Culinary Walnut meats are available in two forms: in their shells or de-shelled. Due to processing, the meats may be whole, halved, or in smaller portions. All walnuts can be eaten on their own (raw, toasted, or pickled), or as part of a mix such as
muesli, or as an ingredient of a
dish: e.g.
walnut soup,
walnut pie,
walnut coffee cake,
banana cake,
brownie,
fudge. Walnuts are often candied or pickled. Pickled walnuts that are the whole fruit can be savory or sweet depending on the preserving solution. Walnuts may be used as an ingredient in other foodstuffs. Walnut is an important ingredient in
baklava,
Circassian chicken,
potica (a traditional festive pastry from
Slovenia),
satsivi (chicken in walnut sauce),
tarator (a summer soup in
Bulgarian cuisine), and
poultry or meat ball stew from
Iranian cuisine. Walnuts are also popular as an
ice cream topping, and walnut pieces are used as a
garnish on some foods.
Nocino is a
liqueur made from unripe green walnuts steeped in
alcohol with syrup added.
Walnut oil is available commercially and is chiefly used as a food ingredient, particularly in
salad dressings. It has a low
smoke point, which limits its use for
frying.
Inks and dyes Walnut husks can be used to make durable ink for writing and drawing. It is thought to have been used by artists including
Leonardo da Vinci and
Rembrandt. Walnut husk pigments are used as a brown
dye for fabric and were used in
classical Rome and
medieval Europe for
dyeing hair.
Cleaning The
US Army once used ground walnut shells for
abrasive blasting to clean aviation parts because of their low cost and low abrasive qualities. However, an investigation of a fatal
Boeing CH-47 Chinook helicopter crash (11 September 1982, in Mannheim, Germany) revealed that walnut shell grit had clogged an oil port, leading to the accident and the discontinuation of walnut shells as a cleaning agent. Commercially, crushed walnut shells are still used outside of aviation for low-abrasive, less-toxic cleaning and blasting applications. In the oil and gas industry,
deep bed filters of ground walnut shell are used for "polishing" (filtering) oily contaminates from water.
Cat litter At least two companies, LitterMaid and Naturally Fresh, make
cat litter from ground walnut shells. Advantages cited over conventional clay litter include environmental sustainability of using what would otherwise be a waste product, superior natural biodegradability, and odor control as good or better than that of clay litter. Disadvantages include the possibility of allergic reactions among humans and cats.
Folk medicine Walnuts have been listed as one of the 38 substances used to prepare
Bach flower remedies, a
herbal remedy promoted in
folk medicine practices for its supposed effect on health. According to
Cancer Research UK, "there is no scientific evidence to prove that flower remedies can control, cure or prevent any type of disease, including cancer". == In culture ==