Dictionary Definition
hazelnut
Noun
1 any of several shrubs or small trees of the
genus Corylus bearing edible nuts enclosed in a leafy husk [syn:
hazel, hazelnut
tree]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
hazelnutSynonyms
Translations
- Basque: hur
- Bosnian: lješnik
- Catalan: avellana
- Cherokee: ᎠᏳᎩᏛ (ayugidǝ)
- Chinese: 榛子 zhēnzi
- Croatian: ljesnjak
- Czech: lískový ořech
- Dutch: hazelnoot
- Esperanto: avelo
- French: noisette
- German: Haselnuss
- Greek: φουντούκι (fountoúki)
- Hungarian: mogyoró
- Italian: nocciola
- Polish: orzech laskowy
- Portuguese: avelã
- Russian: лесной орех (lesnój or'éχ) , фундук (fundúk)
- Serbian:
- Spanish: avellana
- Swedish: hasselnöt
- Turkish: fındık
- Welsh: cneuen gyll
Extensive Definition
The Common Hazel (Corylus avellana) is a species
of hazel native to
Europe and
western Asia,
from the British
Isles south to Iberia,
Greece,
Turkey and
Cyprus,
north to central Scandinavia,
and east to the central Ural
Mountains, the Caucasus, and
northwestern Iran.
Botany
Common hazel is typically a shrub reaching 3-8 m tall, but can reach 15 m. The leaves are deciduous, rounded, 6-12 cm long and across, softly hairy on both surfaces, and with a double-serrate margin. The flowers are produced very early in spring, before the leaves, and are monoecious with single-sex wind-pollinated catkins. Male catkins are pale yellow and 5-12 cm long, while female catkins are very small and largely concealed in the buds with only the bright red 1-3 mm long styles visible. The fruit is a nut, produced in clusters of one to five together, each nut held in a short leafy involucre ('husk') which encloses about three quarters of the nut. The nut is roughly spherical to oval, 15-20 mm long and 12-20 mm broad (larger, up to 25 mm long, in some cultivated selections), yellow-brown with a pale scar at the base. The nut falls out of the involucre when ripe, about 7-8 months after pollination.It is readily distinguished from the closely
related Filbert (Corylus
maxima) by the short involucre; in the Filbert the nut is fully
enclosed by a beak-like involucre longer than the nut. and was
selected by Linnaeus from Leonhart
Fuchs's De historia stirpium commentarii insignes (1542), where
the species was described as "Avellana nux sylvestris" ("wild nut
of Avella").
Cultivation and uses
The Common Hazel is an important component of the hedgerows that were the traditional field boundaries in lowland England. The wood was traditionally grown as coppice, the poles cut being used for wattle-and-daub building and agricultural fencing.There are many cultivars of the Hazel,
including 'Barcelona', 'Butler', 'Casina', 'Clark' 'Cosford',
'Daviana', 'Delle Langhe', 'England', 'Ennis', Fillbert, 'Halls
Giant', 'Jemtegaard', 'Kent Cob', 'Lewis', 'Tokolyi', 'Tonda
Gentile', 'Tonda di Giffoni', 'Tonda Romana', 'Wanliss Pride', and
'Willamette'. Some of these are grown for specific qualities of the
nut including large nut size, and early and late fruiting
cultivars, whereas other are grown as pollinators. The majority of
commercial Hazelnuts are propagated from root sprouts.
In the United
States, hazelnut production is concentrated in two states,
Oregon and
Washington;
however, they are also grown extensively just to the north, in the
Fraser
Valley of British
Columbia, Canada. In 1996 the
in-shell production in Oregon was about 19,900 tons (18,000
tonnes) compared to 100 tons (91 tonnes) in Washington (. Recent
orchard plantings in California are
likely to increase production in the USA. The hazelnut is also
growing in popularity in the USA with a Hazelnut Council set up to
promote its use. The harvesting of hazelnuts is either by hand in
rural communities, or by manual or mechanical raking of fallen
nuts.
Hazelnuts are extensively used in confectionery to make
praline and also used in
combination with chocolate for chocolate
truffles and products
such as Nutella. In the
USA, hazelnut
butter is being promoted as a more nutritious spread than its
peanut
butter counterpart, though it has a higher fat content. In
Austria and
especially in Vienna hazelnut paste
is an important ingredient in the world famous torts (such as
Viennese hazelnut tort) which are made there. Vodka-based Hazelnut
liqueurs, such as
Frangelico, are
also increasing in popularity, especially in the U.S. and eastern
Europe.
Hazelnut is popular as a coffee flavouring,
especially in the form of Hazelnut latte. Hazelnut-flavoured coffee
seems (to many users) to be slightly sweetened and less acidic, even though the nut is low
in natural saccharides. The reason for such perception is not yet
understood.
