Wachholder Ham Waddell Hall Apples Wadschinken Wafers -- Benne Wafers -- Chocolate Wafers -- Graham Wafers -- Tunbridge Wells Wafers -- Vanilla Waffle Iron Waffles Waffles -- Belgian Wagarashi Wagashi Wagashi -- Daifuku Wagashi -- Namagashi Wagener Apple Wagon Wheels Wagyu Beef Waikato Potatoes Waikato Potatoes Waimate Berries Waimea Potatoes Wakame Wakame Soba Wakatay Mint Waldo Berries Waldorf Astoria Cake Waldorf Salad Walewska -- À la Walla Walla Onions Walms Walnut Butter Walnut Oil Walnut Sauce Walnuts Previous | Next | Russet Apples© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced![]() Russet Apples Russet Apples are not a single kind of apple, but rather a group of apples in which there are many, very different cultivars. The term is used to describe apples that have "russeting" on them. Russeting is a patch of the apple's skin that is a different colour from the rest of the apple, and that has a sandpapery, furry texture. The colour of the russeting can be golden brown, burnt umber, silvery or grey. Some russeting will be a small area at the top or the bottom of the apple, or just a patch or two elsewhere on the apple. It may even cover almost all the entire apple. Some russeting will feel like a very fine web; other russeting will feel very coarse. Apple enthusiasts feel that Russets are the best tasting apples. However, Russet Apples never make it to the grocery stores anymore. Faced with pictures of perfect, blemish-free apples in food magazines, consumers may have come to believe that russeting on the skin indicates something is wrong with the apple. Others are so used to more insipid apples with a uniform skin texture such as the McIntosh that they don't like the thought of biting into a patch of skin that feels different. Consequently, any russeting on apples is seen as a bad sign by producers, because they can't sell the apples on as fresh-eating apples, which command higher prices. Apple aficionados, however, continue to hunt Russets out at farmer's markets. As government researchers bred perfect skin into apples, distinctive flavour got filed in their out-boxes. Russets, neglected and untouched by clinical standards, tend to have still a spicy, pronounced flavour that reminds you why our ancestors wrote poems about apples. To be fair, it's ourselves we have to blame, because we're the ones who walked by displays of Russet Apples at the stores until their shelf-space dwindled and disappeared.
Also called: Fenouillets (French)
Other entries for:Russet ApplesAdam's Pearmain, Ard Cairn Russet Apple, Ashmead's Kernel, Bloody Butcher Apple, Carpentin Apple, Champlain Apple, Claygate Pearmain, Cox's Orange Pippin Apple, Egremont Russet Apple, Golden Russett Apples, Irish Peach Apple, Kerry Pippin Apple, Kill Apple, Ribston Pippin, Saint Edmund's Pippin, Widows Friend Apple, Winesap Apples, Yarlington Mill Apple, York Imperial Apple Other entries for:ApplesAcme Apples, Adanac Apples, Airlie Red Flesh Apples, Alaska Apples, Amberoso Apples, Applecrabs, Boiken Apples, British Apples, Cider Apples, Cooking Apples, Crab Apples, Desse de Buff Apples, Erwin Baur Apples, Fameuse Apples, Fresh-Eating Apples, Juice Apples, Ozark Pippin Apples, Pie Apples, Pixie Apples, Salad Apples, Sauce Apples, Smith's Cider Apples, Ziegler's Sweeting Apples Other entries for:Hard FruitApricots, Avocado, Chayote, Citrus Fruit, Guava Fruit, Kiwis, Mangos, Maypop Fruit, Medlars, Melons, Nectarines, Papaya, Passion Fruit, Peaches, Pears, Persimmons, Plums, Pomegranates, Quinces, Red Sorrel, Rose Hips, Sapote, Star Fruit, True Service Fruit Other entries for:FruitBananas, Bletting, Candied Fruit, Dried Fruit, Drupes, Olives, Rhubarb, Soft Fruit |
|


