Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

From Johnny Appleseed to Cosmic Crisp, Here’s Everything You Need to Know About Apples in America Right Now
Food and Wine ^ | October 10, 2023 | Betsy Andrews

Posted on 10/21/2023 6:31:57 PM PDT by nickcarraway

There's never been a better time to eat — and cook with — American apple varieties.

One day in 2004, Brooke Hazen noticed something unusual about one of his Golden Delicious apple trees.

“Some people are lucky enough in their career to have their own bud mutation variety that they get to name,” says Hazen. “Out of the thousands of trees I have, one branch on one tree decided to do its own thing.”

What it did was yield an apple with the typical green-yellow skin but an unusual pink patch where it faced the sun and a sweetness and fragrance beyond any other Golden Delicious he knew. Hazen, the owner of Gold Ridge Organic Farms, an 88-acre orchard and olive grove in Sonoma County, cultivated the new apple, grafting the mutation (or “sport,” in horticultural parlance) onto rootstock and naming it “Sea Breeze.” The name is a paean to the force that, before the rise of the wine grape, once made Sonoma famous as an apple-growing mecca. “The Pacific Ocean provides the perfect cooling climate for apple trees to thrive and fully express their nuances and variations,” Hazen says. “I’m not kidding when I say I’ve met people that were brought to tears by eating the Sea Breeze.”

How do you like them apples?

Hazen, his Sea Breeze, and the consumers who love it are participating in an age-old tradition — one that reveals the magic of apples and the unique intimacy between humans and this fruit. From their origin in the forests of Kazakhstan to a windblown hilltop on the California coast, apples have proliferated and diversified along with us. And with settlers, cider makers, orchardists, scientists, and legions of daily lunch-box-packers all doing their parts, nowhere have apples been more integral to history than the United States. Today, more than 5,000 growers produce over 11 billion pounds of apples per year. They are the number one fruit consumed in this country. It’s enough to make a convert out of an apple skeptic like me.

The Ultimate Apple Guide to 85 Varieties, From Heirlooms to Hybrids But given my “no dessert” attitude toward eating, I had never paid much attention to apples — until an olive oil tasting late one fall at Gold Ridge, when I wandered into the cold storage for Hazen’s Fuji apples and was knocked sideways by the smell. High-toned, floral, almost painfully sharp, the bouquet left me with such an ache to know apples better that I started tucking them into my cooking. I sliced Granny Smiths and Pink Ladies into a potato gratin, where they added an ethereal snap. I julienned acidy Empires and candyish SnapDragons for a kohlrabi slaw to pair with cider-glazed chicken. I even made apples into an entrée, cider-braising Galas, which are dense enough to hold their shape when cooked, with bacon.

And that was just using what I found at the grocery store. When I rented a summer house in Vermont, I discovered that every lane held an abandoned tree with tangy, tannic orbs that might not be great eaten out of hand but proved wonderful when softened in a garlicky marinade and piled onto country bread with local cheddar — and even better when made into applesauce or diced into rustic fritters that my family devoured.

Those Northeastern orphans had something in common with Hazen’s pampered Sea Breeze. Both were the product, to riff on Darwin, of human selection and random variation. “Apples don’t self-pollinate,” explains William Shane, a tree-fruit specialist at Michigan State University. “The only way you get an apple tree to fruit is to have pollen from another variety. So if you plant a Red Delicious seed, the offspring don’t look exactly like a Red Delicious.” That genetic diversity, called heterozygosity, means that in order to get many of a single variety, apples must be cloned. “You take a branch and graft it or a bud from a tree and propagate it. Then you have a variety that is locked in place.”

How we got from Johnny Appleseed to Cosmic Crisp

In colonial America, where fermented beverages were safer to drink than the era’s untreated water, “settlers planted seedling orchards primarily for cider,” says Charlotte J. Shelton of Vintage Virginia Apples and Albemarle CiderWorks, makers of single-variety heirloom ciders. “You would come across a wonderful apple, like a Pippin, Queen Victoria’s favorite when it was introduced to her from America, and you would propagate and name it. There were thousands of American apple varieties by the 1900s.” These were fruits of multifarious character — red or green or yellow, striped or mottled or blushed, smooth-skinned or russeted like Idaho potatoes, tangy or sweet or spicy or tannic. Europe’s apples morphed and multiplied here, becoming as “American” as, well, apple pie.

