centre. Although a nut in the culinary sense, in the botanical sense pine nuts are seeds; being a gymnosperm, they lack a carpel (fruit) outside.
Unshelled pine nuts have a long shelf life if kept dry and refrigerated (at -5 to +2°C), but the shell must be removed before the nut is eaten; shelled nuts (and unshelled nuts in warm conditions) deteriorate rapidly, becoming rancid within a few weeks or even days in warm humid conditions. Pine nuts are commercially available in shelled form, but due to poor storage, these rarely have a good flavour. All too often they are already rancid at the time of purchase. The most important species in international trade is Korean Pine, harvested in northeast China. In the United States and Mexico, the pinyon pines have traditionally been the most highly sought after pine nuts.
Pine nuts are called piñones in Spanish and pinoli or pignoli (locally also pinoccoli or pinocchi; Pinocchio means 'pine nut') in Italian. The pignoli cookie, an Italian speciality confection, is made of almond flour formed in to a dough similar to that of a coconut macaroon and then topped with pine nuts. In the U.S., they are mainly harvested by Native American tribes; in many areas, they have exclusive rights to the harvest.
In the U.S., bad land use practices have led to the destruction of millions of hectares of productive pinyon pine woods by conversion to grazing lands, and in China, destructive harvesting techniques (breaking off whole branches to harvest the cones) and cutting of the trees for timber have led to losses in production capacity.
Pine nut coffee is a speciality found in the Southwest United States, especially New Mexico. Piñon, as it is called, is typically a dark roast coffee with a deep, nutty flavor.
Oil
Pine nuts can be pressed to extract pine nut oil, which is valued both for its mild, nutty flavour and for its purported health benefits such as appetite suppression and antioxidant action. It also had economic importance in pre-revolution Russia.
Other similar seeds
The large edible seeds of species of the Southern Hemisphere conifer genus Araucaria, notably the Monkey-puzzle (A. araucana) of Chile and the Bunya-bunya (A. bidwillii) of Australia, are also often called pine nuts.
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