Crisp, reliable Fuji was Honeycrisp before there was Honeycrisp.
Fuji's development in Japan was interrupted by World War II, and the apple was not released until 1962.
Today it is a mainstay, available in supermarkets year round. Fuji accounts for about 25% of US apple production, behind only Gala and Red Delicious.
It's easy to understand the appeal of this crisp and delicately flavored apple. Some Fuji fans would never eat anything else.
But my mission is to lure you out of the rut you may not know you are in. If you are curious, give these Fuji-adjacent apples a try.
Before Honeycrisp, Fuji had become a kind of industry ideal from which new apple varieties did not stray far.
Indeed, one company sought to market a slightly redder strain as "Kiku," as if it were a new apple.
Go ahead and eat that, if you like the color. You won't be disappointed, because Kiku tastes like regular Fuji.
Speaking of Honeycrisp, if you haven't done so, you owe it to yourself to try them. There is a whole family of new varieties in the Honeycrisp space, some of them with real flavor.
Update: A reader notes that "someone who likes Fuji is almost certain to like Evercrisp," a Honeycrisp type with a Fuji parent.
I quite agree! Read the whole comment (sadly, anonymous) below.
But if, like me, you find Honeycrisp to be a sugar lump too far, you might try the following apples to sweeten and expand your apple pleasure and appreciation.
Other Asian
Mutsu is a big guy |
It's never very tart, but mellows (and grows more yellow) later in the harvest.
Speaking of Asian varieties, Shizuka is Mutsu-like, and Shinsei (also know as Shin-ste) has some unusual, and good, flavors. You won't find these in supermarkets, though.
Supermarket choices and beyond
Pazazz is part of a stable of New Zealand apples, many of which have Gala and Braeburn as parents. If you like Pazzaz you might sample (in order of increasing flavor concentration and hardness) Envy, Smitten, Koru, and Jazz.
Arguably that list strays from Fuji's delicacy towards the end. Here are some farm-stand varieties, that, in season, might genuinely complement Fuji's qualities.
In late summer, try Molly's Delicious and Sansa. In late season, see what you think of Enterprise.
Finally, Esopus Spitzenberg is a heritage apple that achieves very high quality through subtlety and restraint. Though not very like Fuji, I commend E Spitz to the sophisticated Fuji aficionado without reservation.
Esopus |
Do you have any recommendations? Make them in the comments!
There is this place in Java Island, Malang city. The place is famous its small green apples, I am not sure what variant it is, locals simply call it Apel Malang. It's a bit too sour and a bit tough to eat as it is, but I absolutely love it when they turn it into chips and syrup.
ReplyDeleteSomeone who likes Fuji is almost certain to like Evercrisp, a Fuji x Honeycrisp cross from the Midwest Apple Improvement Association which can be found in supermarkets in New York and Vermont (and likely other parts of the Northeast). I find that the flavor is similar to Fuji, but it is a denser apple that has better texture when purchased in mid/late winter after 4+ months of storage.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! A less charitable person might even have accused me of negligence for not mentioning Evercrisp.
DeleteI've incorporated this comment into the original report. Thanks!