As the nation pushed westward, displacing Native Americans, authorities mandated orchards. “The Ohio Company required settlers to plant 50 apple trees and 20 peach trees to be eligible to receive land. This is what led John Chapman, aka Johnny Appleseed, to travel ahead and plant apple trees he would later sell to whoever wanted to settle on that land,” says Jamie Hanson, the orchard manager at Seed Savers Exchange. A modern-day Johnny Appleseed, she tends to 1,000 varieties of pre-1950 commercial apples — ones someone once found a use for and sold. If you’re hankering for an all-purpose Rusty Coat or a sauce apple like Pound Sweet, Hanson has scionwood for you to graft and a tree you can pick from. Show up in Decorah, Iowa, in person, and you can fill a five-gallon bucket for free.

37 Autumnal Apple Recipes From Salads and Glazes to Pie Heirloom apple experts like Hanson feel a sense of urgency because in the 20th century, apple diversity suffered several whammies. By the 1900s, industrialization and improvements to the nation’s transportation network helped make beer a more cost-effective alternative to cider. Then Prohibition was enacted, and cider orchards, already in decline, were made practically obsolete.

Just as cider apples waned, along came university breeding programs and the mass marketing of sweet, durable “dessert” apples that could be shipped, stored, and advertised for supermarket sales: Red Delicious, McIntosh, Honeycrisp. The last is from the University of Minnesota, where professor of horticulture James Luby works. “Our program was started over 100 years ago to develop varieties that survive our winters. Material from Russia had hardiness as well as good texture, and that made it into the Honeycrisp,” he says. Its crunch is thanks to big, juice-packed cells. “Think of a stack of shoeboxes glued together,” says Luby. “Bring weight down on them, and eventually they explode. With Honeycrisp, your teeth apply that pressure, and the shoeboxes break with explosive force. We appreciate that with all of our senses. We hear it, feel it, and eventually taste it as the aromatic compounds in the juice are released.” Indeed. If you tell me you can resist the sugary crack of a Honeycrisp, I’ll eat my shoe.

The third-most-produced American apple after Gala and Red Delicious, Honeycrisp has done so well that it’s spawned offspring. Bred at Washington State University, Cosmic Crisp is the first commercially successful apple developed in the state. A hardy, disease-resistant, crispy-sweet juice bomb with a cherubic shape and skin like stars in a deep-red sky, it is so valuable that it’s patented. “It’s a licensed product in the same way as Pepsi or Coke. Growers pay a royalty and promise to use the trademark appropriately, and we provide communications, content development, marketing strategy, and packaging design,” says Kathryn Grandy, chief marketing officer of PVM, a tree-fruit commercialization company.

What's next for apples in America?

The trademarking of an apple variety makes some people uncomfortable. “I believe in the right to access food and the age-old tradition of sharing seeds and scionwood for growing in your garden,” says Laura Sieger, orchard specialist at the Maine Heritage Orchard, an educational plot that is preserving 360 varieties of Maine apples. But even Sieger admits: “The intersection between commercial and heritage, the blending and melding, has been going on all along. Historically, all these apples that we now consider heritage were once grown commercially. There’s not a place for every variety in a commercial setting, but there’s this constant evolution of what people are interested in. Besides what’s juiciest, crunchiest, and sweetest, people are relearning the array of subtle flavors and textures that apples offer.”

The new trend in apple breeding is complexity, says Luby: “Anise and cloves, a little bit of cinnamon, passion fruit, a cherry-type taste — it’s going to be fun to combine the crunchy, juicy texture with different flavors.”

In the meantime, nostalgic growers are nurturing apples’ historic multiplicity. Some are stalwarts, like Hurd Orchards, located on the New York shores of Lake Ontario since 1816. There, seventh-generation farmer Amy Machamer oversees a crew that, like virtually all apple crews the world over, picks by hand, “cradling the fruit in their palms.” She sells applesauce and preserves from some of her 70 types, and she’s fond of a farmer’s dessert traditional in western New York wherein a lumpy, softball-size heirloom called the 20 Ounce gets wedged and baked with water and sugar until it puffs like popcorn.

