Manzanita Cooperative Launches North America’s Largest Acorn Processing Facility to Revolutionize Native Food Accessibility

Press release from the Manzanita Cooperative:

manzanita cooperative logoFor centuries, acorns were one of the most important foods for Native Californians, though obtaining acorn products has been difficult. Until now, individuals either gathered and processed acorns themselves or paid steep prices, sometimes up to $50 per pound, from a handful of small producers. Manzanita Cooperative, a new worker-owned company based in Mendocino, hopes to change that and make acorn products accessible and affordable to everyone. They are launching North America’s largest acorn processing facility later this year. The cooperative has already secured harvest rights to over 20,000 acres of old growth oak forests on private lands around the North Coast that have previously gone unharvested. Additionally, they obtained a loan to support building their facility and are seeking investors to support product launches.

“We are bringing the native foods of our region to the mainstream for the first time since the Gold Rush” said Jed Wheeler, CEO of Manzanita Cooperative. “Acorn has been a staple worldwide for millennia and is still a major crop in southern Europe, Asia, and North Africa. California has the best food grade acorns in the world, but no acorn industry to speak of. We’re going to change that narrative. Californian Oak trees can survive heat, drought, floods, fire, and more while producing high quality food with no irrigation. They’re an essential part of a climate adapted food-security strategy for California and the world – as well as being keystone species that support tremendous biodiversity.”

Committed to sustainable foraging practices that preserve delicate ecosystems, Manzanita Cooperative’s wild foods program operates through ethical partnerships with landowners and Native American communities.

In recent years, interest in acorn, also known as Oaknut, as a food crop has surged due to the growing demand for locally sourced foods and scientific evidence showcasing its myriad health benefits. While established acorn industries thrive in Korea, China, Spain, and Portugal, Italy’s government has advocated for reintroducing acorns as a crop. In the US, limited supply has hindered acorn consumption due to labor-intensive traditional processing methods. By adapting machinery from other nut crops – and with a few key patent pending innovations – Manzanita’s new facility will become North America’s largest acorn processor from its inception.

Acorns are a nutrient powerhouse offering better nutritional density than many grains, along with proven health benefits. They have a low glycemic index ideal for diabetics and weight loss, alongside proven benefits for the microbiome, lungs, liver, and heart. Once processed to remove most tannins, acorns can be eaten as a hot cereal, polenta, toasted as an almond substitute, made into nut butter, or ground into flour. They particularly shine in baked goods like amazing cookies, muffins, and breads.

Native Californian oaks are highly resistant to drought, fire, and disease, require no irrigation once established, and produce far more food per acre than irrigation-intensive non-native tree nuts like almond. As the climate changes and California’s available water for agriculture shrinks, Manzanita Cooperative believes climate-adapted native crops like acorn are an essential part of an adaptation strategy to avoid food shortages. Other native nuts, such as Bay nut, hazelnut, and pine nut, provide expansion opportunities. Manzanita Cooperative will initially employ 15 worker-owners across the economically depressed North Coast region, with a planned expansion to 85 full-time worker-owners by 2030.

As the first large-scale domestic producer of acorn products, Manzanita Cooperative will offer an essential domestic supply of this critical climate-adapted crop through sustainable foraging practices safeguarding delicate ecosystems through ethical partnerships with landowner and Native American communities.

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tru matters
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tru matters
2 years ago

Just as long as the leave some for the bears and squirrels.

Onlooker
Guest
Onlooker
2 years ago
Reply to  tru matters

And the deer and the raccoons and so many others! One thing we can all do is sort and save acorns and bring them to wildlife rescue nonprofits like Bird Ally X in Samoa. They’re used as a natural food source for orphaned and injured wildlife.

Ernie Branscomb
Guest
Ernie Branscomb
2 years ago

Are they also going to process manzanita berries? (manzanita berries should only be eaten with other foods. they can cause a bowel obstruction.) My father had my grandmother make him a manzanita/apple pie. He picked the manzanita and the apples,

Manzanita, an abundant evergreen shrub that grows throughout California, is often overlooked. However, its berries have a long history of use as a food, both as a cider and a sweet sugar or flour. Manzanita berries are a local superfood that can be eaten raw, used as a condiment, added to smoothies or used for baking.” I sometimes chew on some berries for the favor. then spit them out. It is also rumored that mananita berries are very poisonous to dogs. Strange…

What will they do about the acorn worm? Or does it just add protein.

