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Re: Brazil Nuts. ?...

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> I've been looking for a good quality fresh source of brazil nuts in

> the shell. I figured that YOU would know all about this so please

do

> tell...... Is there a good mail-order business we don't know about?

> When are they harvested and so when are they freshest? Thanks !

> ~Robin Ann

Hello Robin Ann!

I will be most pleased to help you, but as a matter of fact I don't

understand a lot about Brazil nuts. I eat them regularly, but I buy

them shelled, you know. I have heard that they have a very hard shell

and it is a tough job to crack them open. Traditionally it was women

who did that job. I think (but I am not sure) they are at their

freshest around the end of the year. They certainly are boiled at

some point of the processing, but maybe only after they have been

shelled. I don't know how much is lost by boiling them and I don't

know why they do it. Perhaps to soften them? Actually, it is only

very seldom that I see in the shops Brazil nuts in the shell, but I

am going to check it next Friday when I usually do my shopping. Can

you wait that long for a more detailed piece of information? Anyway,

I am wondering how you yourself are going to import them into the

USA. It may be turn out to be too expensive. Besides, American

customs are very very rigid as far as food entering the country is

concerned. Well, the exporter certainly knows better than I.

By the way, Brazil nut in Portuguese is called *Castanha do Pará*

(literally _Chestnut from Pará_). Pará is the Northern State where

the trees grew originally. It is very far from here. I have never

been there. The trees apparently don't grow here in the South.

Cheers,

José

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,

> I have heard that they have a very hard shell

> and it is a tough job to crack them open. Traditionally it was

> women who did that job.

[snip]

> Can you wait until Friday for a more detailed piece of information?

Of course, I can wait for information on Brazil nuts from a Brazilian.

You mention boiling the nuts: In the past I've frozen them in order to

make the nuts easier to crack open from the shell. I use a hammer.

Maybe they don't allow women to have hammers in Brazil?

:-D

~Robin Ann

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> ,

>

> > I have heard that they have a very hard shell

> > and it is a tough job to crack them open. Traditionally it was

> > women who did that job.

>

> [snip]

>

> > Can you wait until Friday for a more detailed piece of

information?

>

> Of course, I can wait for information on Brazil nuts from a

Brazilian.

>

> You mention boiling the nuts: In the past I've frozen them in order

to

> make the nuts easier to crack open from the shell. I use a hammer.

> Maybe they don't allow women to have hammers in Brazil?

>

> :-D

>

> ~Robin Ann

Oh Robin Ann: You are making me laugh. No this is not the first time

I am laughing to-day, but that was a very good laugh, you know.

Indeed, the women breaking the shells use a hammer - I have seen it

on TV - but I can't assert that they use the same hammer on their

employers for paying them such a vile sallary. If that's what you are

alluding to, then I agree that they might start considering such a

corrective action.

Cheers,

JC

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> ,

>

> > I have heard that they have a very hard shell

> > and it is a tough job to crack them open. Traditionally it was

> > women who did that job.

>

> [snip]

>

> > Can you wait until Friday for a more detailed piece of

information?

>

> Of course, I can wait for information on Brazil nuts from a

Brazilian.

>

> You mention boiling the nuts: In the past I've frozen them in order

to

> make the nuts easier to crack open from the shell. I use a hammer.

> Maybe they don't allow women to have hammers in Brazil?

>

> :-D

>

> ~Robin Ann

Hello Robin Ann:

So I went to do my shopping to-day, one day earlier than I usually

do. I talked to one of the shop assistants in the health food shop

where I buy nuts. He told me that unshelled Brazil nuts usually are

only for sale around X-mas, because that's the time people use them

for decoration, you know. It'd be very difficult to buy unshelled

Brazil nuts right now.

Anyway he gave me the telephone number of his main supplier. I called

them up just to confirm the information: unshelled Brazil nuts only

around X-mas. Depending on how much you need, they (the suppliers)

could sell them to you, if you placed an order. If it is a small

quantity, it may be too expensive, however. The person in charge of

exportation issues (the owner) wasn't in when I called. So if you'd

like, I will send him an e-mail later with a few questions. Or you

could do that yourself. Ask him your questions in English or submit

your questions to me and I will translate them for you. Their e-mail

is r.fatuch@... or estreladooriente@.... The man in

charge is called Francisco.

So please let me know what you'd rather do, so I can be of service to

you, if you need me.

I was going to mail this privately to you, Robin Ann, but then I

thought that someone else might be interested in this.

Hoping to hear from you soon,

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....

PS. By the way, Robin Ann, only now (too late?) do I realize that the

word *nut* in American English can stand for an insane or eccentric

person. So maybe Brazil Nuts, with a little stretch from a casual

reader, could as well mean *insane or eccentric people coming from

Brazil*. Oh, I expect you don't think that everyone coming from this

country are necessarily nuts! (Though, as a side note, I would add that

many are indeed...) I've got to put in an emoticon here: :)

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> PS. By the way, Robin Ann, only now (too late?) do I realize that

> the word *nut* in American English can stand for an insane or

> eccentric person. So maybe Brazil Nuts, with a little stretch from

> a casual reader, could as well mean *insane or eccentric people

> coming from Brazil*. Oh, I expect you don't think that everyone

> coming from this

> country are necessarily nuts! (Though, as a side note, I would add

> that many are indeed...) I've got to put in an emoticon here: :)

>

Well, from a California Nut to a Brazil nut, thanks for your

research, . I was interested in a source for unshelled Brazil

nuts because I assume that with unshelled there'd be less of a

chance for the nuts to be rancid. And then, of course, I could also

wield my mighty hammer!

And, yes, Brazil nuts are indeed mainly for sale around here at

Christmas time. I just wondered if that was because they were

harvested at that time and therefore freshest or there was some

other more festive or holy reason involved? This is a rhetorical

question for which I don't expect you to have the answer... :-)

I will probably buy the unshelled nuts on the internet when they are

freshest and then freeze them until I want to eat them...

But you can bet that I'll never think of a Brazil nut in quite the

same way though..

~Robin Ann

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