The Mechanics of Eating Acorns

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red oak acorns
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

If you haven’t read my other acorn posts, Acorns and the Forager’s Dilemma is an introduction to the use of acorns; the Forager’s Dilemma is, in a word, starch. Starch (carbohydrates) is the toughest thing to forage for, and is a primary reason why humans settled down 10,000 years ago to grow grain. Next I wrote about an interesting Acorn Honey Cake I’d made and how various world cultures have traditionally used acorns, cultures ranging from Korea to Japan to the Native Americans, Europeans and North Africans.

Using acorns as food pretty much falls into three categories: Eating acorns as nuts (they are a lot like chestnuts), making acorn flour, or cooking in acorn oil. I have not yet tried to make acorn oil, but I know how to do it and plan on trying it when I am a bit more mobile.

COLLECTING ACORNS
First you need to get yourself a supply of acorns. Go find some oak trees; they’re the ones with all the acorns that have fallen down around them. I know this sounds condescending and stupid, but oaks come in so many varieties that in autumn this really is the easiest way. It is a bit of a crapshoot, as it is tougher to determine a variety of oak by its acorn than by its the leaf — you can do it, but it is a little harder.

You can gather acorns anytime from September until early spring. I find gathering as the acorns fall is best. Suellen Ocean, who wrote a very useful book Acorns and Eat ’em,says she likes to collect Tanoak acorns in February and March, after many have begun sprouting. She says acorns with sprouts between 1 to 2 inches long are still good to eat, but discard any acorn meats that have turned green. Ocean says recently sprouted acorns a) have begun to turn their starch into sugar, and b) are foolproof: “If it is sprouted, it’s a good acorn and I haven’t wasted time gathering wormy ones.”

A word on worms. When I first gathered acorns, little did I know that I had gathered scores already infected with the larva of the oak weevil. Nasty little maggoty things, you can tell they are inside your acorn if there is a little hole in the shell. Look for it, discard that acorn and move on. But know that oak weevil larvae bored those holes from the inside out. Like Alien.

It’s helpful to know what kind of oak you are dealing with because acorns from different oaks have different levels of tannins in them; more on that in a bit. If you don’t know your trees, start looking for little green acorns in May. Pick a leaf and compare it to oak leaves online or in a guidebook. Gather acorns and compare them to online images and guidebooks; different oaks bear acorns with different shapes. With that in mind, remember that not all oaks are created equal, and the fundamental fact of cooking with acorns is that you are dealing with a wild food, and as such must contend with tremendous variability, both in species and even among individuals of the same species.

Some oaks bear acorns so low in bitter tannins that they can be eaten raw. Legend says that California Indians fought over these trees, which makes some sense because one mature Valley Oak can drop 2,000 pounds of acorns in a really good year. A ton of sweet acorns may well be worth fighting over. That said, even “sweet” acorns should be leached to remove what tannins exist in them because several studies show that unleached acorns can make you constipated and can harm your teeth. Of all the species I know of, only the imported European cork oak and the Emory oak of the Desert come close to being “sweet.”

Tannins aren’t the only thing that makes different species of acorn different. UC Riverside Professor David Bainbridge wrote in a 1986 academic paper that depending on species, acorns can range in fat content from 1.1 percent to 31.3 percent, protein from 2.3 percent to 8.6 percent, and carbohydrates from 32.7 percent to 89.7 percent. That is a huge range!

What does it mean? It means that in the kitchen you treat acorns from different species very, very differently. A fatty acorn will make a meal, like ground almonds. A carb-rich acorn — like Valley Oak acorns — makes a drier flour, more like chestnut or chickpea flour (acorns lack gluten and so will not rise.)

A close up of a oak leaves
Valley Oak leaves

WHAT TO DO WITH VARIOUS OAKS
Here’s a general breakdown:

‘Sweetest’ Acorns, meaning lowest in tannin: East Coast White oak, the Emory oak of the Southwest, the Pin oak of the South, the Valley and Blue oaks of California, the Burr oak of the Midwest, as well as the Cork oak and the well-named Bellota oak of Europe. To my California readers, know that there are an awful lot of cork oaks and burr oaks planted in towns and cities here, so keep your eyes peeled.

Largest Acorns: Valley oaks are really big, as are East Coast White oaks. Burr oaks are large, too, as is the California Black oak.

