Pine nuts have been eaten in Europe and Asia since the
Paleolithic period. They are frequently added to meat, fish, salads, and vegetable
dishes or baked into bread. ,
Buryatia|Shelled nuts and vials of
cedar oil.
Buryatia,
Russia , 1921|alt=Pinons packed for shipment,
Santa Fe, NM, US, 1921 In Italian, they are called
pinoli (in the US, they are often called
pignoli, but in Italy,
pignolo is actually a word far more commonly used to describe a fussy, overly fastidious or extremely meticulous person) and are an essential component of Italian
pesto sauce; the upsurge in the popularity of this sauce since the 1990s has increased the visibility of the nut in America, primarily on the West Coast.
Torta della nonna (literally "granny's cake") is a generic Italian dish name that in most families indicates an old family recipe for any cake but often is used for a
tart or a
pie filled with custard, topped with pine nuts and optionally dusted with
icing sugar.
Pignoli cookies, an Italian American specialty confection (in Italy, these would be called
biscotti ai pinoli), are made of
almond flour formed into a dough similar to that of a
macaroon and then topped with pine nuts. In the
Catalan-speaking regions of
Spain, a sweet called
panellets is made of small
marzipan balls covered with pine nuts, painted with egg, and lightly cooked. Pine nuts are also featured in the
salade landaise of
southwestern France. Nevada, or Great Basin, pine nut has a sweet fruity flavor and is promoted for its large size, sweet flavor, and ease of peeling.
Italian pinioli cookies from
Charleston, South Carolina Pine nuts are also widely used in
Levantine cuisine, reflected in a diverse range of dishes such as
kibbeh,
sambusak,
fatayer, and
Maqluba, desserts such as
baklava,
meghli, and many others. Throughout Europe, the
Levant, and
West Asia, the pine nuts used are traditionally from
Pinus pinea (stone pine). They are easily distinguished from the Asian pine nuts by their more slender shape and more homogeneous flesh. Because of the lower price, Asian pine nuts are also often used, especially in cheaper preparations.
Pine nut oil is added to foods for flavor.
Taste disturbances Some raw pine nuts can cause pine mouth syndrome, a
taste disturbance lasting from a few days to a few weeks after consumption. A bitter, metallic, unpleasant taste is reported. There are no known lasting effects, with the United States
Food and Drug Administration reporting that there are "no apparent adverse clinical side effects". Raw nuts from
Pinus armandii, mainly in China, may be the cause of the problem.
Food fraud In the United States, from 2008 to 2012, some people reported a bitter metallic taste ("pine mouth") that sometimes lasted for weeks after they ate pine nuts. After an international investigation, the FDA found that some manufacturers substituted a non-food species of pine nuts in place of more expensive edible pine nut species as a form of
food fraud. ==Other uses==