News

Black walnuts are celebrated for their bold, earthy flavor and impressive nutrient profile. This article reviews the benefits, uses, and potential safety concerns of black walnuts.
The American black walnut (Juglan nigra) is a tree native to North America and its hard-to-crack but flavorful and nutritious ...
Black walnuts were an inexpensive, if time-consuming, way to dress up baked goods, and many people remember picking up the green-hulled nuts and putting them down in the driveway to hull.
Black walnut has been used medicinally for thousands of years. The leaves, bark, roots, hulls, husks, sap, and the nuts themselves were and are all used for different healing properties.
Organic farming research has found that you can compost black walnut hulls successfully, despite the fact that they contain the toxic juglone compound.
I remember my dad sitting down in the winter with a bowl of black walnuts and talking about how tasty they were. He always ask if anyone wanted one, but every year we declined. Besides, those came ...
If you stumble upon a black walnut lying on the ground, you may not know what it is. That’s because the distinctive-tasting nutmeat looks very different than the green, baseball-sized husk that ...
Black walnut hulls, nuts, leaves, or bark should NOT be used in compost piles for vegetable gardens. It would be fine, however, in the compost is designated for turfgrass only.
Black walnut juice stains like nothing else. If you fail to wear gloves when you hull black walnuts, you will have the Black Hand of Death for several days.
There is nothing fancy about black walnut picking. They simply need to be picked up off the ground and hauled to a hulling station where they are sent through a machine that cleans all the hull ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Black walnut trees, which are both native to and common in Northeast Ohio, have a divisive reputation. If you are looking to plant a new tree in a sunny spot with wet soil ...