HOME
Bush Tucker Plants


bushtucker candle nut

Plant Description

Botanical Name: Aleurites moluccana This plant is a large rainforest tree with a spreading crown. It has large leaves; the juveniles are lobed. Clusters of 50 mm brown fruit ripen in summer. It is also found in South East Asia.

Usage

The nuts can be poisonous when raw, causing violent vomiting. In 1999 the media reported that a child became ill after eating raw candlenuts in a park in Brisbane. However others have eaten them raw without ill effects. Roasting destroys the toxin in the oil which causes these effects. The roasted nuts are delicious, and are reported to be nutritious and high in energy from the fat they contain. They can be used to tenderise meat.
It is used in Indonesian cooking - usually ground to a paste.
However particular trees produce a nut which has a high cyanide content, and if many roasted nuts are eaten at a time, they can cause stomach cramps and vomiting, so suitable selection methods need to be applied.
Because of the high oil content, the nuts will burn with a smoky flame, hence their common name and use by early settlers.

Issues

Links

Useful bush tucker sites and more bush tucker plants

Traditional Cooking

Test Yourself

Bibliography

Australian Plants generally

Australian Plants photographs   US Mirror:Australian Plants photographs
Bush Tucker Plants
Bungwall Fern
Bunya Nut
Burdekin Plum
Candle Nut
Cedar Bay Cherry
Davidson's Plum
Lemon Myrtle
Midyim
Moreton Bay Chestnut
Native Ginger
Native Raspberry
Riberry
Sandpaper Fig
Warrigal Greens
More Bush Tucker Plants

Bungwall Fern  Bunya Nut  Candle Nut  Cedar Bay Cherry  Burdekin Plum  Davidson's Plum  Lemon Myrtle  Midyim  Moreton Bay Chestnut  Native Ginger  Native Raspberry  Riberry  Sandpaper Fig  Warrigal Greens  More Bush Tucker Plants