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OT - Burkett Pecans
Apparently a Texas thing. Are they any different from the Diamond brand I can buy in the grocery store?
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It's not a science, it's an art. And it's flawed. - Camp Hill, PA
Comments
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Excuse my ignorance here, but I assume this must be a brand question. OTOH if you are looking for a kick butt recipe for roasted/salted pecans I'll be glad to share a recipe that we love. But it will be tomorrow as I'm headed to bed!
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It's a Brand thing I came across on Flipboard. Supposed to be some great pecans from Texas.__________________________________________It's not a science, it's an art. And it's flawed.- Camp Hill, PA
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Found this, never heard of them though.
ORIGINAL BURKETT PECAN. In the fall of 1900 two young sons of J. H. Burkett, Omar and Joe, found nuts from the parent of the original Burkett pecan tree. When the boys told their father they found the pecans in a squirrel nest, he urged them to return and find the tree that bore them. After some searching they found the parent tree growing on the south bank of Battle Fish Creek, Callahan County, and obtained some bud-wood, which their father grafted to a second-growth seedling. Although only two buds grew, they produced the first two nuts in 1905. In 1908 one bud was destroyed, and by 1910 the parent tree had been destroyed also. The other grafted bud grew into the tree now known as the original Burkett pecan. In the 1920s and 1930s the Burkett papershell pecan was the most popular variety of pecan because of its thin shell, unusual flavor, and large size. The Burkett pecan was officially named for its breeder by the Texas Nut Growers Association at a meeting in Waco. In 1966 the Texas Historical Commission placed a marker at the site of the tree. The original Burkett pecan is located on the north side of Interstate 20 one-half mile east of Farm Road 880, near the Eastland-Callahan county line.Love you bro!
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