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Encyclopedia > Candlenut
Candlenut
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Euphorbiales
Family: Euphorbiaceae
Genus: Aleurites
Species: moluccana
Binomial name

Aleurites moluccana (L.) Willd.

The candlenut, candleberry, Indian walnut, varnish tree or kuku'i nut tree, Aleurites moluccana (L.) Willd. (Family Euphorbiaceae) is native to Malesia. Its native range is impossible to establish precisely because of early spread by man, and the tree is now widely distributed in the new and old world tropics. The tree grows to a height of up to 20 m (60 ft), and is ornamental, with widespreading or pendulous branches bearing pale green leaves. The nut is roundish, and furrowed, about 2 (1-4) cm in diameter, and the seed inside has a very hard seed coat and has a high oil content.


The candlenut has many uses:

  • It is often used in Malaysian cuisine.
  • Several parts of the plant have been used in traditional medicine in most of the areas where it is native. The oil is an irritant and purgative and sometimes used like Japan its bark has been used on tumors. In Sumatra, pounded seeds, burned with charcoal, are applied around the navel for costiveness. In Malaya, the pulped kernels or boiled leaves are used in poultices for headache, fevers, ulcers, swollen joints, and gonnorhea. In Java, the bark is used for bloody diarrhea or dysentery.
  • In ancient Hawai‘i, nuts were burned to provide light. This led to their use as a measure of time. The nuts were strung in a row on a palm leaf midrib and one end lit. One could then instruct someone to return home before the second nut burned out.

In Hawai‘i—kuku‘i is the Hawaiian name—the tree has spiritual significance of hope and renewal, and was involved in many legends. One such was about a woman who, despite her best efforts to please her husband, was routinely beaten. Finally, the husband beat her to death and buried her under a kuku'i tree. Being a kind and just woman, she was given new life, and the husband was eventually killed.


Modern cultivation is mostly for the oil. In plantations, each tree will produce 30–80 kg of nuts, and the nuts yield 15 to 20% of their weight in oil. Most of the oil is used locally rather than figuring in international trade.


External links

  • Center for New Crops & Plant Products, at Purdue University (http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/duke_energy/Aleurites_moluccana.html) – comprehensive description.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Tung Oil Tree Photos (1142 words)
Hawaiians also extracted the oil for many other uses: to shine and waterproof wooden bowls, to mix with charcoal to make fl canoe paint, to burn as torches, and to burn in stone lamps for light.
n the Hawaiian Islands candlenuts are known as "kukui nuts" and are polished and made into shiny dark brown or fl bracelets and leis.
Candlenut seeds occasionally drift ashore on islands of the Caribbean and are known locally as "Jamaican walnuts" because of their superficial resemblance to an unshelled walnut.
Candlenut (156 words)
Large brown fruit with little pulp and a thick rind that encloses one or two very large seeds, the candlenuts.
Candlenut trees are somewhat hardy and will survive temperatures to 25-28F.
Candlenut's need little in any care after they are established.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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