HOW IS PISTACHIO PRODUCED? HOW IS IT PROCESSED?
Pistachios can grow economically in regions with long, hot, dry summers and relatively cold winters. One of the important factors determining the growing areas of pistachios is temperature. In the summer months, high temperatures are needed for a long time for the fruit to develop and ripen, and in the winter months, low temperatures are needed for a certain period of time. In areas where winter cold temperatures are likely to drop to -150C or more, damage to fruit eyes may occur.
Pistachio harvesting should be done when the fruits reach harvest maturity. During this period, the outer shell of the fruit changes from transparency to mattness, the red shell softens and separates easily from the hard shell, the bone shells. When harvested late, the red peel shrinks and dries. The color of the inner fruit opens, the quality deteriorates, as well as animal and pest damages increase.
Pistachio harvesting is done by plucking the clusters by hand. Care should be taken to pluck the clusters in the opposite direction of the cluster slope and where the cluster stem meets the branch. It is not correct to harvest by picking the fruits one by one without removing the cluster from the branch. If harvesting is done in this way, bunch stems and empty fruits remain on the tree. These residues remaining on the tree must be plucked as they will constitute a suitable shelter for pests. It has been determined that harvesting by hitting the branches with poles also damages and breaks the tree branches and damages the crop eyes (black eyes) of the next year, resulting in yield loss. This is one of the reasons why pistachios have a full crop one year and a low crop the next year (periodicity).
HOW ARE PISTACHIOS PROCESSED?
Harvesting and post-harvest operations account for 58% of the work expenses spent in pistachio cultivation. Post-harvest processing is basically carried out in six stages: storage, roasting, cracking or cracking separation, classification, roasting and packaging.