Sunday, November 26, 2023

Howgate Wonder**

A very large yellow-green apple with red stripes sits in a man's hand

I guess this gigantic apple is England's King Luscious. It is colossal, some 13-1/2 inches around. ¶ 

Howgate Wonder's size grabbed my attention right away. Beyond that, it is conical and moderately ribbed, a light spring green with a streaky red blush and a glossy peel.

It's lenticels are small and indistinct. 

Heavy in hand, this is one hefty apple! The stem is appropriately thick and stubby, in a shallow stem well.

Mouthful

It's rather hard to get one's teeth into, partially due to size and partially its firmness of flesh, which is crisp and an off-white cream. That is more coarse- than fine-grained, and tasty.

two stars Normally I would just cut this into slices but I do not have a knife, let alone one big enough!

Flavors feature a sweet malt and a bit of caramel. This is quite a nice combination, and the crunch is first rate once you figure out how to get it into your mouth.

A good bit of acidity enlivens this apple, but overall flavors are mild.

A very large green-yellow apple with a steakey red blush sits next to a much smaller dark red apple
Howgate Wonder at left, next to a Scrumptious that is on the small end of medium-sized.

The apple originated on the Isle of Wight a bit more than a century ago, a Blenham Orange x Newton Wonder cross

Howgate seems to be used primarily for cooking, but in my view it's well worth eating out of hand when fresh.

Especially if you are hungry.

6 comments:

  1. I think you mean circumference, not diameter? If not, you have really, really big hands. Or at least one really big hand.

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    1. Oh my goodness, yes. Don't know where my head was at. Fixed now, thanks.

      Still plenty big.

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  2. I really don't mean this to sound like bitchy one-upmanship, but 13.5" is probably a bit on the modest size for a Howgate Wonder. I have a couple in my kitchen that are 16 inchers, and they're only around 500g each. The largest I grew last year was 771g, although sadly I didn't get a circumference measurement before I ate it...
    Definitely a lovely apple though, great flavour, cooks down to a rich puree.

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    1. Not at all, Darren, thank you for the report! It is something to wonder at to be sure.

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    2. Darren, do you know what Hardiness zone they are?

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    3. Sadly, I don't know for sure, no. All the sources I have are UK-focused, so hardiness zones don't feature.
      If it helps though, I'm based in Manchester, in the North West of the UK, we apparently have a similar climate to Washington State, and they grow just fine on my allotment.

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