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The Granny Smith, also known as a green apple or sour apple, is an apple cultivar that originated in Australia in 1868. [1] It is named after Maria Ann Smith, who propagated the cultivar from a chance seedling. The tree is thought to be a hybrid of Malus sylvestris, the European wild apple, with the domesticated apple Malus domestica as the ...
Here is what we found: Granny Smith is actually a real person. The delicious, light green Granny Smith apple was named after Maria Ann Smith, who, in 1868, found an apple tree seedling growing in ...
It is a favorite for eating plain, as well as for use in salads, apple sauce, and apple butter. [12] [13] America's Test Kitchen, Food Network, and Serious Eats all list Golden Delicious apples as one of the best apples for baking apple pie due to its balanced flavor and its high pectin content that allows it to stay intact when cooked. [14 ...
Monument to Baldwin Apple at site of discovery (Wilmington, Massachusetts) Plate from the 1903 Apples of New YorkAccording to local tradition, the apple was found near Wood Hill by William Butters (1711-1784), grandson of Will Butter, first white settler in what is now Wilmington, Massachusetts.
8 tbsp butter (1 stick); 2 medium Granny Smith apple, coarsely chopped; 3 / 4 lb sweet Italian pork sausage, casing removed; 1 large onion, chopped (about 1 cup); 2 stalk celery, chopped (about 1 ...
Apples have 95 calories, 4 grams of fiber and 11 percent of the daily recommendation for vitamin C. Learn more health benefits of the fruit plus apple recipes.
Braeburn apples for sale on a UK market stall. The Braeburn is a cultivar of apple that is firm to the touch with a red/orange vertical streaky appearance on a yellow/green background. Its color intensity varies with different growing conditions. It was discovered as a chance seedling in 1952 by the farmer O. Moran from Waiwhero in the Moutere ...
Roxbury Russet. The ' Roxbury Russet' is an apple cultivar, believed to be the oldest apple cultivar bred in the United States, having first been discovered and named in the mid-17th century in the former Town of Roxbury, part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony southwest of (now part of) Boston. [1] It is known by several other names including ...