There are also newbies, like Peter Klein, who, says he, “freaked out, quit my job, and bought an orchard in 2004” in Michigan. He grows “fun varieties”: “old-fashionedy” Golden Russet, with its sandpaper skin and “bone-dry” flesh; the “spicy fan favorite,” Smokehouse; Summer Rambo, which ripens in August and is good for pie before it fades come September. He supplies Chicago chefs like Smyth restaurant’s John Shields, who finds Klein’s Grimes Golden such a “beautifully balanced apple” that he seems hell-bent on destabilizing it by wrapping it in a Cryovac bag, hollowing it out with a drill bit, and stuffing it with sea-lettuce ice cream.

Cooking with heirloom apples Your own apple creations might not be as highfalutin, but I assure you, there is an apple for your every need. Just ask Erin Robinson, orchardist at Scott Farm in Dummerston, Vermont. One morning, I crunched through the snowdrifts to watch her prune a Holstein, a variety whose fruit boasts a tropical panache. Scott Farm dates to 1791 and has seen its share of apple history. In the 1920s, it was planted with then-newfangled McIntosh apples, which were shipped to urban markets via rail. In the 1980s, its apple business was eclipsed by huge operations in the Northwest and South America, and its owner gave the property to the trust, which launched the grafting project that converted Scott Farm to the 130-variety heirloom collection that Robinson now tends. Her father worked here, too. She’s known every tree since childhood. And from winter pruning to spring blossoms and autumn harvest, her ardor for apples has only increased.

“Just like humans, apples are unique. They’re delicious. They’re beautiful. They’re interesting. And there’s so much potential for so many more,” she told me. “I have two children of my own, and sending these apples off the loading dock feels like putting my kids on the school bus. I cared for them as long as I can, and I’m sending them out into the world.”

She reached into a brush pile and gifted me a Holstein branch that, just as she promised, bloomed several weeks later, bringing this Vermont orchard into my Brooklyn home. “There are generations before me that loved these apples enough to keep grafting them to make more trees, and I’m in that loop now, doing what I can, so the next generation will continue to appreciate the rare ones and know that apples can really be amazing.”


TOPICS: Food
KEYWORDS: apples; applesauce; betsyandrews; cider; dietandcuisine; donatefreerepublic; foodandwine; godsgravesglyphs; hardcider; helixmakemineadouble; honeycrisp; johnnyappleseed; pomologist; pomologists; pomology; seabreeze; snapdragon
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-22 next last

1 posted on 10/21/2023 6:31:57 PM PDT by nickcarraway
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

My Grandmother used to bake a fantastic apple pie.


2 posted on 10/21/2023 6:34:41 PM PDT by EvilCapitalist (81 votes my ass.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

Cosmic Crisp are my new favorite apple; very juicy, very crunchy very sweet, with just enough tartness to keep them from being sweet only.


3 posted on 10/21/2023 7:01:43 PM PDT by Flaming Conservative ((Pray without ceasing)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Flaming Conservative

SweeTango apples are in the stores right now, but they won’t be around long...yummy.


4 posted on 10/21/2023 7:06:19 PM PDT by who knows what evil?
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

“I bake because punching people is frowned upon.”

My personal best favorite scratch pie to bake is a Bourbon Honeycrisp. If you’re lucky, i’ll bake one. My brother in South Carolina visits Colorado knowing i’ll make one.

Excellent article post. I read every word.


5 posted on 10/21/2023 7:11:56 PM PDT by drSteve78 (Je suis Deplorable. Even more so)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

Up in the mountains near Scottsboro, Alabama lies Crow Mountain Orchard (the actual address is Fackler, Alabama). The best apples I ever had are grown there. It’s in the mountains so the fruit sees some cold before it’s picked, unlike most Alabama apples. I don’t live in north Alabama anymore so I don’t get them now. No fancy varieties, just good apples - their Fujis are my favorite, and their cider is the best.


