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EverCrisp

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MAIA-1,'EverCrisp'
GenusMalus
SpeciesM. pumila
Hybrid parentageHoneycrisp× 'Fuji'
Cultivar'EverCrisp'
OriginUnited StatesPataksala, Ohio, 1998

EverCrispis an Americanapple cultivardeveloped by the Midwest Apple Improvement Association (MAIA).[1]Trademarkedas EverCrisp, the MAIA-1 variety is a cross between two existing apple cultivars: theHoneycrispandFuji.[2]Originally produced inOhio,EverCrisp has since expanded to apple-growing regions across theMidwestinMichigan,IllinoisandIndiana,in theNortheastinPennsylvaniaandNew York,and in theNorthwestinWashington.[3]The apple entered the public marketplace in 2017.[3]

History

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EverCrisp

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Mitch Lynd of Lynd Fruit Farms inPataskala,Ohio developedMAIA-1during 1998 and 1999.[4]Lyndpollinatedand collected the pioneer seeds, Honeycrisp and Fuji, in 1998,germinatedthe firstseedlingsin 1998–1999, and carried out much of the organisational work that enabled the seedlings to be disseminated to farmers for experimentalcultivationand development.[4]With the help of several apple-growers at Lynd's request, theMAIA-1variety had the chance to grow and evolve in Midwestern soil. In 2007, the first tester seedlings began to fruit. The initial fruits were selected and evaluated through internal tastings. If successful, the fruit would advance to external tastings.[5]In late-2008, David Doud of Countryline Orchards inRoann,Indiana produced anMAIA-1apple from a test tree called MDD5-44.[4]Referring to EverCrisp, Doud describedMAIA-1as the "apple with the 21st century crunch" and thought "it was better than any other apple he was growing"[4]MAIA-1,soon to be trademarked asEverCrisp,was the first fruit variety released by the MAIA.[5]

After almost 20 years of development, EverCrisp became publicly available for purchase and consumption in late-October 2017.[3]According to theEverCrisp Applewebsite, EverCrisp is available from orchards across the Midwest and Northeast, grocery stores such asLunds & ByerlysandHeinen's Fine Foods,and markets such as Greenmarket Farmers Market in New York and Kissel Hill Fruit Farm & Market in Pennsylvania.[3]As of October 2018, EverCrisp is grown in 350 orchards across 32 states.[6]The MAIA estimates they have planted more than 600,000 EverCrisp trees across theUnited Statessince the apple's development.[7]

EverCrisp is considered a "club apple" variety.[8]This means that apple growers who want to breed, harvest, and sell EverCrisp are required to purchase a membership andlicense.[8]According toGood Fruit Growermagazine, EverCrisp growers need to purchase a US$100 per year membership, a royalty fee of $1 per tree, trademark and logo fees of 20 cents per tree for four to ten years, and 30 cents per tree for eleven to twenty years.[9]Bill Dodd, the president of the MAIA, released a statement on the MAIA's website in 2014 assuring that "no one will be excluded" from buying into the EverCrisp club.[10]"We're not going to limit who has access," Dodd said.[10]

Midwest Apple Improvement Association (MAIA)

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The Midwest Apple Improvement Association (MAIA) is an organisation founded by apple-growers Mitch Lynd and Ed Fackler in the mid-1990s.[11]Although the MAIA is an independent organisation, it is advised by Dr. Diane Miller atOhio State University.[12]According to The MAIA, the organisation grew out of a need for apple cultivars that were both suited to theclimateand harvesting challenges of the Midwest.[11]The MAIA's membership were looking for a later and longer-harvesting-period fruit than the Honeycrisp, suitable for growing in the central and southern Midwest. Approximately 50 apple-growers in the Midwestern regionpledgedto commit US$100 per year for 15 years toward crossbreeding and growing new apple varieties on their independentorchards.[13]During MAIA's first breeding year, beginning in the spring of 1997, 5300 seedlings were developed and grown through crossbreeding existing apple cultivars as GoldRush,Sweet Sixteen,Crimson Crisp, HoneyCrisp, Fuji, andGolden Delicious.[13]The MAIA estimates over 50,000 seedlings have been distributed to MAIA members since the organisations inception over two decades ago.[5]

On the back of EverCrisp's success, the MAIA released two new apple varieties in early-2017, 'Crunch-A-Bunch' and 'Bakers Delight'.[14]According toGrowing Producemagazine, the new cultivars formally known as MAIA-11 and MAIA-12 were designed not only for commercial growers but for applehobbyistsand "backyard growers" too.[15][14]The varieties are sold and distributed exclusively byGurney's Seed and Nursery Company,mail delivering the new MAIA seeds to home apple-growers throughout the US, and through Early Morning and Wafler Nurseries for commercial orchardists.[16]According toGrowing Produce,both varieties offer unique flavour profiles and disease, browning and pest resistance.[16]