In Australia over
2000 tonnes are imported annually mostly to supply the
demand from the Cadbury
company for inclusion in its eponymous milk chocolate bar
which is the third most popular brand in Australia. Hazelnut
oil,
pressed from hazelnuts, is strongly flavoured and used as a
cooking oil. Hazelnuts
are also grown extensively in Australia in orchards growing
varieties mostly imported from Europe.
Primitive archers have also used the wood of the
hazelnut in the making of arrows. The fine grain and tendency to
grow with fairly straight shoots makes them suitable shaft
material.
Harvesting
Hazel nuts are harvested annually in mid autumn. As autumn comes to a close, the trees drop their nuts and leaves. Most commercial growers wait for the nuts to drop on their own, rather than use equipment to shake them from the tree.There are three primary pieces of equipment used
in commercial harvesting; the sweeper, the harvester, and the
forklift. The sweeper centralises the material into rows, the
harvester lifts and separates the nuts from the debris, and the
forklift hauls the nuts away for processing. The sweeper is a
low-to-the-ground tractor that makes multiple passes up and down
the rows with a 2 m belt attached to the front that sweeps leaves,
nuts, and small twigs from left to right, depositing the material
in a row as it drives forward. On the rear of the tractor is a
powerful blower that pushes material left into the adjacent row
with air speeds up to 90 m/s. Careful grooming during the year and
patient blowing at harvest can eliminate the need for hand raking
around the trunk of the tree where nuts can accumulate. The sweeper
will prepare two rows at a time as it goes up and down the rows.
After its final pass, all the material on the ground has been
deposited in 60 cm wide rows for the harvester to process. It is
best to only sweep a few rows ahead of the harvesters at any given
time, as the rows are susceptible to moisture and parasites over
time.
The harvester is a slow moving machine that lifts
the material off the ground and separates the nuts from the leaves,
empty husks, and small twigs. As the harvester drives over the
rows, a fast spinning cylinder with hundreds of tines rakes the
material onto a belt. The belt takes the material over a blower and
under a powerful vacuum that sucks the light weight dirt and leaves
off the nuts and discharges it into the orchard. The remaining nuts
are conveyed into a tote box.
Once a box fills with nuts, a third tractor will
haul away full boxes and bring empties to the harvester to minimise
time spent not collecting nuts.
There are two different timing strategies for
collecting the fallen nuts. The first option is to harvest early
when only half of the nuts have fallen. With less material on the
ground, the machines can work much faster and are less subject to
breakdown. The other option is to wait for all the nuts to fall and
go over the crop once. The first option is easier, but takes longer
to perform with two passes.
Ideally, the orchard should not be so dry that an
abundance of dust can reduce vision and equipment efficiency.
Conversely if it is too wet, mud cakes in the machinery and
moisture weighs down the material, making it more difficult to lift
and separate.
Diseases
Mesolithic Food Industry
In 1995 evidence of large-scale Mesolithic nut processing, some 9,000 years old, was found in a midden pit on the island of Colonsay in Scotland. The evidence consists of a large, shallow pit full of the remains of hundreds of thousands of burned hazelnut shells. Hazelnuts have been found on other Mesolithic sites, but rarely in such quantities or concentrated in one pit. The nuts were radiocarbon dated to 7720+/-110BP, which calibrates to circa 7000 BC. Similar sites in Britain are known only at Farnham in Surrey and Cass ny Hawin on the Isle of Man.This discovery gives an insight into communal
activity and forward planning in the period. The nuts were
harvested in a single year and pollen
analysis suggests that the hazel trees were all cut down at
the same time.
References
hazelnut in Arabic: بندق
hazelnut in Aragonese: Abellanera
hazelnut in Bulgarian: Обикновена леска
hazelnut in Catalan: Avellaner
hazelnut in Welsh: Collen (coeden)
hazelnut in Danish: Almindelig Hassel
hazelnut in German: Gemeine Hasel
hazelnut in Spanish: Corylus avellana
hazelnut in Persian: فندق
hazelnut in French: Noisetier commun
hazelnut in Friulian: Noglâr
hazelnut in Galician: Abeleira
hazelnut in Croatian: Obična lijeska
hazelnut in Indonesian: Corylus avellana
hazelnut in Italian: Corylus avellana
hazelnut in Hebrew: אגוז לוז
hazelnut in Luxembourgish: Hieselter
hazelnut in Lithuanian: Paprastasis
lazdynas
hazelnut in Dutch: Hazelaar
hazelnut in Japanese: セイヨウハシバミ
hazelnut in Norwegian: Hassel
hazelnut in Norwegian Nynorsk: Hassel
hazelnut in Occitan (post 1500): Avelanièr
comun
hazelnut in Polish: Leszczyna pospolita
hazelnut in Portuguese: Avelã
hazelnut in Russian: Лещина крупная
hazelnut in Albanian: Lajthia
hazelnut in Serbian: Леска
hazelnut in Finnish: Euroopanpähkinäpensas
hazelnut in Ukrainian: Ліщина звичайна
hazelnut in Walloon: Côrî