The chestnut tree is a plant known and apppreciated since 
        ancient times. Indeed, it is mentioned in the Bible and in Homer's poems, 
        while the Greeks called its fruits "Jupiter's acorns". In Italy it has 
        been widespread since ancient times, above all in the Appennines between 
        300 and 1000 metres of height. Since the Middle Ages until almost our 
        days the chestnut has been the feeding base for mountain peoples, as it 
        is shown by many legislative acts related to chestnut woods promulgated 
        during the centuries. The Gavinana Statutes in 1540, for example, expected 
        landowners to pick their chestnuts within the month of November. After 
        that, poor people could go without restriction and pick the fruits which 
        had been left. On this subject, ther is a popular belief that the husk 
        holds three chestnuts: one for the landowner, one for the peasant and 
        one for the Poor. In order to be milled, chestnuts must be previously 
        dried.n Tuscany the drying took place in the "metato", 
        a rural building set up in the harvest place. Somewhere, in the Appennines 
        north of Pistoia and in the Garfagnana area for instance, this building 
        was an integral part of the dwelling house: it substituted the kitchen 
        and it was a meeting place where people stayed up late. 
Chestnuts were 
        set to dry on a reed-bed, that is on a structure built up with close boards 
        or reeds whose nearness to the kitchen-fireplace granted an even heating. 
        Pascoli recollects it in one of his poems: "lonely metato in which the 
        sweet wooden bread dried up on a sweet fire: over the reed-bed the chestnuts 
        crack, and the red fire burns in the darkness." (The log, in Castelvecchio 
        Poems) Once dried up, the chestnuts were husked by a strong beating which 
        ground the shells in strong sacks or in a proper container called vat. 
        Today this way of proceeding has been substituted by proper husking machines. 
        Also the metati have almost entirely disappeared. The places once used 
        for that purpose have been changed into dwelling rooms or tool storerooms.
                                                                   Thanks to Margherita Azzari  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
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