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  2. Ribston Pippin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribston_Pippin

    The apple skin is a yellow, flushed orange, streaked red with russet at the base and apex. The yellow flesh is firm, fine-grained, and sweet with a pear taste. Irregularly shaped and sometimes lopsided, the apple is usually round to conical in shape and flattened at the base with distinct ribbing.

  3. Cortland (apple) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cortland_(apple)

    After the many attributes of McIntosh were discovered, plant breeders began crossing it with other varieties to enhance its traits. One of the earliest was the 'Cortland'. Its flavor is sweet compared to McIntosh, and it has a flush of crimson against a pale yellow or green background sprinkled with short, dark red stripes and gray-green do

  4. Bramley apple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bramley_apple

    To make apple sauce, the apples are sliced and then stewed with sugar and lemon juice in a saucepan. Bramley's Seedling apples are favoured for producing a jelly which is very pale in colour. [ 22 ] Because the tree is a heavy cropper and liable to glut, it is a fine candidate for the domestic production of fruit wine , alone or with other ...

  5. Malus sylvestris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malus_sylvestris

    Malus sylvestris, the European crab apple, also known as the European wild apple or simply the crab apple, is a species of the genus Malus. Its scientific name means "forest apple", reflecting its habitat.

  6. York Imperial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/York_Imperial

    A 'York Imperial' apple. The 'York Imperial' is easily identified by its lop-sided shape. [5] [13] It is consistently one of the top-ten-selling apple varieties. [14]The fruit is medium to large, and varies from an oblate-oblique shape to an oval-oblong shape, and the skins are deep red with greenish-yellow streaks and specks, as well as occasional patches of yellow or green.

  7. Lady apple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_apple

    1865 watercolor of an Api apple by Alphonse Mas. The Lady is a historic apple cultivar originating in Brittany, France in at least 1628. The cultivar has gained a variety of known names in English, and is commonly referred to as Api or the Lady Apple. [a] As a seedling, the apple has the names Helen and Highland Beauty.

  8. Macoun apple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macoun_apple

    'Macoun' apples are a cross between the 'McIntosh' and 'Jersey Black' cultivars. [1] The Macoun ("Ma-cown," after the variety's namesake, Canadian horticulturalist W.T. Macoun , but sometimes also pronounced either "Ma-coon" or "McCowan") was developed at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva , by Richard Wellington.

  9. SugarBee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SugarBee

    SugarBee (CN121) [1] is an apple cultivar grown in the elevated orchards of Washington state. The variety was discovered by Chuck Nystrom in the early 1990s and developed in Minnesota, and is believed to be the result of an accidental cross-pollination between a Honeycrisp and another, unknown variety. [ 2 ]