Empire
Apples
Available Oct.
21 through Dec 25
The Empire apple
is a cross between Jonathans and McIntosh apples. The following describes
the McIntosh Apple:
In
1796 John McIntosh was a 19-year-old from the Mohawk Valley in New
York who was smitten with a young woman but faced such strong opposition
to the romance from his father that the couple hatched a plan to
elope to Canada. His bride-to-be left first, and he soon followed.
By the time he caught up to her, he found she had died of a sudden
illness, and he could only grieve at her grave. He hiked off into
the Canadian wilderness to become an anguished hermit. Five years
later he homesteaded near Dundela, Ontario, not far from the St.
Lawrence River, and transplanted some wild apple saplings he found
there, one of which survived and produced fruit of such tangy allure
and aromatic fragrance that it became well known in the region.
It wasn't propagated
into commercial potential until years later by John McIntosh's son,
whence it became known as McIntosh Red. The variety is thought to
be related to the Fameuse apple of the region. McIntosh has juicy
white flesh and a rather tough skin that has mixed red and green
coloring. It's a favorite apple for eating out of hand but also is
widely used in salads and sauces and pies and is a mainstay in fresh
cider.
The McIntosh doesn't
grow well in our area, so growers choose Empire, a substitute with
similar characteristics.
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10
lb. Empire Apple Gift Box - $45 delivered
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time to order some fruit - just click the button to add items into your shopping
cart. When you have everything you need, proceed to the checkout.
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