In 2018 Bill Dodd, president of the MAIA, estimated that 70,000 to 80,000bushels(a bushel holds approximately 125 medium apples) were to come from the 700,000 apple-trees MAIA have planted since the organisations inception.[17][18]According toOZYmagazine,Dodd predicts that one million apple trees will have been planted under the MAIA by 2020.[17]"One of our goals for our breeding program is to have a fullseasonof varieties, "Dodd stated in an interview withGrowing Producemagazine in late-2017.[14]According toOZY,these new trademarked apple varieties, 'Summerset', 'Rosalee', 'Sweet Zinger' and 'Ludacrisp', are set to be released by 2021.[17]In the next two to three years, the MAIA expect to have early, midseason, and late-season apple varieties available to the public through orchards, nurseries, independent groceries, and grocery-chains. As of early-2018, the MAIA had more than 450 members worldwide.[19]By 2019, MAIA reported that it had 700 members.[20]

Designer fruit

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Designer apple variety WA 38, trademarked asCosmic Crisp.(2016)

In an article titled 'New Wave Varieties Upset the Apple Cart',OZYmagazine reported in December 2018 that "EverCrisp is among a slew of new commercial [apple] varieties," that are not only "juicy, crunchy and flavourful, [but] can be stored longer and have a higher disease resistance".[21]EverCrisp is firmly within what has been referred to byQuartzymagazineas the "designer fruit era".[22]Among other successful designer apples asCosmic CrispandZestar,EverCrisp is part of a new generation of apple cultivars that are "more delicious, beautiful, convenient for eaters and more productive for growers,"[22]

According toOZY,consumer demand for better quality produce and a wider variety of cultivars are the central forces driving the expanding market of designer apples in the U.S.[21]According toVox,apple breeders are certainly listening. Organisations such as the MAIA are working hard to meetconsumer demandby releasing new apples, each with their own nuances.[23]Voxreports that there's an apple for everyone; some look better than others, some are anti-browning, some are crunchier, warmer, cooler, sweeter or more tart.[23]

According toQuartzy,this wave of new designer cultivars have the potential to trump old favourites such asRed Delicious,Granny Smith,McIntoshand Honeycrisp.[22][24]OZYtoo is aware of this trend, reporting that if institutions such as the MAIA andWashington State Universitycontinue to release new apple varieties and the steady rate of apple consumption in the U.S. endures, older apple varieties will eventually be displaced.[21]

Beyond the apple itself,marketinghas been an important factor in the success of club apples such as EverCrisp and Cosmic Crisp. According toThe Packermagazine,Rena Montedoro, vice president of sales and marketing for Crunch Time Apple Growers, said, "the names of apples influence the consumer. They speak to each apple,"[25]EverCrisp is marketed as the apple whose "name says it all".[26]TheEverCrisp Applewebsite claims that EverCrisp is a "durable apple [that] maintains sweetness and firmness like no other."[26]Although marketing campaigns for independentpatentedfruit varieties are a relatively new phenomenon, trademarked apple cultivars such asCosmic Crispare already experiencing success.[27]According to Seattle magazine, Cosmic Crisp's marketing campaign is heavily focused onconsumer research.[28]Through think taste tests andfocus groups,Cosmic Crisp has been able to generate significant "buzz" before it has even hit the shelf.[27]According to aQuartzyarticle in late-2017, Washington State has planted more than 12 million Cosmic Crisp trees in preparation for its debut.[29]

Cultivation

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Trademarked appleSweeTangobeing harvested. (2010)

EverCrisp is a late-season apple, ripening in mid-October and harvested in October to November depending on the region.

On David Doud's orchard in north-centralIndiana,EverCrisp is ripe between October 10 to October 15. Doud states that EverCrisp can be harvested with no complications for three weekends in October. In northern Indiana, EverCrisp has exhibited watercore if left to hang on the tree till November.[30]

Co-founder of the MAIA Mitch Lynd says that EverCrisp is "more grower friendly," than the Fuji apple, having a higher yield per tree, quipping that Fuji apples grow "lot of tree and not a lot of apples. EverCrisp makes a lot of apples but not a lot of tree."[30]

Appearance and flavour

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According toEverCrisp Apple,the MAIA-1 variety issweet,crisp, firm and dense just like its parent cultivar Honeycrisp.[31]Director for floral and produce atTops Friendly Markets,Jeff Cady, describes EverCrisp to have a strong Honeycrisp flavour with a distinct Fuji-like tang.[32]A panel of taste-testers atBloombergsaid EverCrisp had an "in-your-facecandied-applesweetness, with a background tang and monstrous crunch. "[33]

