Walnuts

  • English Walnuts (In Shell) English Walnuts (In Shell)

    English Walnuts are grown primarily in California and Oregon. This delicious nut is the most popular nut in the shell.

    $3.99/lb
  • English Walnuts (Raw, No Shell) English Walnuts (Raw, No Shell)

    A very common ingredient found in many baking items. These walnut halves and pieces are mainly grown in California and Oregon.

    $8.99/lb
  • Organic Walnuts (Raw, No Shell) Organic Walnuts (Raw, No Shell)

    Organic English raw walnuts out of the shell.

    $11.99/lb
  • Black Walnuts Black Walnuts

    When you want an intense nutty flavor paired with an amazingly satisfying crunch, few things compare to our big, rich black walnuts. A decadent ice cream topping.

    $13.99/lb
  • Walnut Pieces Walnut Pieces

    Delicious and fresh English walnut pieces. Perfect for baking, cooking, or as toppings.

    $8.49/lb
  • Organic Walnut Pieces (Raw) Organic Walnut Pieces (Raw)

    Organic all natural walnut pieces. Perfect for snacking, baking, and cooking.

    $10.99/lb
  • Roasted Walnuts (Unsalted) Roasted Walnuts (Unsalted)

    These English walnut halves and pieces are roasted to perfection. They make a tasty snack for those on salt-free diets. Packed with protein.

    $9.49/lb
  • Roasted Walnuts (Salted) Roasted Walnuts (Salted)

    These English walnut halves and pieces are roasted to perfection and then lightly sprinkled with salt. High in protein.

    $9.49/lb
  • English Walnut Halves (Raw, No Shell) English Walnut Halves (Raw, No Shell)

    English walnut halves are beautiful and delicious. This is the nicest walnut on the market.

    $9.49/lb
  • Dark Chocolate Covered Walnuts Dark Chocolate Covered Walnuts

    Dark chocolate covered walnuts are a match made in heaven - deliciously decadent dark chocolate poured over top notch walnuts.

    $8.99/lb
  • Chocolate Walnut Fudge Chocolate Walnut Fudge

    Old fashioned moist and delicious fudge with pieces of walnuts.

    $9.99
  • Sprouted Spinach Pesto Mix Sprouted Spinach Pesto Mix

    Sprouted Spinach and pesto mix is a tantalizingly delicious blend of sprouted almonds, walnuts, and pumpkin seeds perfectly seasoned with spinach and pesto. A truly unique and addicting snack.

    $9.99
  • Candied Walnuts Candied Walnuts

    Candied walnuts, also known as glazed walnuts, are fantastic for snacking or as salad walnuts. It took us a while to perfect this recipe and think you will love these candied walnuts.

    $9.99/lb
  • Chocolate Covered Walnuts Chocolate Covered Walnuts

    Chocolate covered walnuts, a combination of one of the most popular nuts, and a deliciously smooth milk chocolate, are a match made in heaven.

    $8.99/lb
  • Red Walnuts Red Walnuts

    Delicious raw California red walnuts make for not just a delicious tasting snack but a beautiful looking one as well!

    $10.99/lb
  • Maple Walnut Fudge Maple Walnut Fudge

    Classic maple flavored fudge loaded with chunks of walnuts. Sweet, moist, chewy, and delicious.

    $9.99
  • Black Walnut Oil Black Walnut Oil

    Roasted black walnuts are expeller pressed to create a unique and very tasty black walnut oil, which won a 2011 Sofi Award, one of the top awards in the country for specialty foods.

    $7.99
  • Walnettos Walnettos

    A favorite candy from the late 60's, Walnettos are a chewy caramel mixed with real bits of walnuts. Walnettos are a truly classic candy from a classic era.

    $9.99/lb
  • Peanut Butter Explosion Fudge Peanut Butter Explosion Fudge

    We have never tasted anything as decadent and amazing as this. Premium peanut butter fudge packed with marshmallows, chocolate chips, and walnuts. A true explosion of flavor. This one has literally left us speechless.

    $9.99
  • Cinnamon Walnuts Cinnamon Walnuts

    Try one of these great tasting cinnamon walnuts, and you will be craving for more

    $10.99/lb
  • Yogurt Covered Walnuts Yogurt Covered Walnuts

    These yogurt covered walnuts sure are delicious. Fresh walnuts coated in a smooth yogurt covering.

    $8.99/lb
  • Organic Walnut Date Rolls Organic Walnut Date Rolls

    All natural and delicious combination of dates rolled in chopped walnuts. A truly great tasting snack.

    $9.99/lb
  • Chopped Walnuts Chopped Walnuts

    These chopped walnuts make the perfect topping for ice cream. Try coating your next meat or fish dish for a deliciously nutty crunch.

    $8.99/lb
  • Walnut Oil Walnut Oil

    Walnut oil adds a nutty flavor to salads & vinaigrettes. This full and rich flavor enhances grilled meats.

    $7.99
  • Walnut Meal Walnut Meal

    Walnut meal, slightly coarser than walnut flour, is great for baking and cooking.

    $8.99/lb

From our family to yours, since 1929

Our beloved grandfather, Poppy Sol, started this business in an open-air market. Three generations later, we’re still bringing smiles to our customers' faces.

