Jane Manaster
Travel just
about anywhere in the southern United States, and you will find pecan trees.
The “nut too hard to crack by hand”—the derivation of the pecan’s Algonquian
name—is one of the most successful native agricultural crops of North
America. So popular are pecans that Thomas Jefferson once wrote home from
Paris for a supply, while many people today consider their holidays
incomplete without a pecan pie.
Jane Manaster’s
Pecans, updated from its original 1994 publication, explores the
natural history, cultivation, and uses of the pecan tree and nut. Her
engaging account pieces together a fascinating mosaic of the peoples caught
up in the pecan story—Native Americans, Spanish explorers, European
immigrants and their American descendants, African Americans, and Mexican
Americans.
Manaster also
describes the life cycle of the pecan tree, the development of many
cultivated species, and predators and diseases of the pecan. She chronicles
the successes of commercial growers in extending the pecan’s original range
eastward from the Mississippi basin to Florida and westward to California;
and she charts the growth of the commercial pecan industry, especially in
Georgia, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona.
Not forgetting
the pecan’s popularity in candy and baked goods, Manaster includes nearly
two dozen traditional and modern recipes for such delights as pralines,
candied and roasted pecans, pecan pie, and pecan logs. With such a wealth of
information in so readable a format, The Pecan will find a wide audience
among pecan lovers and growers everywhere.
A freelance
writer and geographer, Jane Manaster lives in Austin, Texas. She is
the author of several works, including Horned Lizards (TTUP, 2002)
and Javelinas (TTUP, 2006).