EverCrispdescribes the appearance of their MAIA-1 variety as a "blushed rosey red over a cream background."[31]Growing Producenotes that while EverCrisp has a texture similar to Honeycrisp, its external shape and appearance most resembles the Fuji apple.[34]The MAIA states EverCrisp has a "slightly harder" exterior than Honeycrisp. In apress releasefromEverCrisp Apple,Dave Rennhack of Rannhack Orchards Market testified to EverCrisp's capacity to store well. "The apple eats even better after two or three months in the cooler," said Dave. "The flavour mellows out a bit and the coloration turns from an underlying green cast to pineapple gold, making the apple very appealing."[35]Bill Dodd, president of the MAIA, said EverCrisp has the storability of Fuji with the lasting crunch of Honeycrisp. "EverCrisp can last on the counter for two weeks where the Honeycrisp will start losing quality," said Dodd.[36]

Reception

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According to U.S. media sources, EverCrisp has been largely well-received by apple orchardists in the Midwest. In an interview withGood Fruit Growermagazine, Bear Mountain Orchards owner John Lott expressed his opinion regarding the MAIA's management of EverCrisp. "It's being marketed as a variety by growers at every level," Lott said, "[It's] not branded in a box like most club varieties."[37]Bruce Hollabaugh, wholesale apple distributor in Pennsylvania, commends the MAIA's approach to managing EverCrisp as an inclusive club apple. "It's refreshing to see guys like us, a grassroots organisation of growers, that's trying to make apples better for the right reasons."[38]In late-2018, Brain Garwood of Garwood Orchards said "EverCrisp is a great apple for us as it continues to bring people to the orchard,"[39]Promoters say EverCrisp is enjoying a rapid increase in activity among fruit farmers, partly because the fruit is said to lack the problems of thin skin and tree disease susceptibility that are alleged to plague the popular Honeycrisp parent.[40][41]

According to U.S. media sources, this positive sentiment has followed through with independent and wholesale distributors. In an interview withThe Produce Newsin March 2019, Ward Dobbins of United Apple Sales said EverCrisp's quality has gotten "even stronger as [the] trees mature." Dobbins says this has enabled him to "work closely with retail partners in providing supply assurance to give them a true apple advantage late in the season."[42]Vinnie Latessa, director of produce forHeinen's Grocery Store,says that "EverCrisp is rivaling sales of Honeycrisp [and is] a close second in our lineup of apples from a sales and volume standpoint."[43]Scott Swindeman, co-owner of Applewood Orchards inMichigan,said that his supply of fruit from EverCrisp trees has increased by approximately 25 percent since his harvest in 2017.[44]

According to a consumer study conducted in November 2010 by Diane Miller, tree fruit Extension specialist atOhio State University,EverCrisp "rated higher than Fuji andCameoand was equivalent to Honeycrisp andSweeTango."[30]The MAIA is optimistic that "once people try EverCrisp, they will come back for more."[44]

