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Gastropod

That Old Chestnut: A Nutty Tale, of Love, Loss, and Reconnection

Gastropod

Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley

Arts, Science, History, Food

4.7 • 3.7K Ratings

🗓️ 8 November 2022

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Just a little over a hundred years ago, eastern forests were studded with what was called "America's perfect tree": 100-foot giants with straight-grained, rot-resistant wood, which filled the woods every fall with delicious, nutritious nuts. This nut—the American chestnut—was a staple in the diet and culture of Indigenous peoples, local wildlife, and colonial Americans. Then, in the early 1900s, disaster struck: a deadly and seemingly unstoppable disease moved in and made the species functionally extinct. But Americans haven’t given up on the chestnut; there’s a movement today to bring back this iconic tree using a variety of ingenious approaches. So what will it take to return the “redwood of the East” to our forests—and its sweet, buttery nut to our plates? Join us this episode as we take a frolic through the chestnut’s forgotten history and the science underpinning its potential return, as well as visit a farm growing hybrid American chestnuts to taste for ourselves why they once drove Americans wild—and might soon do so again. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Alright, here we go.

0:05.2

First American chestnut.

0:07.0

Mmm.

0:08.0

Mmm.

0:09.0

It's very sweet.

0:11.0

Sweet and...

0:13.0

Starcheats delicious.

0:15.8

I have eaten plenty of chestnuts before, but this was different.

0:20.3

It was my very first American chestnut, or at least mostly American chestnut.

0:26.8

And that's kind of a big deal, which is why we're making an entire episode about it.

0:31.2

That's right, you're listening to Gastropod, the podcast that looks at food through the

0:34.1

lens of science and history.

0:35.6

I'm Nicola Twilly.

0:36.6

And I'm Cynthia Grieber.

0:37.8

Personally, I'd never eaten chestnuts plain like this.

0:40.5

At least as far as I can remember, I've had chestnut honey and chestnut flour crepes,

0:44.4

but never just whole-boiled chestnuts.

0:46.7

But actually, what we were doing once upon a time, this was normal.

0:50.2

Chestnuts were one of the most common things you could eat in the fall on the east coast.

0:54.2

Until they were wiped out by a deadly disease.

0:57.7

For nearly 100 years now, the American chestnut has been functionally extinct.

1:03.0

This episode we've got the story of America's former favorite nut.

...

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