Tue. Nov 5th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

If you’ve made pesto at home, you’ve probably used a handful of pricey pine nuts to add texture.

The creamy, teardrop-shaped nuts are a delicacy in Mediterranean cooking.

They’re one of the world’s most expensive nuts, and none of the pine nuts sold in Australian supermarkets are grown here.

In fact, Australia imports about $13 million worth of pine nuts annually from Asia.

But that could change, with a handful of farmers embarking on a journey to slowly replace some of those imports.

A waiting game

a man stands next to a pine tree
Andrew Bailey with some of his pine nut trees, which can grow up to 30 metres tall.(ABC Rural: Laurissa Smith)

The journey is a very long one.

The pine trees can take up to 15 years to produce their first harvest of edible nuts.

The species best suited to an Australian climate is Pinus pinea or Italian stone pine, which is native to southern Europe and Turkey and considered the most superior nut in the culinary world.

Agricultural scientist and farmer Andrew Bailey reckons it’ll be worth the wait.

He has planted 400 trees on his property at Winkleigh in northern Tasmania.

“I’ve had the place 25 years and the pine trees have been in around 12 years.

“From a production point of view, it fits perfectly with where they would grow in Europe at the same latitude,” Mr Bailey said.

Why are pine nuts so expensive?

Pine nuts can retail between $50 and $100 per kilogram, depending on which country they’re grown in.

The umbrella-shaped pine tree produces pine cones, just like a pine tree that’s grown for timber.

These cones take three years to mature, longer than any other pine species.

A hand holds down a branch with a small pine cone attached to it
This tiny pine cone will take three years to mature and ripen.(ABC Rural: Laurissa Smith)

They produce seeds, and inside those are the kernels, which are fiddly to extract.

“The challenge with these pine trees is that the seed comes out much like a pistachio seed,” Mr Bailey said.

“So it’s already encased in a shell and we have to further process that to get the seed out and polish it.”

A plantation has the potential to yield about 200kg of pine nuts per hectare and trees have a very long life.

Some 200-year-old trees in Europe are still being harvested.

Developing a market in Australia

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