Fattiest Acorns: The Eastern red oak acorns I’ve used have a very high oil content, and I’ve read that the Algonquin Indians used red oak acorns for oil. In the West, the champions are both live oaks, the Coastal and the interior live oak, as well as the tanoak and black oak, which is Quercus kellogii.

SHELLING
I found that shelling the acorns is the most onerous part of dealing with them. They have an elastic shell that resists normal nut crackers. I found whacking them with a hammer to be the best way to open up an acorn. Some people use a knife, and I do this with green acorns, but not fully ripe ones. Best way to whack ’em is to put the flat end (the side that used to have the cap) on a firm surface and rap the pointy end with a hammer, or, with long, tapered acorns like cork oak or Valley oaks, just whack the side.

Acorns are far easier to shell after they’ve dried. If you choose to dry them, do this in wide, shallow pans so they don’t get moldy. Once dried, I’ve worked with two-year-old acorns and they were fine.

Red oak acorns have a “test,” a skin that doesn’t want to come off, just like a chestnut. If you boil the acorns and shell them while still hot, the skin comes right off. Only do 5 to 10 acorns at a time if you are doing this, or they’ll cool too much. I only bother with this when I am making acorn bits, not flour. The skin is a little bitter, but it’s not that big a deal if you are making flour.

Shell your acorns into water. The meats oxidize fast, and you will get a lighter-colored flour if you do this. It’s aesthetic, but it matters to me.

TANNINS
All acorns should be leached with water to remove bitter tannins, which will a) make your mouth feel and taste like felt, b) make you a bit nauseous, and possibly c) constipate you for days.

Getting those tannins out is the big barrier to cooking with acorns. But it ain’t no biggie. With my Valley oak acorns, after shelling I drop the acorn meats directly into my stockpot that was two-thirds full of water. When I fill the pot about a third of the way up with shelled acorns, if I am in a hurry, I bring the pot of water to a boil. The water turns dark. As soon as it boils, pour the water off into the sink and repeat the process. It requires about five changes of water to get Valley oak acorns to taste like chestnuts. I did this all while watching football, and did not miss a snap. Other oaks will require more or fewer changes of water. Choose the “sweetest” acorns on my list above for the least amount of work.

There is a better method, but it takes days. Grind the raw acorns into flour, then mix 1 cup of acorn meal to 3 cups water. Pour this all into a glass jar with a lid and put it in the fridge. Every day you shake the jar, wait 12 hours or more, then pour off the water — and the tannins. How long? Anywhere from a week to two weeks, depending on how bitter your acorns are. This is a good way to leach acorns without using fuel for boiling water, and you do not denature a particular starch in the acorns that acts a little like the gluten in flour, i.e., it helps the flour stick to itself. I go into the full process of cold leaching acorns here.

If you plan on baking with the acorn flour, use the cold-water leaching method.

Once your acorns are free of tannins, you need to figure out what to do with them. Regardless, you need to dry them first or they will rot. Big pieces can be patted dry on a tea towel. If it is hot out, lay the acorns out on cookie sheets and dry in the sun. You could also put them in an oven set on “warm.” You can also put the acorns in a dehydrator set on low heat.

You can also freeze your fresh acorn meal. Store dried flour in jars in the fridge. Why the fridge? What fat there is in acorns will go rancid pretty quick if you left the flour at room temperature.

acorn flour
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

What you can now do with this flour is pretty limitless. My first success was an acorn flour flatbread in the style of an Italian piadina, which is essentially a tortilla. I then made acorn flour honey cake, which is really very tasty — almost like gingerbread cake. The flour also makes an excellent pasta dough when mixed with regular flour.

More Acorn Recipes

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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81 Comments

  1. Hi there! Great read thank you. As I live in the countryside of Holland, Europe, in a street 5 mile long with 5 mile of oaks on both sides, I,d be a fool not asking if these acorns can also be used?
    Can any acorn be used?
    Thanks for taking the time answering this question!
    Barbara

  2. Hi, what a wonderful article! I’m trying to do this at the moment: I have been leaching the roughly chopped acorns for a couple of weeks now, changing the water every second day or so.Today I ground them up, rinsed some more and now got them sitting in a baking tray over our fireplace. As they are drying they are starting to smell of chlorine! We’re on rain water, so it can’t be from the water and was wondering if I need to leach some more? TIA

  3. A fellow blogger send me the link to your website; I had posted a story a few days ago on a lady farmer I know in Lebanon who made acorn coffee while living as a refugee in another town during the civil war. I wanted to try this coffee and collected a bunch of acorns. I found them easy to peel so I guess it is not the same variety that grows in North America. I need to find out what these trees are called here and compare. Interesting article, thanks! (very interesting site too, I am bookmarking!)

