I like to sit in front of the fireplace while shelling pecans. It is a relaxing, yet rewarding task. Depending on how many pecans we pick, it can be a long process to get them cracked, shelled and in the freezer. We compost all the pecan shells into the garden. This year we took our pecans to our local feed store to have the pecans cracked. In the past, I'd crack them myself, but for a small investment, having them cracked mechanically, saves a lot of time. There was a problem, though. The mechanical cracker at our local feed store was broken and they weren't fixing it until next season.
We looked around and found that there is a place in nearby Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, called the Fruit Stand that has a pecan cracker that will crack our small pecans. They charge by the weight and when they weighed the pecans that we brought to them, the total was 62 pounds. They charge $0.35 per pound to crack them, so the total was $23.
Tricia dropped them off and drove to Lafayette and had lunch with me. An hour later when she went to pick them up, they were ready. She shopped around at the Fruit Stand and bought some good french bread while she was there. She also looked at what they were selling shelled pecans for. $10 a pound! Wow. She brought the big molasses tub full of 62 pounds of cracked pecans home and I got busy. Since the pecans had sat on our back patio for a few months, we experienced some loss. Some of the pecans were bad, but many were good. In no time at all I had the big tub empty. Out of 62 pounds of cracked pecans, we yielded five one gallon sized Zip Loc bags holding 18 pounds of shelled pecans. I was hoping for better, but that's okay. Now we have a baseline of 29% return on pecan "meat" to whole pecan, we'll shoot for better next year.
Four bags - with one already in the freezer |
4 cups pecans
2 teaspoons sea salt
filtered water
Mix the three ingredients and allow it to soak overnight. In the morning, drain in a colander.
Then spread the soaked pecans on a tray and place in an oven, or in our case, a warmer, and let it get to 150 degrees for 12 to 24 hours, turning until they are dry and crispy.
When dry, we pour them back into a Zip Loc bag and snack on them or freeze them for snacking or using for baking recipes like pies and brownies pancakes.
No comments:
Post a Comment