This cheerful lemon-yellow apple, prominently ribbed, bears faint honey-sweet aromas.
It is blocky and a little lumpy, with a splash of russet spilling from the stem well.
The closest thing to a blush is a region or two that is slightly more orange.
My photo shows a few grey speckles, easy to spot against the bright backdrop, but a close examination reveals many lenticels that match rather than contrast with that yellow. They are ever so slightly raised on the fruit's glossy smooth surface.
Those lenticels are actually a bit more obvious in the photos, and in the shade, than in direct sunshine.
Here is a curious effect: Some of the lenticels that are basically invisible when viewed straight on shift to a dark green when viewed at an angle.
Aura's calyx is wide open. There is a tiny bit of give in the squeeze.
A second sample is slightly less ribbed and more regular, with more grey spots.
Whenever I see a modern yellow apple, I think "Golden Delicious." The presumption is accelerated this time by the faint whiff of honey.
Let's see if tasting bears this out.
Put it to the taste
There is something peppery in the mix of tastes that kicks in after the first chew. That adds character, yet is not entirely agreeable, at least on one of my samples.
Other flavors are floral and citric (close to pineapple) with a faint vanilla echo that is especially noticeable in the finish.
I honestly do not know what I think of that peppery note. On balance, this is a very good apple, especially for the off season, and I plan to get more of them for my own enjoyment.
Behind the apple
Aurora is a Splendour x Gala cross, so Aura has Splendour on both sides.
If anyone knows the true name of this apple (not just the trademark), I'd like to hunt for, and link to, its plant patent.
My idea of a Golden Delicious connection seems pretty tenuous.
Update: But see the comments.
Hi Adam. I saw your post on Twitter. The cultivar name is 8S6923 and the full trademark name seems to be Aurora Golden Gala. https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTSCI.40.1.251
ReplyDeleteI am grateful, anonymous twitter follower, but Aurora is the pollen parent of Aura, not Aura itself.
DeleteI reviewed Aurora in 2014.
There is a physical resemblance, but they are not the same apple.
The look of it and your description of the flavor, sounds exactly like Opal
ReplyDeleteThat would be an interesting comparison to make! If one could have both at the same time.
DeleteBased only on my notes and recollection, I would say that the flavor sets are pretty different from each other.
I believe this is D27-16, and patent is held by Regal Fruit International.
ReplyDeleteUnless someone has made an error, that is a different apple.
DeleteAura's Honeycrisp x Aurora parentage has been reported by several websites and at least one trade publication.
The patent for 'D27-16' names '8S6923' as the seed parent and Honeycrisp as the pollen parent. '8S6923' is the cultivar name for the trademark Aurora Golden Gala.
DeleteD27-16 patent:
https://patents.justia.com/patent/PP34374
Aurora Golden Gala, '8S6923' cultivar information:
https://www.budwood.ca/varieties/category/0/Select_Apples/product/4/8S6923_Aurora_Golden_Gala/
Good Fruit Grower Article:
https://www.goodfruit.com/golden-opportunity-on-the-apple-aisle/#:~:text=The%20Aura%20Apple%20introduction%2C%20which,ll%20remember%2C%E2%80%9D%20she%20said.
I think you have unriddled this! Note the last link, at Good Fruit Grower, identifies Aura as "D27-16."
DeleteThanks!
You're welcome. Just trying to help out as requested in the post. Contrary to your last statement, it is likely 3 of Aura's 8 great grandparents were Golden Delicious. It is known that Gala is half Golden Delicious, Honeycrisp is a quarter Golden Delicious, and suspected that Splendour is half Golden Delicious.
DeleteWe saw Aura apples at the store in Ontario Canada recently and enjoyed them a lot. One of our favourites for sure.
ReplyDelete