agriculture.
Pickerelweed

Look for these plants in still water such as ponds, lakes, water features, and very slow moving streams.

The young leaves are edible before they unroll (early summer). The pickerel fruit isn't edible but the seed it contains is a great food source. These seeds can be eaten raw, ground into flower, roasted, or boiled into a porridge.


Buy my book! Outdoor Adventure Guides Foraging covers 70 of North America's tastiest and easy to find wild edibles shown with the same big pictures as here on the Foraging Texas website.

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