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Unboxing

A yellow apple sits on some crumples newspaper pages in front of a perforated plastic bag.

Whan that April with his showres soot is when (whan?) GoldRush, that king of keepers, is ready to eat. ¶ 

It's also when I see how the ones I laid down in my refrigerator in December have fared in my home newsprint-and-perforated-plastic-bag storage system.

(Eat your heart out, fancy industrial chillers!)

A batch of similarly stored Suncrisps developed some rot this year, probably because too much moisture accumulated in the bag.

These GoldRush, by contrast, have fared well and make for prime eating this month.

"Swich licóur" indeed!

Three cheers for Goldrush

By way of marking the GR "season" (they are pretty good any time) and singing their praises, here is more about this apple:

Don't skip over the comments from readers on these, either.

I find I've written a good deal about GoldRush over the years, including some comparisons (even an absurd one). Click the label "Goldrush" (or "Gold Rush") the side or bottom of this post to see them all.

Goldrush apples picked in the fall

Or just view them on this Goldrush page (same thing).

Notes

Those Suncrisp did quite well, considering. They are best around the new year, but I imprudently saved a few into March.

Even so, they were excellent after cutting the brown parts away.

These days I am mostly eating supermarket Cortland and Jazz, and the GoldRush. 

Once upon a time we would start to see apples from the southern half of the world in late April, but the tides of that commerce have lately ebbed. 

Things can get kind of grim in the lead-up to the first local apples in July.

Comments

  1. I am still using a crate of GR stored in the open in a shed. I've lost quite a few and the remaining are shrivelling a lot now. It does not store as well just in the open like that, but it does pretty well and remains edible texture wise. Rubbery is awesome. I've seen GR and other apples like Roxbury, and Golden Russet if I recall correctly, go wrinkly and almost malleable under the skin, yet still have that rubbery texture. I've done some crossing of those to gold rush in hopes of getting more disease resistant, long storing russets. Rubbery texture is. not a trait I've seen a lot. I think it is worth pursuing in breeding.

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    1. Mine are not even all that rubbery this spring, for some reason.

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  2. Western WI: Unfortunately my goldrush were horrible this year as well as being lousy keepers. In the Midwest (and West) most goldrush were gone fairly early in the season. So I don’t know if it was the orchard (the one close by was sold and still hasn’t reopened) or if the apples (although organic) were sprayed with something close to harvest, or if it was just the weather. The taste put me off apples and I am having trouble getting myself to eat any at all right now. Hopefully once the yellow transparents (aka early junes) appear, I’ll be ready.

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    Replies
    1. I also look forward to Yellow T, although they (1) are very out of fashion, and (2) are ripe for about 45 minutes, which (3) is around August first up this way.

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  3. what caused your obsession with all the different types of apples?

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  4. Wow, I didn't realize there was such a variety. I’ve only ever known the basic green and red apple.

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