A Brief History of Pistachios
The pistachio has a long and interesting history. Native to the Middle East, pistachios
are one of the oldest flowering nut trees. Recent archeological evidence in Turkey
suggests that humans were enjoying them as early as 7,000 B.C. Flourishing in hot
climates, pistachios spread from the Middle East to the Mediterranean, quickly becoming
a treasured delicacy among royalty, travelers and common folk alike. Legend has
it that the Queen of Sheba decreed pistachios an exclusively royal food, going so
far as to forbid commoners from growing the nut for personal use. Nebuchadnezzar,
the ancient king of Babylon had pistachio trees planted in his fabled hanging gardens.
And in the first century A.D., the Emperor Vitellius debuted this prized nut in
his capital city of Rome.
In its more pedestrian role, the pistachio has been used as a dyeing agent and a
folk remedy for ailments ranging from toothaches to sclerosis of the liver. The
pistachio’s high nutritional value and long storage life also made it an indispensable
travel item among early explorers and traders. Along with almonds, pistachios were
frequently carried by travelers across the ancient Silk Road that connected China
with the West.
Originally imported in the 1880s for Americans of Middle Eastern descent, pistachios
were first introduced to the rest of America as a snack food some 50 years later.
Sold in vending machines across the United States, these imported nuts were usually
dyed red to mask imperfections and to draw attention from passersby.
Pistachio trees were planted experimentally in California beginning in the early
1930s. After ten years of careful research and selective breeding, one especially
hearty variety emerged, named Kerman, after the Middle Eastern city of its origin.
By the 1960s, commercial cultivation of pistachios had expanded across California’s
hot Central Valley. Today, California is the second largest producer of pistachios
worldwide, boasting over 100,000 acres of pistachio orchards and producing in excess
of 200 million pounds of pistachios a year.
The Growth Cycle of the Pistachio
Pistachios grow in heavy grape-like clusters, and like almonds, are surrounded by
a fleshy hull. Pistachios ripen in late summer or early autumn, their hulls becoming
rosy and their inner shells splitting naturally along their sutures.
Pistachio orchards can successfully bear nuts for centuries in what are known as
“alternate-bearing” cycles, i.e., their crop yield is heavy one year
and light the next. Unlike almonds, pistachios produce male and female flowers on
separate trees. Thus, in order for pollination to take place, both male and female
trees must be present, or alternately, branches from male trees must be grafted
onto their female counterparts. It requires wind—not bees—to carry pollen
from male to female flowers.
At harvest time, mechanical “tree-shakers” knock the pistachios onto
a catching frame, never allowing them to touch the ground. From there the nuts are
loaded onto containers and rushed to the processing plant. Pistachio nuts must be
hulled and dried immediately to preserve their delicate quality and to prevent their
shells from staining.