Bunya Nut
Bunya Nuts are native to south-eastern Queensland especially the Bunya Mountains National Park.
The bunya nut tree is a huge tree which bears a crop only after the tree itself is around 100 years old, and then it crops once every 2 or 3 years only.
Football-sized green bunya pine cones are hidden in the tree canopy weighing 5-10 kilograms and containing between 30 and 100 nuts.
The cones will fall from the tree when mature so stay clear of the trees at that time.
You can split the cones by dropping them on concrete or a hard surface however the membrane containing the husks will disintegrate of its own volition within a week to 10 days.
They store very well in the freezer and in fact freezing produces a much sweeter nut.
Opening the husk is the next step and can be quite tricky
Taxonomic Name | Common Name | Part | Energy kj | Water g | Protein g | Fat g | Carbs g | Na mg | K mg | Ca mg | Fe mg | P mg |
Araucaria bidwillii | Bunya Nut | Kernel | 856 | 43.9 | 11 | 1 | 39.6 | 5 | 229 | 7 | 2.1 | ND |
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Bunya Nut Flour
Bunya Nut Flour Air dried raw Bunya Nuts ground into a fine flour Listed weight is the shipping weight$7.50 - $11.05 (Inc. GST)$7.50 - $11.05 (Ex. GST) -
Australian Bush Spices
Pink Sweet Dusting
Pink Sweet Dusting Ingredients: bunya nut, macadamia, quandong, raw sugar, lemon myrtle ,cinnamon Australian Bush Spices native 'sugar and spice' fusion of bunya and macadamia nuts with quandong, lemon myrtle and a...$12.95 (Inc. GST)$12.95 (Ex. GST)