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Cheap
Eats:
Spiced Pecans
by Cynthia Clampitt
If you’re looking for American icons, you might think first
of baseball, hotdogs, and apple pie. However, if you’re talking about true
all-Americans, you might want to include the pecan. Pecans are indigenous to
North America—and the fossil record seems to indicate that pecans were here
before humans were.
Pecans were important to many Native American groups. The
Spanish explorer Cabeza de Vaca, who was shipwrecked on the coast of what is
now Texas and held captive by Native Americans from 1529 to 1535, wrote that
the indigenous people subsisted on pecans, and even planned their movements
and activities around the harvesting of the nuts. Native Americans pressed oil
from pecans, used ground pecans to thicken stews, mixed the nutmeats into
vegetable dishes, and carried roasted pecans to sustain them while traveling.
The word pecan comes from the Algonquian paccan,
which means “nut that must be cracked with a stone.” The pecan is a member of
the hickory family, and hickory is another word from an Algonquian language; it
is derived from powcohiccora, which was a food prepared from pounded
nuts.
Pecans appear to have originated along the southern reaches
of the Mississippi River and its tributaries, and in Texas along the Rio
Grande. Over time, they were spread north and east, planted in the river
valleys that were the traditional, seasonal migratory routes of some Native
American groups. The European explorers who began giving New World discoveries
scientific names first encountered pecans at the northernmost limits of the
nuts’ range, and that is how they ended up with the name Carya illinoensis,
the Illinois hickory, despite their southern roots.
Thomas Jefferson boosted the popularity of pecans when, in
the 1770s, he moved some trees from the Mississippi valley to Monticello. He
made a gift of several trees to George Washington, who planted them at Mount
Vernon in 1775, where three of them survive to this day. However, cultivating
pecans was difficult, and remained a hobby for avid gardeners, though a modest
trade in wild pecans started up, centered in New Orleans.
It was an enslaved African named Antoine, a gardener at
Louisiana’s Oak Alley Plantation, who laid the foundation for improvements in
breeding pecans. In 1846–1847, he developed a way of grafting branches from the
best of the wild varieties onto seedling pecan stocks. Sadly, his landmark
pecan orchard was destroyed by Union soldiers during the Civil War. But his
discovery was not lost, and it opened up an era of commercial pecan growing.
After the Civil War, a freed slave helped pecans make the
next leap forward. George Washington Carver, the brilliant agricultural
scientist who joined Booker T. Washington at the Tuskegee Institute, was
researching crops that could reduce malnutrition and increase income in the
South. He created numerous products from pecans, and suggested that pecans,
sweet potatoes, and peanuts could replace cotton as the region’s primary cash
crops.
In Texas, wild pecans were sufficiently abundant to create
an industry—and the pecan became the official state tree. Even today, most of
the approximately 70 million pecan trees in Texas are wild. However, because
wild pecan trees do not produce as many nuts as cultivated varieties, it is
Georgia that leads in pecan production.
You might think that, like most of the other New World
discoveries, this sweet, flavorful nut would have rocketed around the world,
becoming indispensable in a wide range of cuisines. Not so. Pecans are finicky.
They like very specific types of soil, and each variety of pecan likes a very
specific type of micro-climate. Pecans need to be near rivers, and they require
high heat, day and night, during the growing season. If they don’t get
everything they want, they simply won’t produce enough nuts to make them
commercially viable. (Conversely, if it is happy with where it’s growing, a
single pecan tree can produce 400 pounds of pecans.)
Up until the mid 1900s, this finicky nature meant almost no
one outside the United States was growing pecans (other than a few botanical
gardens). In fact, when I was living in England in 1972, my search for pecans
garnered only puzzled looks and queries as to whether I meant “piquant,” and
even in 2004, an American I’ll be visiting in France has asked if I can bring
pecans. So pecans are still far from being widely available. Agricultural
science has now brought us to the place where success stories have emerged in a
few places—South Africa, Australia, Israel—but more than 80 percent of all pecans
are still American born. And Americans love pecans; after peanuts, they are the
most popular nut in the U.S. (Actually, technically speaking, because peanuts
are legumes, and not nuts, pecans are number one, but when speaking of economic
importance, peanuts get lumped in with true nuts.)
Though shelled pecans are now available all year, these nuts
were traditionally only available after harvest in late fall, and that is still
generally when in-shell nuts appear in stores. As a result, pecans have long been
associated with winter festivities, appearing in celebratory pecan pies and
fruitcakes, or simply filling bowls at parties—the one time each year you get
to use that nutcracker. Here’s one more way to enjoy America’s nut.
Spiced Pecans
1/2 cup sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/4 tsp. salt
White of one egg
1 tsp. cold water
1 pound pecan halves
Pre-heat the oven to 225 degrees. Butter and 15” x 10” jelly
roll pan.
Combine the sugar, cinnamon, and salt and mix thoroughly.
In a separate bowl, combine the egg white and cold water and
beat until frothy but not stiff. Add the pecan halves and mix until all nuts
are coated. Add the sugar mixture and stir until nuts are evenly coated.
Spread the nuts in a single layer on the buttered pan and
place in oven. Bake for 1 hour, stirring every 15 minutes. Cool before serving
or storing. Store in an airtight container. Makes one pound.
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