The Acorn: Connecting with My Paleolithic & Pagan Ancestors

My acorn bread, raw acorns, and a bowl of processed acorns. Photo by KEN KORCZAK

By KEN KORCZAK

The first people of my state, Minnesota, the Native Americans, ate a lot of acorns.

My ancient relatives back in eastern Europe probably did, too. Over in the Britons, Druids and Celts held the oak as sacred. Back in their day, the British Isles were covered in oaks. Some of them were giant oaks, the likes of which no longer exist today.

According to author and professor of theology James N. Powell, the modern word for “truth” can be traced back to the Proto-Indo-European word for “oak.” Powell also says that the oak tree is struck by lightning more than any other tree — thus bolstering its ancient connection with the gods and heaven.

I’ve always had an affinity for the oak tree, and I have long said to myself: “One day I am going to collect a whole pile of acorns, shell them out and make something to eat out of them.” That was about 25 years ago. Now I do it almost every autumn.

If you want to gather acorns for food, expect to do a lot of work. Here’s the timeline of my acorn project:

* Collecting one 5-gallon pail of acorns — 1 hour.

* Shelling acorns one at a time with a pair of pliers — 6 hours

* Boiling acorns to remove tannin — 3 hours

* Baking boiled acorns to dry them — 1.5 hours

* Grinding dried acorns into flour — 90 seconds

* Mixing ingredients for acorn bread — 15 minutes

* Baking acorn bread — 30 minutes.

Is it worth it? Yes! First of all, acorn bread tastes like manna from heaven, if manna from heaven tasted like a delicious, fragrant, nutty bread that is slightly sweet and has a moist, wonderful texture. The reward in producing a single loaf of acorn bread takes a long day of painstaking work. But as the saying goes: “It’s the journey, not the destination!”

Crack an acorn shell and maybe your ego shell at the same time? Photo by KEN KORCZAK

This is true of my acorn experience. Cracking acorns with a pair of pliers one at a time for six hours qualifies as a form of ascetic meditation.

Working with acorns provides a connection with Mother Nature and also the most ancient traditions of our ancestors. If you want to feel deeply connected with humanity, and enjoy an earthy, nutty food that is the very embodiment of abiding endurance, then a day spent gathering, cracking, boiling, baking and grinding acorns is an excellent way to do it!

 

BOIL THEM

Acorns should be boiled for at least two hours. I think I went almost three before I was satisfied that the tannin was sufficiently removed. You tell by the color of the water which drains away each time you change the water. You bring to a boil, drain, add water, boil again, and repeat until you think you’ve gone far enough!

Boiling shelled acorns. Photo by KEN KORCZAK

Bake your boiled acorns at about 200 degrees in the oven for an hour, or so, or until they are nicely dry.

I bake my acorns at 200 degrees F for about an hour. Photo by KEN KORCZAK

After you have baked your acorns, it’s time to grind them into flour. I use my Vita-Mix blender. The acorns are quite soft after boiling and drying to probably any blender will do, or any food grinder, even a coffee grinder. If you really want to work hard, crush them by hand with a masher, or something.

I grind the baked acorns into flour. Photo by KEN KORCZAK

Bake something! Mix your acorn flour with regular flour and bake something yummy. You’ll have to experiment. Acorn flour is quite bitter so a little goes a long way. Most of the time, I add just a quarter cup of flour to 2 or 3 cups of regular flour to get a brown, nutty bread.

My buns made from acorn flour. Photo by KEN KORCZAK

 

MAKE THE EXPERIENCE YOUR OWN

Everyone has different tastes. You can also make a very dark acorn bread more akin to, say, banana bread. You’ll have to add a lot of sugar or honey to counter the natural bitterness of acorns. Some people may like the bitterness, however, which is all good.

Keep in mind, too, that you can use your acorns in a variety of ways — eat it as a mush or cereal, put it in a smoothie, sprinkle it on a salad — you decide. For me, though, acorn bread is where it’s at.

I love the idea that in gathering acorns, processing them and eating them gives me a connection to my European pagan & paleolithic ancestors and the countless generations that followed. It’s an activity I pursue as part of my own kind of Atman Project.

My favorite oak tree and special friend. Photo by KEN KORCZAK

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