References

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  1. ^"About EverCrisp Apples – EverCrisp Apples".Retrieved2019-04-17.
  2. ^Prengaman, Kate (10 October 2018)."EverCrisp: A club for everyone".Good Fruit Grower.Retrieved2019-04-17.
  3. ^abcd"Where to Buy – EverCrisp Apples".Retrieved2019-05-12.
  4. ^abcd"About EverCrisp Apples – EverCrisp Apples".Retrieved2019-05-12.
  5. ^abc"About Midwest Apple Improvement Association, M.A.I.A."www.midwestapple.com.Retrieved2019-05-27.
  6. ^Davis, Eric (2018-10-01)."US apple growers planting more acreage of Evercrisp apples".www.freshplaza.com.Retrieved2019-05-17.
  7. ^Prengaman, Kate (10 October 2018)."EverCrisp: A club for everyone".Good Fruit Grower.Retrieved2019-05-17.
  8. ^abAbad-Santos, Alex (2016-10-06)."Honeycrisp was just the beginning: inside the quest to create the perfect apple".Vox.Retrieved2019-05-12.
  9. ^Prengaman, Kate (10 October 2018)."EverCrisp: A club for everyone".Good Fruit Grower.Retrieved2019-05-14.
  10. ^ab"Tasty EverCrisp Apples,Midwest Apple Improvement Association, M.A.I.A."www.midwestapple.com.Retrieved2019-05-16.
  11. ^ab"About Midwest Apple Improvement Association, M.A.I.A."www.midwestapple.com.Retrieved2019-05-12.
  12. ^"About Midwest Apple Improvement Association, M.A.I.A."www.midwestapple.com.Retrieved2019-05-22.
  13. ^ab"About Midwest Apple Improvement Association, M.A.I.A."www.midwestapple.com.Retrieved2019-05-16.
  14. ^abcHerrick, Christina (2017-11-20)."Midwest Apple Improvement Association Breeds Fruit for the Modern Consumer".Growing Produce.Retrieved2019-05-16.
  15. ^Mertz, Leslie (26 June 2017)."Lots of new apples coming to market".Good Fruit Grower.Retrieved2019-05-16.
  16. ^abHerrick, Christina (2017-03-25)."Two MAIA Releases Available for Growers, Hobbyists".Growing Produce.Retrieved2019-05-16.
  17. ^abcMiltner, Olivia."New Wave Varieties Upset the Apple Cart".OZY.Retrieved2019-05-16.
  18. ^Huffstetler, Erin."Here's How Much You'll Get If You Buy a Bushel".The Spruce Eats.Retrieved2019-05-16.
  19. ^"Retail debut of EverCrisp earning 'early fans'".Fruit Growers News.Retrieved2019-05-27.
  20. ^Shepard, Cristin (August 21, 2019)."Midwest Apple Improvement Association launches new website".The Packer.Lenexa, Kansas.RetrievedAugust 21,2019.
  21. ^abcMiltner, Olivia."New Wave Varieties Upset the Apple Cart".OZY.Retrieved2019-05-17.
  22. ^abcGriffin, Annaliese (2017-11-15)."This autumn's apples mark the beginning of the designer fruit era".Quartzy.Retrieved2019-05-17.
  23. ^abAbad-Santos, Alex (2016-10-06)."Honeycrisp was just the beginning: inside the quest to create the perfect apple".Vox.Retrieved2019-05-17.
  24. ^Sowder, Amy."What's in a name? A lot, when it comes to 2019 apples".Packer.Retrieved2019-05-24.
  25. ^Sowder, Amy."What's in a name? A lot, when it comes to 2019 apples".Packer.Retrieved2019-05-17.
  26. ^ab"About EverCrisp Apples – EverCrisp Apples".Retrieved2019-05-24.
  27. ^abAbad-Santos, Alex (2016-10-06)."Honeycrisp was just the beginning: inside the quest to create the perfect apple".Vox.Retrieved2019-05-24.
  28. ^Baker, M. Sharon (2017-11-24)."The Next Big Apple Variety Was Bred for Deliciousness in Washington".Seattle Magazine.Retrieved2019-05-24.
  29. ^Griffin, Annaliese (14 November 2017)."This autumn's apples mark the beginning of the designer fruit era".Quartzy.Retrieved2019-05-25.
  30. ^abc"Tasty EverCrisp Apples,Midwest Apple Improvement Association, M.A.I.A."www.midwestapple.com.Retrieved2019-05-27.
  31. ^ab"Taste – EverCrisp Apples".Retrieved2019-05-24.
  32. ^"EverCrisp fits retailers' need for unique winter apple".The Produce News - Covering fresh produce around the globe since 1897.Retrieved2019-05-24.
  33. ^Krader, Kate (2018-12-14)."The Search for the Next Honeycrisp Apple".Retrieved2019-05-24.
  34. ^"New Apple Variety Makes Its Debut".Growing Produce.2013-01-23.Retrieved2019-05-24.
  35. ^"EverCrisp Wins in Michigan – EverCrisp Apples".Retrieved2019-05-24.
  36. ^Snook, Debbi (2017-10-18)."Like Honeycrisp? Check out next generation EverCrisp apple".cleveland.com.Retrieved2019-05-25.
  37. ^Prengaman, Kate (10 October 2018)."EverCrisp: A club for everyone".Good Fruit Grower.Retrieved2019-05-22.
  38. ^Prengaman, Kate (10 October 2018)."EverCrisp: A club for everyone".Good Fruit Grower.Retrieved2019-05-25.
  39. ^Davis, Eric (10 January 2018)."US apple growers planting more acreage of Evercrisp apples".www.freshplaza.com.Retrieved2019-05-22.
  40. ^Snook, Debbi (2017-10-18)."Like Honeycrisp? Check out next generation EverCrisp apple".cleveland.com.Retrieved2019-05-22.
  41. ^"About EverCrisp Apples – EverCrisp Apples".Retrieved2019-05-22.
  42. ^"EverCrisp fits retailers' need for unique winter apple".The Produce News - Covering fresh produce around the globe since 1897.Retrieved2019-05-25.
  43. ^Davis, Eric (10 January 2018)."US apple growers planting more acreage of Evercrisp apples".www.freshplaza.com.Retrieved2019-05-25.
  44. ^abZessin, Amanda (2018-11-08)."Supply doubles for EverCrisp apple as 2018-19 season arrives".freshplaza.com.Retrieved2019-05-25.