Japanese Chestnut
It is the end of September which in the world of Japanese confectionary and pomiculture (is there really no word in the English language for the cultivation of chestnut trees?) means it is time to start thinking about harvesting and making use of the extraordinarily sweet Japanese Chestnut (Castanea crenata). The trees are quite simply gorgeous, unlike any of the varieties of Castanea that we have in Europe, and the ripe fruits are encased in the sharpest needles you could ever imagine. Being used to our European varieties where the needles are often a bit soft, I learnt with much pain that these Japanese Chestnut are seriously spiky. Fresh they are half a percent fat and loaded with vitamins so quite healthy even as fruits go. Japanese use them for everything from ice-cream to jellies, candies, jams, sweets, roasts and in creams and lotions, and even as a topping on hot rice. I saw these specimen in a lovely garden in the lovely little town of Obuse in Nagano Prefecture, way north of Tokyo. Enjoy!




Like the shots and the story…
Thank you! I’m glad to hear that you like it! (^-^) Love the photos on your blog BTW!
Thanks a lot for the nice comment on my site. I appreciate it! : )
Boned, roast duck stuffed with chestnuts, sticky rice and other assorted ingredients. Yummm
The American Chestnut has been nearly eliminated from its original range by an imported blight, and the last few natural stands of mature American Chestnut trees are in Michigan (at the extreme boundary of where they once occurred). Plantings in the Pacific Northwest (safe so far from Chestnut Blight) prevent extinction, and there projects to develop and replant the forests with a blight resistant American Chestnut. They were known for their sweet nuts and high-quality lumber. I saw enormous old stumps from American Chestnuts when I went to Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Some of them still send up shoots.
Oh you must give me the recipe for Boned,roast duck stuffed with chestnuts ect. Sound delicious!
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This is very close to the recipe I use. Boning the duck this way is not easy, but makes for an incredibly impressive presentation.
(You don’t have to use canned chestnuts except when they are not in season. In season, You can use boiled or roasted chestnuts instead.)
http://www.alleasyrecipes.com/recipes/2/4/eight_jewel_duck.asp
I should add, I just received the most recent (English translation) edition of よつばと! and in one chapter, she goes with the neighbor girl to gather chestnuts.
Ah yes, another victim of globalization I think. Before I left Europe we had lots of those stories as well. These days I try not to read about it as it makes me depressed.
Hmm, I’m making croissants right now and these little beauties would go well with them for sure (* _ *) whats more they look beautiful
I know, this persons pictures are stunning!
Thank you for the kind comment! How was your croissants? (^-^)
Hi, such an amazing blog! Please can you look at mine and comment, mine I must admit is no where near as flashy as yours, it has no pictures yet however I’m looking for people views. Thanks again! I’m guessing you are from Japan, am I right? Such an amzing country from what I have seen in pictures, would love to go there one day! Bye! My link – http://whathaveyouseen.wordpress.com/2012/09/28/our-new-website/
Also please look at this website it’s amazing too! – http://actonit.yolasite.com/
Thank you for the kind comment! (^-^) Good luck with your new blogs!
Baskin Robbins in Japan has custnut ice cream. They call it a French name, mount blanc? Sorry if I butchered the spelling. It’s sad the American baskin robbins doesn’t have chestnut ice cream
I really loved it.
I mean chestnut not custnut. Lol iPhone likes to auto correct words too much.
Indeed they do. モンブラン! (^-^)
I would love to try some of the foods created with the chestnuts. They sound so wonderful ^^
I always look forward to the Winter time when there is the big hoard of roasted chestnuts — how I love them so!
The chestnuts are starting to fall here now too, not as much as usual but it’s getting there. The Japanese Chestnut is really quite beautiful, though, and I’m quite surprised from the look of it that they are spiky.
Yes, they are so different from the chestnuts you find in Europe, or the chestnuts I had to play with as a child. Anyone who can pick chestnut in the forests are lucky I think! (^-^) Here, most chestnut is grown in orchards, to it’s a bit difficult to pick for yourself… (^-^;)