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  2. Acorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acorn

    In Korea, an edible jelly named dotorimuk is made from acorns, and dotori guksu are Korean noodles made from acorn flour or starch. In the 17th century, a juice extracted from acorns was administered to habitual drunkards to cure them of their condition or else to give them the strength to resist another bout of drinking.

  3. Aesculus flava - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesculus_flava

    Genus name is the latin name for a kind of oak bearing edible acorns but applied by Linnaeus to this genus. [8] Aesculus was the Latin name that is given to an oak or any tree that has seeds that are eaten by livestock, while flava (or flavum) is the Latin word for yellow, referring to the buckeye's yellow flowers. [ 9 ]

  4. Category:Acorns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Acorns

    Articles relating to acorns and their culinary uses. They are the nuts of the oaks and their close relatives (genera Quercus and Lithocarpus, in the family Fagaceae).They usually contain one seed (occasionally two seeds), enclosed in a tough, leathery shell, and borne in a cup-shaped cupule.

  5. List of forageable plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_forageable_plants

    Acorns (ripening in September to October), too bitter when raw, but used chopped and roasted as a substitute for almonds, or then ground as a substitute for coffee. After leaching out the bitter tannins in water, acorn meal can be used as grain flour. [22] Golden currant: Ribes aureum: Native to northwest North America: Berries, edible raw but ...

  6. Quercus garryana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quercus_garryana

    The mildly sweet (but perhaps unpalatable) acorns are edible, ideally after leaching. [6] [29] The bitterness of the toxic tannic acid would likely prevent anyone from eating enough to become ill. [29] Native Americans ate the acorns raw and roasted, also using them to make a kind of flour. [5] The hardwood is hard and heavily ring-porous.

  7. Mast seeding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mast_seeding

    Knocking down acorn to feed pigs. 1300s England. Mast is the fruit of forest trees and shrubs, such as acorns and other nuts. [1] The term derives from the Old English mæst, meaning the nuts of forest trees that have accumulated on the ground, especially those used historically for fattening domestic pigs, and as food resources for wildlife.

  8. Notholithocarpus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Notholithocarpus

    The seed is an acorn2–3 cm (3 ⁄ 4 – 1 + 1 ⁄ 4 in) long and 2 cm in diameter, very similar to an oak acorn, but with a very hard, woody nut shell more like a hazel nut. The nut sits in a cup during its 18-month maturation; the outside surface of the cup is rough with short spines. [ 3 ]

  9. Talk:Acorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Acorn

    The main page of this article suggests roasting acorns to make them edible. Is this possible? Does roasting have an effect on tannin? Does it make acorns taste less bitter? Or are the acorns still bitter after roasting, but at least the nutrients are more easily digested? 216.99.198.130 07:39, 13 September 2010 (UTC) Perhaps lye?