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ON OUR RADAR: Interesting Nibbles From The Past Week

Lunch ToteSave money by bringing your lunch to work. Bring it in style with this Built NY Lunch Tote.
  The Urban Vegan lists 25 money-saving kitchen tips for pure vegans. The article starts with the premise that veganism doesn’t have to be expensive, but you don’t have to be vegan to find the tips useful. Some will sound familiar: Pack your own lunch—you can save at least $2,000 after-tax dollars a year. Invest $19.99 in the chic, insulated tote at the left, and you are now cool instead of a brown-bagger. (Shown: The Built NY Lunch Tote, available in black, orange or silver, keeps food and drink separated. Made from the same material as a diver’s wetsuit, it insulates for up to 4 hours with no additional refrigeration necessary.) Some tips are earth-friendly (we do all of them at THE NIBBLE, including using cloth napkins instead of paper napkins and rinsing/reusing Ziplock-type bags). It’s a good list to review. One of our favorites: Borrow rather than buy cookbooks.
 

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TODAY IN FOOD: It’s One Month To National Pistachio Day

We’re the last to make light of Fundamentalist Islam, but we do have better pistachios for it.

Prior to the overthrow of the Shah of Iran in 1979, there was no pistachio industry in the U.S. A series of political events ensued, beginning with the fundamentalist Islamic revolution of the Ayatollah Khomeini that ousted Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.

It was followed by the Iran Hostage Crisis, in which the U.S. Embassy in Tehran was stormed and 66 hostages were taken.

This led to a U.S. trade embargo against Iran. Since a majority of the pistachios eaten by Americans were imported from Iran, California farmers saw the opportunity to plant the crop.

> Check out the history of pistachios, below.

> Also below, the year’s pistachio holidays.

> Pistachio recipes for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks.

Then go nuts and celebrate one of mankind’s oldest cultivated crops.
 
 
CALIFORNIA IS THE PISTACHIO KING

A better pistachio resulted, since the U.S. has the benefit of more modern farming methods. When there are delays in processing the harvested nuts, the white shells begin to stain and blemish, which is why pistachios from the Middle East were often dyed a cover-up red*.
 
Our favorite pistachios come from Santa Barbara Pistachio Company. They farm organic pistachios, and sell salted and unsalted pistachios plus wonderful flavors. We buy them unshelled in plain plus Chili Lemon, Crushed Garlic, Hickory Smoked, Lemon Zing, and Salted.)

Another favorite is Setton Farms, which sells organic and conventional pistachios in Buffalo Wing, Chili Limón, Chocolate-Covered, Garlic Onion, Jalapeño, Salt and Pepper, Scorpion Pepper, Tajin, and more.

So look for California pistachios and enjoy your fill: They’re a good-for-you nut (pistachio nutrition).

Check out the history of pistachios below; then go nuts and celebrate.
 
 
PISTACHIO NUT HOLIDAYS

  • February 25: National Chocolate Covered Nut Day
  • February 26: National Pistachio Day
  • October 22: National Nut Day
  •  
    Pistachio-Rich Foods

  • August 21: National Spumoni Day
  • August 31: National Trail Mix Day
  • November 17: National Baklava Day
  •  
    More

  • The Year’s 38 Nut Holidays
  •  
     
    PISTACHIO NUT HISTORY

    Pistachio trees are native to the Middle East, in the area around Afghanistan, Iran (Persia), and Central Asia. They’ve been cultivated there for thousands of years. They are mentioned in the Old Testament (Genesis 43:11) as one of the “best products of the land,” along with balm, honey, aromatic gum and myrrh, and almonds.

    Pistachios have always been considered a delicacy in the region. Legend says that pistachios were a favorite of the Queen of Sheba, who demanded all of the crops harvested in her land (present-day Yemen) for herself and her court.

    Pistachios reached Greece through Alexander the Great (334-323 B.C.E.). Later, under the rule of the Roman Emperor Tiberius (14-37 C.E.), the nut was introduced into Italy and Spain.