6 posted on 10/21/2023 7:17:05 PM PDT by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite its unfashionability)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Flaming Conservative
Paid advertising works. The article is heavily over-written by big city media. Per wiki about Cosmic Crisp:

A $10 million consumer launch of the product was funded by Washington-State agriculture promotion funds through the Washington Apple Commission and other agencies. The two taglines for the apple were "Imagine the Possibilities" and "The Apple of Big Dreams". It is said to be the largest campaign in apple industry history and included payments to social media influencers and a partnership with a touring children's production of Johnny Appleseed. The term "Cosmic Crisp" is trademarked.

The paid brainwashing engineer, former New York Times dining critic "Betsy Andrews", is a bit heavy on the Y chromosome:


7 posted on 10/21/2023 7:26:19 PM PDT by Reeses
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

Just had a great batch of Snapdragons, and before that some good Snowsweets.
Normally I love Braeburns but they are hard to get.


8 posted on 10/21/2023 7:49:04 PM PDT by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: piasa
Braeburns have a nasty tendency to go brown on you if stored for long term which most store fruit has been.

Since our apples go from the tree to the basket to your car we do not have that problem.

9 posted on 10/21/2023 8:00:40 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Keep America Beautiful by keeping Canadian Trash Out. Deport Jennifer Granholm!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: Reeses

That’s a man!


10 posted on 10/21/2023 9:15:12 PM PDT by Flaming Conservative ((Pray without ceasing)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Flaming Conservative

I second this obversation.

As a child I grew up loving the Winsap. Can’t find it in CA anymore but Cosmic Crisp is a good choice for me.

KC


11 posted on 10/21/2023 9:36:36 PM PDT by KC_for_Freedom (retired aerospace engineer and CSP who also taught)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

Opals and honeycrisps are our current favorites.


12 posted on 10/21/2023 10:08:56 PM PDT by 31R1O (The people who can control themselves ought to be able to defend themselves from those who can't.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

FUJI MASTER RACE


13 posted on 10/22/2023 12:59:51 AM PDT by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway
my mom picked apples and we kids picked apples in upstate NY....

Cortlands and McCauns were the best....

there were no green variety apples back then...McIntosh, Pipins, yellow delicious and red delicious(yuck).

people really don't know cider...we made cider from the drops on the orchard floor.....take them to the cider press, and the apples were gently washed with water spray only then pressed....no pasteurization or any such thing....if there were germs , we drank it down....best drink in the world....

14 posted on 10/22/2023 1:09:32 AM PDT by cherry
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: cherry

oh, and Northern Spy apples...huge apples that were used to make pies....Northern Spy apply pie.


15 posted on 10/22/2023 1:10:19 AM PDT by cherry
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: KC_for_Freedom

Loved the winesap and the gravenstein, but can’t find them anymore.


16 posted on 10/22/2023 2:21:19 AM PDT by Bookshelf
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: Reeses

Cosmic Crisp is the best tasting apple I have ever eaten. I have NEVER seen an ad or writeup about it before this one. I first chose it because it was the least sweet red apple in the available apples at a Sam’s Club store. Their apple bags have a ‘sweetness’ chart. It’s crispy and tart, what I like best. I have to drive an extra 50 mile round trip some times to get it, but I gladly make the drive, just for the taste. I eat an apple a day.


17 posted on 10/22/2023 3:58:25 AM PDT by norwaypinesavage (The power of the press is not in what it includes, rather, it's in that which is omitted.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: norwaypinesavage
Cosmic Crisp is the best tasting apple I have ever eaten. I have NEVER seen an ad or writeup about it before this one.

Agreed. A good apple can sell itself by taste alone. SweeTango apples are great, but Cosmic Crisp and SweeTango are rare outside the Divided States. Where I currently live, most of the apples come from China, gigantic unnatural monstrosities with unknown cancer causing properties.

18 posted on 10/25/2023 6:55:42 AM PDT by Reeses
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: nickcarraway

Fuji is my favorite. Golden Delicious after that. Cosmic Crisp has a very strange texture that I find offputting.


19 posted on 10/25/2023 6:56:41 AM PDT by RinaseaofDs
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Reeses

Now , if they could only solve the rock hard factory peach problem....


20 posted on 10/25/2023 6:57:05 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 18 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-22 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson