Connecticut heirloom apples to be planted behind Eric Sloane’s recreation of the Noah Blake Cabin

heirloom apples

          The Friends of the Eric Sloane Museum will be developing programming at the Eric Sloane Museum for 2016, the year we celebrate Eric Sloane and New England Apples. We’ll be exploring many aspects of the apple – Eric Sloane’s treatment of apples and apple trees in print and in oils, apples as an ingredient, apple cider, apples and apple trees in art – the list is magical and we do hope that you can join us for many if not all of our programs and events.

Below is a list of traditional New England heirloom apple trees provided to us by Peter Montgomery of Montgomery Gardens. Peter will help us kick off the 2016 season by planting an orchard behind the Noah Blake cabin on the grounds of the Eric Sloane Museum. We hope you will be able to join us in late April for this historic event!

Cox’s Orange Pippin

Origin: Colnbrook, England, 1825.

Appearance: A yellow background spackled with a little red and a lot of orange in a rustic-looking patina that looks like it came straight off the Sistine Chapel (before the cleaning). The flesh has the cream-yellow tinge of most rich-flavored apples.

Flavor: Think ambrosia salad—pineapple, oranges, marshmallow, and coconut. With lime squeezed over the top. And a sprinkle of flower petals. Cox rarely loses a taste contest.

Texture: The breaking flesh sprays juice upon every bite. With a perfect mix of crisp and tender, and nice thin skin, Cox goes down easy.

Season: Fresh picked in September, it is delicious but tart; by late October, it has mellowed into its full tropical apogee. After that, it goes downhill fast.

Use: Cox would make a fine pie or sauce, but this would be like using the Mona Lisa as kindling.

Region: A staple of UK supermarkets, though often in subpar condition there. Look for it at roadside stands in England, the Canadian Maritimes, New England, the Finger Lakes, the Great Lakes, and the Pacific Northwest. Many feel that Cox only sings in a maritime clime.

Esopus Spitzenberg Alias: Spitz,  
Spitzenberg, Spitzenburgh

Origin: Esopus, New York (Ulster County), 1700s.

Appearance: The red coat, spotted with fat yellow lenticels like bubbles in hot oil, makes me think of the hide of some reptilian beast. The greenish-yellow background often shows through. Modestly sizes and modestly ribbed. When it ripens fully, the flesh turns yolk-yellow.

Flavor: Extraordinary brandied, burnt-sugar notes, as if it was already halfway to being a tarte tatin. One thinks of burnt orange, or Cointreau, and (after some mellowing) lychee and roses.

Texture: Excellent breaking crispness. Quite juicy. The skin is on the chewy side.

Season: Pick in October. Give it a month to mellow unless you are a sour fanatic. The flavor takes off around the winter solstice, and will hold in cold storage through spring.

Use: This apple can do anything. Eat it fresh, make it into a pie, ferment it into an unforgettable cider.

Region: The new darling of home orchardists and cider makers throughout the Northeast and upper Midwest.

Wealthy

Origin: Excelsior, Minnesota, 1868. (Crabapple seedling.)

Appearance: Large, round-oblate, with a light red coat over greenish-yellow skin.

Flavor: Middle of the road. Good, sweet-tart, fairly one-dimensional, like a McIntosh without the whimsy.

Texture: So crisp, so juicy when young. It has that odd foamy quality, like modern apples; it seems strangely light and insubstantial, and its cells give way without a fight.

Season: October (September in the South). Get it before it softens.

Use: Fresh eating, sauce.

Region: Northernmost states, especially Minnesota.

Westfield Seek-No-Further (The apple 
tree and fruit discussed by Eric Sloane in his book “A Reverence for Wood”).

Alias: Westfield Seek-No-Farther; Seek-No-Further.

Origin: Westfield, Massachusetts, 1700s.

Appearance: You will know it by its lenticels. Like Esopus Spitzenberg, for which it would make a fine body double, it is covered in a dusty red firmament through which its fat, irregular dots seem to swirl like the stars in Van Gogh’s Starry Night. Like many rich-flavored apples, the flesh is yellowish. Sometimes there is a bluish bloom that can be shined away.

Flavor: Sweet and nutty. It displays high apple notes spiked with limey zest, vanilla, and enough astringency to either delight or deter you. This is nature’s apple-walnut crisp.

Texture: Crisp and coarse with a dreamy snap.

Season: Mid-September to early October. Will keep for only a month or so.

Use: Best fresh. Turns mushy if baked.

Region: Rare, but treasured, among New England and Upper Midwest orchardists.

Wolf River

Origin: Fremont, Wisconsin, 1856, near the Wolf River.

Appearance: Massive, round, reddish pink, ribbed, like a Northern Spy on steroids. Inside, the flesh is alabaster, quickly browning when exposed.

Flavor: Hardly sweet, mildly acid, profoundly uninteresting, except right where the flesh meets the skin, where there is a nice hit of cherry.

Texture: Dry, a bit airy, almost spongy.

Season: Early fall for culinary uses.

Use: A baked apple specialist. Also good dried or in pies.

Region: Known nationwide for its size, but most popular in its native Midwest.

Roxbury Russet Alias: Roxbury, Boston Russet.

Origin: Roxbury, Massachusetts, early 1600s.

Appearance: The classic russet, green skin turning the color of oiled oak in the sun, covered in a sandpapery russet. Let’s face it; it’s an ugly apple, although it will sometimes develop a brassy glow on one cheek. Tends toward roundness, though sometimes oval and sometimes squarish. It seems to have a lot of variation.

Flavor: Yummy and strange. Early in the season, its sweetness is almost completely overrun by aggressive, almost painful acid. It’s like biting into a kumquat. By early winter, the acid gives way to a delicious, rich persimmon with nutty undertones.

Texture: Very hard and crunchy at first, Roxbury Russet can turn spongy if not properly stored. Its dense, white flesh is granular and dry, and its skin, like most russets, is thick but not tough.

Season: Pick in October. Gets tastier for several months if stored properly.

Use: Excellent in pies and crisps. Superb keeper. (Store in plastic to preserve moisture.) I love it fresh.

Region: Still highly esteemed throughout New England.

Golden Russet

Origin: Upstate New York, 1840s.

Appearance: A typical green-skinned russet on the shady side, but on the sunny side it turns smooth and truly golden in color, with some copper and bronze and peach mixed in. There are few sights prettier than rows of Golden Russets in the orchard, resembling an apricot sunrise. Look for a smattering of perfectly round off-white lenticels on the skin. Inside, the flesh is pure white.

Flavor: A luxurious delight of pear and fig, a ripe Golden Russet is as rich as it gets. Everything about the sweet, spicy, sprightly flavor says “apricot.” When unripe, the skin has a green pepper note.

Texture: Hard and crunchy, with just enough juice to lubricate your jaw and keep it from overheating. In keeping with the theme, the texture of the skin has an apricot-like roughness.

Season: Pick in October. Don’t press for cider until winter. As a dessert fruit, its flavor peaks in December and January, but it will keep until late winter.

Use: This apple does everything better than most apples do anything.Region: Grown throughout the northern United States by people who are serious about apples and cider.

*Descriptions above were provided by Peter Montgomery – thank you! From “Apples of Uncommon Character” by Rowan Jacobsen