     

    A Bowl Of Pistachios Nuts
    [1] Beautiful pistachios with charcuterie from Columbus Craft Meats.

    Chicken Salad Sandwich
    [2] Not just for snacks and desserts, here pistachios are added to tuna salad, along with dried cranberries. The recipe (photo © Lovely Little Kitchen).

    Casarecce With Broccoli Rabe
    [3] Another delicious idea: Casarecce With Broccoli Rabe and Burrata. Here’s the recipe (photo © DeLallo).

     
    During the Persia Empire (present-day Iran), ownership of pistachio groves and trading in pistachios meant high status and riches.

    Pistachios were introduced from the Near East into Italy and Spain in Roman times and became established in southern Europe and North Africa (e.g., Sicily, parts of Greece, coastal Spain, some areas of southern France).

    Cultivation expanded with the spread of Islam and the resulting Arab expansion in the Middle Ages. The Venetian Republic had close trade ties with Syria, one of the main cultivation areas for the pistachio. The nuts reached Sicily, and then northern and central Italy, via the sea trade routes.

    Cultivation was essentially Mediterranean. Climatically, pistachios want: Hot, dry summers and cold but not too wet winters. These conditions map well onto the Mediterranean basin, but poorly onto northern/Atlantic Europe.

    Pistachios reached central Europe via Italian sales routes, over the Alpine passes. North of the Alps they could not become a serious orchard crop.

    They were imported and used mainly as a luxury ingredient in pastries and confectionery. Wealthy people could grow small amounts in greenhouses.
     
     
    Pistachios “Immigrate” To The U.S.

    In 1854, seed distributor (and later, Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office) Charles Mason brought pistachio seeds to the U.S. for experimental plantings, via international seed-collection networks tied to the U.S. Patent Office and consular services.

    His focus was planting in California, Texas, and other southern states that had viable climates.

    However, Mason’s introductions never turned into a real industry. The trees he planted were basically curiosities and garden trees, not commercial orchards.

    While growers and scientists knew pistachios might work in the American West, they didn’t yet have a reliably productive cultivar for U.S. conditions. Imported pistachios from the Middle East still dominated the [small] market for pistachios, and prices were high.

    From the 1880s to early 1900s, pistachios caught on in the U.S. mainly among Middle Eastern immigrants.

    For the broader population, they were sold from vending machines in train and subway stations as a novelty snack with a premium price: a dozen for a nickel!
     
     
    How The U.S. Pistachio Industry Was Born

    The key technical and economic shift happened in the early–mid 20th century, but only matured after World War II.

    From 1929 through the 1940s the focus was on Finding the right cultivar. The USDA knew that California’s Central Valley climate looked perfect for pistachios. But they needed a variety that would bear bountifully in that specific climate, and produce attractive, reliably splitting nuts suitable for the snack trade.

    In 1929, USDA botanist William E. Whitehouse went to Iran, collected about 20 pounds of pistachio seeds, and planted some 3,000 trial trees in California.

    Pistachio trees are slow to bear, and after a decade of waiting for the trees to mature, only one line proved outstanding. That variety, grown near the city of Kerman, became the “Kernan” cultivar, the foundation of the U.S. industry.

    Only after World War II did pistachios become affordable to enjoy as a popular snack [source].
     
     
    Post World War II: Success!

    After WWII several things changed. Improved global shipping and cold‑chain logistics made mass importation easier. In the U.S., economic growth and rising middle‑class incomes made “luxury snacks” more accessible. Industrial food processing (automatic shellers, sorters, roasters) brought economies of scale and more consistent quality, which encouraged wider distribution and sales.

    In the 1960s, large‑scale planting of Kerman orchards began in the San Joaquin Valley, and several economic and political shifts drove down the cost:

  • Tax changes in 1969/1971 made other tree crops (like almonds and citrus) less attractive but left pistachios relatively favored, encouraging farmers toward growing them.
  • The Shah of Iran’s domestic programs (e.g., adding pistachios to school breakfasts), the Iranian Revolution (1979), and U.S. trade embargoes sharply limited Iranian exports and pushed up global prices.
  •  
    These engendered a huge incentive for U.S. growers to fill the gap in pistachios, both domestic and worldwide.
     