  4. I am making wreaths from my acorns that I gathered in Kissimmee FL and they are so oily that they will not stick to any glue onto any surface!! Any suggestions? P.S……these wreaths (7) are for this christmas…only a handful of days away!!!

  5. try using tanin waters for tannning hides 🙂 once you drain water off, add the discarded shelld and make a tea of them. ……waste not want not….

  6. This is my first time roasting acorns. I live in Mobile Alabama. I have 3 white oaks all over 400 years old. This year is a bumper crop of acorns. I soaked mine for 4 days changing the water twice a day. I just shelled them, boiled them in lite sugar water & I’m roasting them 350 deg. for a hour. Mine didn’t have the caps on them, but the squirrels make most of them drop & I didn’t find a lot with worms. If there are worms in them, and are accidently eaten after they’ve been boiled & roasted, can they make you sick / harmful to a person? Also, can you eat them just boiled? I tasted one & it was pretty good. Kind’a like a boiled peanut.

    it seems like the worms couldn’t harm you. They’re gross, I’ll give ya that.

  7. Joe: Nope, you need to leach Valley oak acorns. They have less tannin than other oaks, but unless you get a rare individual tree that has “sweet” acorns, you will be sorry if you do not leach them.

    And no, there are no regulations about gathering acorns to my knowledge.

  8. Koreans make a product called Mook from acorns. It is processed like a flour, but can be made by putting the acorns in the blender with a little water after leaching with water pouring off the brown water.The mixture is allowed to sit in a large bowl to separate the Mook from the water. It is then filtered several times and put into bowls or vessels to solidify into a gelatin like consistency, sliced and eaten with hot pepper powder mixed with sesame oil and garnished with green onions. Primarily the oaks used are the scrub oaks in western Washington that have big seasons and seasons with little or no acorns. 2012 was a bountiful harvest.

  9. Hank

    Sorry, another quick question.

    What kind of regulations are there on acorn gathering? Are you only allowed to gather a certain amount/number per season?

  10. Dear Hank,

    I had a question regarding Valley Oak acorns. I’ve head on other gathering blogs that, unlike either acorns, you do not need to leach them before you roast and grind them. Would you recommend leaching them or not leaching them?

  11. Great article, thank you so much! I’ve seen the usual acorn bread and pancake recipes, but acorn soba noodles…oh my, thanks again

  12. Hank – thanks for the great info on acorns! Re how to crack the shells, I was playing around with feeding red oak acorns to the birds and discovered that an old-fashioned aluminum garlic press did the job. This press is like a little box with a grid for the garlic to come through and a metal press that comes down on the nut. I think the reason it works better than a nutcracker is because the box holds keeps the nut from deforming as the press comes down on it. (if that isn’t clear, let me know and I can flip you a pic of the press with an acorn in it).

    BTW, there was so much oil in these nuts that just leaving a line of 6 or so cracked nuts on the deck stained a 1-sq ft area! What a mess!
    Jen

  13. ‘heroes of old, when fed with oaken mast, the great trees themselves, in years surpassed’ poem from 14th century england implying extended lifespan, if not heroism

  14. Stephanie: I would not. While I know of no factual reason why you couldn’t reuse the water, I do know that tannins are one of the substances oaks use to kill off competing plants around their drip system. I’d be careful.

  15. Is it safe to use the water the acorns were boiled in on other plants? I would like to be water wise if possible and get double duty out of it.

  16. Hank-
    I’m an inspired and beginner forager. I collected a bucket of acorns and quickly learned, by markings and color, which were likely infested or rotted. My question to you is, of the ones that seemed healthy I noticed there were still dark spotting in the nut meat. Are those still okay to eat? Thanks!
    Keep on blogging and sharing your adventures!

    Samantha

  17. Theresa: Yep, you can use them. They will be more of a pain to work with than larger acorns, but all acorns are edible. It just takes longer to leach out the bitterness from some varieties than others.

    Barb: Well, acorns are neither nuts nor grain — they can be either, dietarily speaking. Some varieties, like the Valley oak in Calfornia, are very heavy in carbs and very low in protein. But an Eastern red oak happens to be high in protein and low in carbs.