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Acorns!

Acorns!. California Indian Acorn Culture. Before contact was made with Europeans… Acorns were a major and stable food resource Availability: more than 18 species of oak Productivity: varies, good crop 2-3 years in fall Storability: caches or granaries, unshelled up to 12 years

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Acorns!

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  1. Acorns!

  2. California Indian Acorn Culture

  3. Before contact was made with Europeans… Acorns were a major and stable food resource Availability: more than 18 species of oak Productivity: varies, good crop 2-3 years in fall Storability: caches or granaries, unshelled up to 12 years Nutritional content: 18% fat, 6% protein, 68% carbohydrates, vitamins A & C, amino acids, high in calories

  4. Acorn oil Acorn shells can be roasted and steeped for a coffee drink In some groups, an adult would consume a ton of acorns a year Edible after leaching out tannic acids Acorns as a Food Source Continued

  5. For future use: Dry acorns Store in granaries for up to 12 years For immediate use: Dry acorns Shell and winnow using hammer and anvil Pound into flour with mortar and pestle Leach out tannic acids by flushing with water in a shallow, sandy basin or in a basket filter Use flour to make soup, bread, mush, etc How to Process Acorns

  6. Traditional Preparation of Acorns

  7. Miwok acorn granaries in Sierra Nevada foothills, near Railroad Flat, 1906 Mrs. Freddie, a Hupa, leaches acorn meal in a sand basin Rock outcrop with holes used to crack open acorns by native people at Palomar State Park

  8. After contact was made with Europeans… Acorns were discontinued as a major and stable food resource Demographic collapse, dispossession of land, assimilation policies Disrupt cultural transmission Inaccessibility of oak groves and traditional maintenance practices such as burning Pressure to relinquish traditional ways Increase in nonnative people population and environmental degradation due to resource extraction

  9. Present Day Acorn Use • Alteration of processing techniques • Traditional ways not lost • Modified to use modern technology • Acorn as a connection between the past and present • Prepared and eaten at special gatherings • Logos and business names of local tribes

  10. “The Way We Lived” “And you women, strike out, gather wild onions, wild potatoes! Gather all you can! Gather all you can! Pound acorns, pound acorns, pound acorns! Cook, cook! Make some bread, make some bread! So we can eat, so we can eat, so we can eat…Make acorn soup so that the people will eat it!…Don’t talk about starvation, because we never have much! Eat acorns! There is nothing to it!” - Song of Chief Yanapayak, Miwok

  11. Questions?

  12. References ACORN - FOOD RESOURCE - OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY. (n.d.). Retrieved May 29, 2009, from http://food.oregonstate.edu/glossary/a/acorn.html Acorns. (n.d.). Retrieved May 29, 2009, from http://www.hastingsreserve.org/oakstory/Acorns2.html California Indian History. (n.d.). Retrieved May 29, 2009, from http://ceres.ca.gov/nahc/califindian.html California Oaks Foundation: OAKS 2040. (n.d.). Retrieved May 29, 2009, from http://www.californiaoaks.org/html/2040.html Central Valley. (2009). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 29, 2009, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://search.eb.com/eb/article-9022094 United Auburn Indian Community . (n.d.). Retrieved May 29, 2009, from http://www.auburnrancheria.com/

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