Will you look at that gorgeous apple!
The crimson blush is so saturated that the prominent lenticel dots look white in stark contrast.
A relief map of red-brown crackles resemble scars.
You can feel them with your fingertips, like a Braille interpretation of a Jackson Pollock painting.
Just before Christmas, I got two of these in a box of apples, seven varieties developed by the Midwest Apple Improvement Association.
Some of them, like Ludacrisp, have been patented and trademarked.
The 311 is just a number, not even a variety name (let alone a trademark), and may never make the cut.
If it does, you read it here first.
These are large apples with a tiny amount of ribbing, deep stem wells, and closed calyxes. The stem is as you see it in my photo, a dry brown twiglet.
Beneath that blush, the apple is a light yellow. (There's a less-blushed part on the side not shown.)
I admire the whole package, but can you imagine trying to convince a buyer for a national supermarket chain to put these on the shelves?
Anyway, let's eat.
Let's Eat
The clean, substantial texture remind me a little of that of the great Esopus Spitzenburg.
Like the Spitz, 311 is modestly sweet. It has a generic floral quality and bears some spicy flavors including a little cinnamon.
This is an apple that feels good in mouth and belly. It is a GoldRush x Melrose cross that ripens in mid-October.
I cannot speak for the market but would make room for this variety in my fall treasure hunt if I ever found it at a farm stand or orchard.
Since that may never happen, I'll just say how grateful I am to have two of these now.
That's not an apple; that's a Christmas tree ornament!
ReplyDeleteMade me think a little of this.
DeleteLove your blog. Looking for varieties that grow well in the true midwest, i.e. Ks, NE,SD, OK.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous apple. Reminds me of a Blue Pearmain without the bloom.
ReplyDeleteAnyone else have song 'Down' by the band 311 go through their head as they read this?
ReplyDeleteI agree with other commenters - beautiful looking apple.