How to Make Acorn Cake and Acorn Recipes | Hank Shaw (2024)

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4.60 from 15 votes

By Hank Shaw

January 03, 2010 | Updated May 19, 2020

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How to Make Acorn Cake and Acorn Recipes | Hank Shaw (2)

One of the first questions I had as I began researching acorns years ago was what do other groups do with them? The literature is dominated by roughly hewn recipes from either various American Indian groupsor hippies. Neither, quite frankly, are recipes I am overly jazzed about.

Oaks live all over the world, from Asia to North Africa to Europe to North America. And where there are acorns, people have eaten them. They have their own methods, too.

Turns out the acorn-eatingest people in the world right now are the Koreans. If you go to a good Asian market, there is a good chance you will find acorn flour and acorn noodles, which look just like soba noodles. From what I can tell the noodles are eaten in the same way soba noodles are; and yes, they also appear to a lesser extent in Japanese cuisine.

Any Korean food experts out there? My question is whether acorn flour and noodles are considered low-class or poor people’s food. Because that is their stigmaeverywhere else in the world, best I can tell.

This is interesting. A certain set of scholars think that sometime around 10,000 years ago, humans — who ate acorns with aplomb at the time — grew in population to the point where they were overeating them and threatening the oaks. Great big oaks that gave sweet acorns would be in demand and might even be fought over, as the Indians did in parts of California.

How to Make Acorn Cake and Acorn Recipes | Hank Shaw (3)

So with too few acorns and a burgeoning population, the scholars theorize that the people looked to wild grains as a secondary source of vital carbohydrates. And carbs are key to a hunter-gathering society; remember the Forager’s Dilemma?

Turned out these wild grains — emmer wheat, spelt, barley and rye — domesticate easily, are annuals so can be planted anywhere if your tribal group moves around, and give easily collectible seed that is lighter than a big ole’ bag of acorns, which havea pretty long lag time from acorn to acorn-bearing oak. And good luck moving a giant oak when invaders arrive, but you can flee with some barley seed and plant again next spring.

Acorns, which are, for the most part, bitter and need to be water-leached at least once or twice to be palatable, fell by the wayside. Acorns also lack gluten, which is vital in making bread items stick together. Wheat, barley and rye all have at least a little gluten.So acorns, and in Europe chestnuts, which havea similar consistency, fell to the status of emergency or famine foods. A fixation with whitened wheat flour furthered this. Black bread was for peasants, and acorn cooks up dark. It’s the sugars in them.

Consequently, you need to search far and wide for acorn recipes in European circles. North African Berbers do use them, however. I corresponded with Paula Wolfert, who wrote the great Couscous and Other Good Food from Morocco, which is the sine qua non of Moroccan cookbooks. Wolfert told me that Berbers will sometimes make couscous from acorn flour. Fascinating. I have heard that Italians will make acorn flour pasta, too. I developed my own recipe for acorn flour pasta here.

Another source on Moroccan food tells me they alsoroast and salt acorns and serve them like roasted chestnuts. Linda Berzok, who wrote American Indian Food, says that the Indians around Tuscon, Arizona, sell roasted acorns from the Emory Oak, which are so sweet they don’t need leaching. An expert on Mexican food says in Chihuahua they do the same thing; makes sense, as the Emory Oak lives there, too.

How to Make Acorn Cake and Acorn Recipes | Hank Shaw (4)

Back in Europe, acorns from the cork oak are pretty sweet, and those that the famed jamon iberico pigs eat, the bellotas, reputedly need no leaching.Janet from The Old Foodie sent me a recipe for acorn bread from an English book written in 1802 that is a little like the acorn flatbreads I made last week, although with no wheat flour. These English acorn cakes are more like acorn meal hamburger patties cooked in embers.

In Europe, the thread running through most acorn and chestnut cookery is that they are fillers when wheat flour is scarce. Considering the reverence many groups have for wheat it’s pretty easy to see why anything they need to fill out a bread recipe would be seen as an adulteration, not an enhancement.