    The first major commercial California crop came in 1976; from there, acreage and yields exploded. The price came down so that pistachio nuts became a popular snack.
     
     
    Size Of The Pistachio Market

    For 2024/25, the USDA puts total world pistachio production around 1.0 million metric tons in‑shell (1,003,751 tons).

  • In the U.S., United States (California almost entirely), 2024/25 production was about 474,000 tons in‑shell, or 47% of global production.
  • Turkey produced about 250,000 tons, or 25% of global production.
  • Iran produced about 190,000 tons, or 19% of global production.
  • Syria produced about 69,000 tons, or 7% of global production.
  • Rest of world (EU, North Africa, Central Asia, etc.) counts for the remaining 3%–5% of global production.
  •  
    Thanks to American Pistachio Growers, Atlas Obscura, and Jerry James Jones, West Coast Nut and Wikipedia for much of this information.
     
     
    THE ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD “PISTACHIO”

    Many linguists think the word originated in an ancient Old Persian/Semitic language (e.g., Aramaic or a related dialect) and was then borrowed into Old Persian and Greek. However, the exact pre‑Persian form is uncertain. Here’s what we do know:

  • Old Persian: “pesteh” passed through Greek and Latin into the modern European languages. Middle Persian pstk evolved into New Persian pesteh.
  • Greek: Pistákion / pistákē, the word for the nut, was borrowed from pesteh. Pistachio tree became pistákē.
  • Latin: Pistācium derived from the Ancient Greek pistákion or pistákeia).
  • Italian and French: The word for the nut became pistacchio (Italian) and pistache (French).
  • English: Pistachio is a re-spelling of pistacchio. The first noted English usage is recorded from the 16th century.
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    Pistachio Trees
    [4] A pistachio grove with a close-up on growing nuts (photo © American Society of Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers).
     
    ________________

    *Later, pistachios were dyed red to stand out in vending machines. Today, some pistachios are still dyed red for marketing purposes.
     

    CHECK OUT WHAT’S HAPPENING ON OUR HOME PAGE, THENIBBLE.COM.

     
     

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    FOOD TIP OF THE DAY: Onion Magic

    OnionDon’t weep over me: Get goggles!   If your eyes water when you chop onions, the best kitchen gadget is a pair of swimmer’s goggles. They keep the sulfur enzymes away from your eyes like magic! To remove the smell of onions (or garlic) from your hands, squeeze lemon juice on them (or if you’ve squeezed lemon juice for a recipe, rub the squeezed pulp) and then rub your hands against stainless steel—your sink, faucet, a serving spoon. The “kitchen chemistry” works. While swimmer’s goggles may not qualify as kitchen gadgets, you can see some of our favorite traditional (and not-so-traditional) gadgets in the Kitchenware Section of THE NIBBLE online magazine.
     

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    TODAY IN FOOD: It’s National Peanut Butter Day

    Peanut butter lovers have a day to celebrate—and to try new and different peanut butters. Take a look at this comparison of the two-dozen-plus different flavors offered by our favorite brands. P.B. Loco’s Sundried Tomato PB is one of our favorite flavors; their Asian Curry makes instant sesame noodles, as well as an exotic PB sandwich. Both of these savory flavors can be enjoyed with roast beef or turkey, instead of mustard or mayo, and with vegetable sandwiches (try avocado). We put them in vegetable sushi, too, instead of wasabi. We eat the Raspberry White Chocolate PB from the jar like candy; the Sumatra Cinnamon and Raisin PB is the best of its breed. All of the savory flavors of Peanut Better demand to be tried. The Onion Parsley and Rosemary Garlic are incredible—you’ll make amazing hors d’oeuvres with them, as well as enjoy them on sandwiches with the aforementioned turkey and beef. The Peanut Better line is certified kosher and organic. Read our full reviews of P.B. Loco and Peanut Better, and bake this banana bread recipe with PB.   Peanut Butter
    All PB is not created equal: If you love your peanut butter, try these gourmet brands, and their special flavors.
     