I hope that they have great success. The only thing that bothers me is that they are removing foods that used to be gathered freely by anyone.

Ed Voice
Guest
Ed Voice
2 years ago

They do talk about buying manzanita berry’s on their website:

“In the future we will also be buying native pine nuts, hazelnuts, and manzanita berries.”

https://www.manzanita.coop/sell-to-manzanita/

They are looking for investors, too bad they don’t include a business plan or investment/investor perspective, sounds interesting, but why in the town of Mendocino, that far way from transportation and distribution hubs. And they don’t list any indigenous people or tribes as being on-board.

My Mom would add manzanita berry’s into her Huckleberry, blackberry and rhubarb pies. My Dad, Wayne Coon and Bud Miller would always try and make manzanita hard cider or beer. Every time a batch blew-up, it always smelled good…

Last edited 2 years ago
Onlooker
Guest
Onlooker
2 years ago

They’re working on private land so it’s not freely available

Ernie Branscomb
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Ernie Branscomb
2 years ago
Reply to  Onlooker

Most folks were given permission to gather on private lands. That won’t likely happen with secured harvest rights.

jason
Guest
jason
2 years ago

It’s about time. This needs to spread all throughout California.

Zipline
Guest
Zipline
2 years ago

Good luck to you. We have some acorn growing on our property, the critters love them.

Trashman
Guest
Trashman
2 years ago

The hogs go after acorns like vacuum cleaners.

Jed
Guest
Jed
2 years ago

Hi folks, Jed from Manzanita Coop here. Thanks to Redheaded Blackbelt for sharing our press release!

I wanted to address some of the questions in the comments.

First, for the person who asked about investment, we have a full kit available for investors on request but don’t want to post it on our website for lots of obvious reasons. Please reach out if you’re interested.

We need to raise just a bit more money to finance our first harvest. In addition to seeking investors, we’ll be launching a crowdfunding campaign in July.

As for the other questions:

  • We are leaving plenty behind for the wildlife. Sustainability is a top concern and our harvest system leaves the majority of the nuts for wildlife. Incidentally, folks concerned about wildlife should stop and consider the impact of cutting down oak forests to plant almond orchards – many of the non-native tree nuts grown in California are grown on former oak forests and have had catastrophic impacts on wildlife. By offering landowners a way to make money on healthy oak forests, we’re offering a financial incentive to keep them intact and preserve habitat.
  • The areas we are harvesting have been mostly or completely unharvested for decades. We’re not taking food away from humans that rely on it either. Currently there are literally millions of pounds of acorn left to rot in California. A single tree can produce up to a ton in a single year.
  • Yes, as our name implies, we will absolutely be harvesting Manzanita in the future, along with a long list of other native foods. And profits will be reinvested in restoring degraded and destroyed forests and former forests and replanting oak, manzanita, and others as we develop our native agroforestry system.
  • Our team is diverse and includes White, Latino, Asian, and Native American co-founders; and we are committed to maintaining that diversity as we scale.
  • We are actively doing outreach to tribes and native organizations and in fact our first external shareholder is the California Indian Museum and Cultural Center. Native people are not a monolithic group and have a wide range of opinions on this project. After consultation with a number of groups we’ve developed guidelines to help us be good partners, including a commitment not to harvest in areas that are traditionally harvested by tribes – even if the lands in question are not owned by the tribe and we might be able to secure harvest rights – without their explicit support. We’re also working with a native chef to sponsor the launch of eatacorn.com later this year, showcasing acorn recipes from tribes across the west, as well as recipes from the rest of the world.

I’m happy to answer any other questions and hope you all will give our products a try when we launch later this year. Acorn really is delicious and incredibly nutritious when it’s prepared properly. It’s been California’s most important crop for thousands of years, minus the last 150, and we’re hoping to restore it to its rightful place – and restore our oak forests in the process.