There is one European food that uses acorns that isn’t stigmatized: It’s an acorncake. The Italians make a chestnut flour cake called castagnaccio, but it contains no leaveners. I imagine it’s like a hockey puck. So I Frenchified it and added beaten egg whites, baking powder and baking soda. I baked it in little ramekins and topped it with powdered sugar.

How to Make Acorn Cake and Acorn Recipes | Hank Shaw (5)

Now I am not a cake maker. The cake itself was really crumbly — too crumbly for my taste. But the taste of the cake was amazing! It was a dead ringer for a gingerbread cake, only there was no gingerbread spices in it at all! I was shocked. All that’s in it is acorn flour, eggs, honey, olive oil, sugar and a pinch of salt. How did it get to be like gingerbread? Must be the acorns.

4.60 from 15 votes

Acorn or Chestnut Flour Cake

I found a version of a chestnut cake like this in an old Gourmet magazine, and this acorn cake recipe is a riff off that. These are lovely done in a 9-inch springform pan, but are equally good in buttered ramekins. Be sure to use a small circle of parchment paper on the bottom of the ramekin, and butter both sides. This will help you get the little cakes out easier. Oh, and don’t forget they rise, so don’t fill them too high.

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Course: Dessert

Cuisine: French

Servings: 4 people

Author: Hank Shaw

Prep Time: 20 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 30 minutes minutes

Total Time: 50 minutes minutes

Ingredients

  • ½ cup olive oil
  • 1/2 cup acorn or chestnut flour
  • 1/2 cup cake flour or all-purpose wheat flour
  • ¼ cup toasted and chopped pine nuts (optional)
  • ½ teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 3 separated eggs
  • ½ cup honey
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • Confectioner’s sugar for dusting
  • Butter for greasing pans

Instructions

  • Grease the springform pan or ramekins. Preheat oven to 350°F.

  • Mix the acorn flour, wheat flour, baking soda and powder and salt in a bowl. In the bowl of a stand mixer, or in another large bowl, beat the egg yolks, oil, honey and 2 tablespoons of sugar together until it looks like caramel. Mix in the dry ingredients.

  • In another bowl, add the egg whites and just a pinch of salt and beat into soft peaks. Add the remaining sugar and beat a bit more, so the whites are reaching the firm peak stage.

  • Fold this into the dough a little at a time gently.Pour, or really gently place, the dough into the ramekins (remember they will rise!) or the springform pan. Using a rubber spatula flatten out the top and place in the oven as fast as you can.

  • Bake for about 30 minutes. After 20 minutes, watch for burning, as acorn flour browns faster than chestnut flour. Remove from the oven, let rest 5 minutes, then turn out onto a rack to cool.

  • When they have cooled for a good 15-20 minutes or so, dust with the confectioner’s sugar.

Nutrition

Calories: 686kcal | Carbohydrates: 83g | Protein: 9g | Fat: 37g | Saturated Fat: 5g | Cholesterol: 123mg | Sodium: 340mg | Potassium: 184mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 54g | Vitamin A: 195IU | Vitamin C: 11mg | Calcium: 53mg | Iron: 2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe? Tag me today!Mention @huntgathercook or tag #hankshaw!

Categorized as:
Foraging, How-To (DIY stuff), Italian, Recipe

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

Read More About Me

How to Make Acorn Cake and Acorn Recipes | Hank Shaw (2024)

FAQs

How do you prepare acorns for humans to eat? ›

Grind, blitz or chop your shelled acorns into small pieces and cover with cold water. Leave the mixture in a bowl or jar and change the cold water every day. The acorns are fully leached when the bitterness is gone, this usually takes a few days. Dry the mix by straining through a cheesecloth or muslin over a bowl.

What can I do with lots of acorns? ›

What to Do With Acorns in Your Yard
  1. Use them for arts and crafts and holiday decorations.
  2. Use them to grow an oak tree.
  3. Use them in animal feeders.
  4. Donate them to zoos and wildlife preserves.
Jun 14, 2023

Can you make anything out of acorns? ›

How to Use Acorns. Acorns can be used in a variety of ways. They can be eaten whole, ground up into acorn meal or flour, or made into mush to have their oil extracted. Once you've safely leached the tannins from your raw acorns, you can roast them for 15 to 20 minutes and sprinkle them with salt for a snack.