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    FOOD TIP OF THE DAY: Eating The Rinds Of Cheeses

    Bloomy Rind Cheeses

    Aged Parmigiano-Reggiano

    Red Wax Gouda
    [1] EAT ME! Cheeses with bloomy white rinds like Brie, Camembert and triple-crèmes are delicious (photo courtesy Murray’s Cheese). [2] COOK WITH ME! Rinds from aged hard cheeses like this Parmigiano-Romano can be tossed into soups and stews (photo courtesy Whole Foods Market). [3] TOSS ME: Waxed rinds are not edible (photo © Karcich | Dreamstime).

      Recently we were at a professional wine event, and some fine cheeses were being served.

    We were dismayed to note that most people had scooped out the soft, runny centers of the bloomy rind cheeses, leaving the white rinds as ghostly shells.

    Cheese fans: The soft, white bloomy rinds are meant to be eaten. If you’ve been cutting them away, try them while they’re still pure and white. Connoisseurs consider them part of the unique character of the cheese, and will eat them even as they age and lose their pure white appeal.

    You’ll find bloomy rind cheeses made from cow’s milk, goat’s milk and sheep’s milk, although the most famous happen to be from cow’s milk and are also two of the most popular cheeses in the world, Brie and Camembert. Other bloomy-rinded favorites include triple crèmes such as Brillat-Savarin, Saint-Andre and Pierre Robert. (See the Glossary Of Cheese Terms in the Cheese Section of THE NIBBLE online magazine for more information.)

    Other wines can be eaten, too. As long as the rind is soft, from a semisoft cheese, it is edible and quite tasty, too, with mushroom accents.

    People are either rind-lovers or not; few are on the fence. But there’s no harm in trying a bite. After all, it’s that soft rind that enabled the cheese to develop its lovely flavors.

    Beyond white rinds of Brie, Camembert and triple-crème cheeses, the gray or yellow rinds of many other soft or semisoft cheeses deserve a taste. (think Brie or Taleggio) are edible and often have a pungent, mushroomy flavor.

    Even if it looks questionable to your eye, give it a try. If the cheese is good, so is the rind. You may find that a little rind complements the cheese and enhances its flavor. But if it’s strong or bitter. pass it up and try the next rind..
     
    WHAT ABOUT HARDER RINDS?

    Some people chew on the rinds of aged cheese, as long as it’s not covered in wax, which is inedible.

    If that doesn’t appeal to you, remember this kitchen trick: Toss the rind it in a pot of soup to add extra flavor (remove it before serving). The earthy rinds of hard aged cheeses like Parmesan and Pecorino have been used this way since…the beginning of aged cheese!
     
    MORE ABOUT BLOOMY-RIND CHEESES
    Brie and Camembert are essentially the same cheese made in different locations and in different sizes.

  • Camembert, named after its village in northwest France, is made in 4.5-inch wheels and Brie, named for the province in northern France where it originated, is made in 11- to 11.8-inch wheels [although “baby Bries” are now made as well]. Read our full article on the difference between Brie and Camembert.)/
  • The bloomy rind category of cheese refers to those cheeses with snowy white, downy rinds and soft, creamy interiors.

  • Bloomy rind, also called white rind or soft-ripened cheese, is one of the major categories of cheese. Along with the fresh (un-aged) cheeses, it comprises the soft cheese category.
  • The bloomy rind is composed of one of the greatest cheese molds, Penicillium candidum, which grows naturally as the cheese ages. The rind is produced by spraying the surface of the cheese with Penicillium candidum before the brief aging period (about two weeks). The mold grows on the outside of the cheese, breaking down the protein and fat inside, making it soft, runny and more complex.
  •  
    CHECK OUT ALL THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF CHEESE IN OUR CHEESE GLOSSARY.

     
     
      

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