How to Peel Chestnuts With Ease

Hands peeling roasted chestnuts

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Chestnuts aren't so much tough to crack, as tricky to peel. Their shells are much softer and more malleable than other tree nuts, but that means any "cracking" doesn't work all that well. Plus, they have a hairy skin under their peels that clings something awful to the sweet and tender edible chestnut underneath, a fact made worse by the creviced, folded, brain-like texture of the edible part of the nut.

So how to proceed? Cook the chestnuts first, and then keep them warm so that stubborn skin doesn't re-cling to the nut as it cools.

There are two main ways to prepare chestnuts so their shells and icky hairy skins come off with the minimum of fuss: roasting them or steaming them.

In either case, you'll need to cut an "x" or at least a "y" into the chestnut shell. This will let the shell loosen itself from the nut as it cooks.

Roasting

Preheat an oven to 400 F. While the oven heats, cut the "x's" in the chestnut shells. Set the prepared chestnuts in a roasting pan or on a baking sheet, and cook them until the shells pull apart and the nuts are tender about 30 minutes.

Steaming

Bring an inch or so of water in a large saucepan, set the prepared (shells cut) chestnuts in a steamer basket, and put the steamer basket over the boiling water. Cover the pot and steam the chestnuts until the shells pull apart and the nuts inside are tender to the bite (or to a toothpick stuck in their centers), about 20 minutes.

Peeling

However you've cooked them, you'll proceed the same way now. Wrap the roasted or steamed chestnuts in a clean kitchen towel to keep them warm—it will make them easier to peel. As soon as they are cool enough to handle, grab a seat and get to peeling.

Pull and snap off the shells, being sure to also take off the skin between the shell and the chestnut. When you're done, you want a pile of yellowish-white chestnuts (and another of the dark shells and papery skins).

It's a fine line between the chestnuts being too hot to handle long enough to peel them, and cooling off so much that the skins seem to shrink onto the nuts again. That's why wrapping them in a towel is key. If they cool off too much, that is, if you find that they become trickier to peel as you go, you can pop them back in the oven or the steamer for a few minutes to re-warm them. You can also microwave them for a minute or two for a similar effect, but know that microwaved chestnuts tend to lose some of their tender texture and harden unpleasantly.

Uses

A favorite way to eat chestnuts is simply as you peel them! It's a fun group activity to sit and peel chestnuts after dinner, treating them as a casual dessert. 

Chestnuts are also delicious chopped up and added to stuffing or dressing, made into candy or otherwise used in desserts such as French dessert Mont Blanc, or whirled into a rich soup.