Brazil Nut
Related Category: Plants
common name for the Lecythidaceae, a family of tropical trees. It includes the anchovy pear (
Grias cauliflora), a West Indian species with edible fruit used for pickles, and several lumber trees of South America, e.g., the cannon-ball tree (
Couroupita guianensis), some species of
Barringtonia, and the Brazil nut (
Bertholletia excelsa). The latter is found chiefly in Brazil along the Amazon and Orinoco rivers, but extensive groves have also been planted in N Bolivia. The edible Brazil nuts grow clumped together in large, round, woody and extremely hard seed pods the size of a large grapefruit. The meat of the seed (the nut) is very rich in oil. The Brazil nut family is classified in the division
Magnoliophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Lecythidales.