Why do you soak acorns in water? ›

To prepare palatable acorns, crack them out of their shell and break any large pieces into “pea-sized” chunks. Then soak these acorn chunks in cold, warm, or even hot water to remove the bitter and irritating tannic acid. Note that some books instruct us to boil acorns, but this locks in some of the bitterness.

How many acorns to make a cup of flour? ›

For those who think it would take many trees to produce enough flour for even a small batch of pancakes, it surprisingly doesn't take many acorns at all. It takes about 3 cups of acorn meat to yield 1 cup of flour.

Why did humans stop eating acorns? ›

A lost tradition shared across the world since Stone Age

Humans can't eat raw acorns, or at least they can't do that pleasantly and in big amounts: they contain tannins, which give the fruit an unpleasant bitter taste and make it toxic.

How did Native Americans prepare acorns for eating? ›

To do this, the acorns were dried for one year, shelled, winnowed to remove a thin inner shell, pounded into flour, sifted repeatedly through finely-woven baskets, leached by rinsing in water, then cooked into a mush like grits.

How to tell if acorns are good to eat? ›

How to eat acorns
  1. Look for fully mature, brown acorns with the caps still attached. ...
  2. Rinse your acorns thoroughly to remove any contaminants, such as dirt and small insects. ...
  3. Remove the hard shells using a nutcracker.
  4. Boil the raw acorns in a pot for 5 minutes, or until the water turns dark brown.
Apr 17, 2019

What is the $75 bonus on acorns? ›

With Acorns, you start out with a free $5 bonus. With Acorns Spend, you'll get a $75 bonus after you enable direct deposit and receive your first two deposits in your Spend account.

What crafts can you make with acorns? ›

Simply glue acorns together to make little comic figures, using matchsticks or toothpicks for arms and legs, felt-tip pens to add features and lumps of clay for shoes. The acorn cup makes a natural hat! Kids love simple DIY projects, and they're a great way to pass the time on a rainy fall day.

How to make acorn coffee? ›

To make a cup of acorn coffee, Johannsen says you "Heat up a liter of water and mix around four to five tablespoons of acorn powder," like how you'd make instant coffee. And, just like coffee, it can be drunk on its own or with a splash of milk and a little sugar.

How do you process acorns for eating? ›

When partially dry, coarse grind a few acorns at a time in a blender. Spread the ground acorns to dry on cookie sheets, then grind again in a blender. Repeat until you are left with a flour- or cornmeal-like substance. You can also freeze your fresh acorn meal.

What are the disadvantages of acorns? ›

However, a significant drawback of Acorns is its fee structure. The app offers three plans, priced at $3, $5, or $9 monthly, based on the services you need. The $3 monthly fee is relatively high for accounts with smaller balances.

What are the best acorns to eat? ›

Generally, the best acorns to harvest are those of the white oaks, such as the swamp oak, Oregon white oak, and burr oak, as they contain less bitter tannin. Luckily, nearly all acorns can be made usable with natural processing which renders them nutty and sweet.

What are the tastiest acorns? ›

Generally, the best acorns to harvest are those of the white oaks, such as the swamp oak, Oregon white oak, and burr oak, as they contain less bitter tannin. Luckily, nearly all acorns can be made usable with natural processing which renders them nutty and sweet.

What is the best acorn tree? ›

Water Oak

The water oak produces high yields of acorns. So while the taste is bitter, the abundance is there and the acorns will help carry deer through the winter months. This is critical when acorns from the white oak group are long gone.

Which acorns have the most tannins? ›

They bury red oak acorns because acorns in the red oak group have the highest levels of tannins. This is because red oak acorns do not germinate until spring. They have high levels of tannins to fight off fungi and other pathogens over the long, dreary winter. Thus, red oak acorns store better.

What is the difference between white oak acorns and red oak acorns? ›

The red oak acorn has more tannin or tannic acid than the white oak. Tannin is nature's preservative, so red oak acorns last longer on the ground. Tannin is bitter to the taste, so deer typically prefer the much sweeter white oak acorn.

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