“The walnuts were so fresh, and not bitter like they can get sometimes. I love the veggie chips - they're addicting, glad I took other people's advice and got two containers. And the dark chocolate almonds are awesome. Intense chocolate, not very sweet, only need 2 or 3 to feel satisfied. Shipment came fast, and in good shape. Thanks guys!”

Sara Jane, Verona, PA May 13th, 2009

There are about fifteen different varieties of the walnut family. They are indigenous to East Asia, southeastern Europe and North and South America. All walnuts are edible but the English walnut is known as the most delicious and certainly the most important. It is believed to be native to a vast region including Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, southern Russia and northern India. In prehistoric times, walnuts were most likely collected from wild trees for food, a process that lasted for millennia. Starting with caveman, knowledge was gained gradually about walnuts, and preference was undoubtedly given to nuts with the largest and sweetest kernels, with thin shells which were easier to crack.

Many legends and superstitions have been associated with the walnut. The Greeks and Romans regarded it as a symbol of fecundity. It was customary at Roman weddings for the bridegroom to toss handfuls of walnuts much as we now throw rice, to be scrambled for by young boys. By flinging the nuts away, the bridegroom showed he was mature and had finally laid aside childish amusement. In China, where the cricket has traditionally been considered a creature of good omen, musically-trained, singing crickets were carried about in intricately carved walnut shells.

Walnuts have been introduced to a broad range of temperate climates extending across the Northern Hemisphere, most notably in Australia and New Zealand. This broad dispersal has led to the development of numerous walnut varieties, suited to the different ecological conditions in each location.

Throughout a long history of cultivation, the walnut has been highly esteemed as a superior dessert nut which requires neither roasting nor salting to enhance its flavor. The green, immature walnut, including the husk, is edible. In England, young walnuts are traditional delicacies when pickled. Green walnuts can also be made into walnut marmalade, added to jams, or preserved whole in syrup. A nut brandy can be prepared from green walnuts. Like the maple, the walnut tree can be tapped in spring for the rising sweet sap and the liquid boiled down to sugar. The walnut tree has also widely famed for its beautiful wood that is used in furniture.

The eastern black walnut is native to the deciduous forests of the eastern United States. It is the largest of the native species in North America reaching a height of up to 150 feet. It bears dark colored edible nuts with a thick, hard, black shell, smaller in size, more circular in outer shape and with a somewhat stronger flavor than that of the Persian walnut. Its high quality wood has long been prized for furniture and cabinet making. There is a large demand for the black walnuts themselves. They are used for candies, cakes, and ice cream. Due to the scarcity and trouble cracking the shells they are priced quite higher than English walnuts.

The English walnut is a large, shapely, round-headed, deciduous tree, which under favorable conditions grows to a height of about 100 feet. It has a clear, straight trunk and silvery-gray bark. The feathery leaves are six to twelve inches long, divided into leaflets three to six inches in length.

For many years, the United States has been the leading world producer of walnuts. California accounts for nearly all of the country's production. Oregon has a smaller production but their contribution is negligible compared to that of California. The majority of California walnut production is concentrated in the San Joaquin and Sacramento Valleys.

The Hartley has become the most extensively planted variety of walnuts in California, especially suitable for the in shell trade. A well-filled walnut shell yields a higher kernel percentage, but the kernel should not be so tight in the shell that it is hard to extract and would tend to break in a cracking machine. A superior walnut should be well filled, but have adequate space between shell and kernel.

Walnut trees require spacing of at least fifty feet in each direction to obtain maximum yield. Depending upon the variety grown, harvestable crops are produced within five to eight years. Some reports mention that trees that are fifty, seventy-five and even one hundred years old continue to bear good crops. Walnuts are mature when the hull can easily be separated from the shell.

Harvesting begins when about eighty percent of the nuts can be removed from the trees. This may be done at one time or over a period of several days. Almost all the nuts are harvested mechanically. Since all the nuts have not separated naturally from their hulls, the harvested crop is a mixture of hulled and unhulled walnuts. Machines then hull and wash the walnuts brought in from the orchards. To prevent deterioration, the walnuts must be thoroughly dried as soon as possible by mechanical dehydrators.

Following the harvest, walnuts are dried to a moisture content of eight percent maximum to prevent darkening of the kernels, retard mold development and permit efficient shell bleaching. They are separated into three categories: in the shell, kernels, or as by-products.

After the nuts are sorted the in shell nuts are then bleached in a diluted solution. This is not harmful, as the weak solution does not penetrate the shell. The walnuts are rinsed and rubbed to obtain a uniform tan color. The nuts are then dried and sampled to determine their quality. Next, they are graded based on size into four categories: Jumbo, large, Medium, and Baby. About thirty percent of California's crop is kept in the shell.

The remaining seventy percent of the crop is known as 'cracking stock' and is shelled. After cracking, the kernels are conveyed to air separators to remove shell and fiber material. They are then sorted by electronic, color sorting machines which separate dark walnuts from light. The shelled walnuts are then packaged. It takes approximately two and one half pounds of walnuts to obtain one pound of kernels.

The United States is the world's leading walnut producer and exporter. They are said to be the American homemaker's favorite ingredient nut. Walnuts are a good source of iron and Vitamin B and are also rich in phosphorous.

We also offer Wholesale Walnuts.