Gravenstein Apples are a Rare Heirloom, But Famous in Sauce, Cider, Vinegar, and Brandy

in #food7 years ago

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One of the joys of August where I live is the beginning of apple season. And it all begins with one of my favorites, the Gravenstein apple. Thanks to cold storage and imported fruit, we have access to apples year-round, but from winter onwards they are just a commodity (because one supermarket apple tastes much like the next one). Red and Golden Delicious, McIntosh, Fuji, Gala, and Granny Smiths are all good apples and each of them is excellent if you can find one fresh off the tree, but I don’t get excited about them because I can buy those varieties in American stores for months at a time.

From August to November in my region, if you are fortunate and know where to look, you can enjoy some truly heirloom varieties of apples. In August, I get excited because one of the first apples of the season is the best one of all. These don’t last and they can’t be stored long, but there’s nothing like the taste of a fresh Gravenstein apple.

This year, I drove to apple country and bought a whole box of them. They need to be eaten, cooked, or juiced within a couple of weeks, since these apples do not store well.

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Gravenstein Apple. Author photo.

When slightly green below their red stripes, the apples are wonderfully tart and crisp with a perfect balance of acids and sugar. That is my favorite stage to eat these. A few days later, the green begins to turn golden, cutting the acidity slightly. This is probably the stage at which most people would enjoy this apple the most. Later, the green-gold turns a deeper gold, which means that the apple flesh inside has become sweeter and less crispy. The texture of a fully ripe Gravenstein is fine-grained. I am less interested in them at that point because the snappiness is gone, but they are still very good for juicing or making apple sauce or apple pie.

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More Gravenstein apples. The two on the left are perfectly crisp and tart (ideal for my taste). The two in the middle are slightly sweeter (best for most people). And the two on the right are fully ripe with a fine-grained texture (still good for juicing or cooking). Author photo.

Where is apple country for these heirloom treats? Since 1669, Grasten in Southern Denmark has been the epicenter for these apples, which may have come originally from Italy or Germany. The name Grasten was Germanized as Gravenstein. The apples are famous in parts of Telemark and Hardanger in Norway. They also are grown in Austria and in the Bavarian region of Germany, where the apples are known as Gravensteiners and are used to make Obstler brandy. In the United States, western Sonoma County, California is the place where most Gravs are still grown, though there are nice pockets of them in Nova Scotia, Canada and other places on both US and Canadian coasts. They are grown in New Zealand in small quantities. The Gravenstein cultivar is a triploid, which means that it isn’t good for pollinating other apples, so if you plan to plant one, make sure you grow another early-blooming variety also.

As the famous fruit breeder Luther Burbank once said, “if the Gravenstein could be had throughout the year, no other apple need be grown.” Because they don’t store well and are not good commercial apples, many Gravenstein orchards have been removed and replaced with more commercially viable crops, such as wine grapes. The rapid decline in Grav production caused Slow Food USA to proclaim this a heritage apple in 2005 and induct it in the organization’s Ark of Taste. Also in 2005, Denmark’s Food Minister proclaimed it as the country’s national apple.

And since then, quite a few chefs and gourmet food, brandy, and juice producers have taken up the challenge to make good use of this heirloom apple, which is nearly the equivalent of an endangered species. Its flavor in apple cider, sauce, crisp, pie, vinegar, and distilled alcohol is second to none.

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Various Gravenstein-specific food and drink labels, stamps, and festival promotions from around the internet. Apple crisp (like pie, but using a granola or streusel topping instead of pastry dough) image from Slow Food USA.

Long live the Grav!

Additional Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravenstein
Top photo by the author

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Man the whole time I was looking at this I was thinking, "where the heck is the pie?" That is all I think about when I see apples. Apple Pie, Apple crisp (with vanilla ice-cream) and my grandma's apple strudel.

Glad you ended big!

But now I'm hungry. Thanks a lot.

Well @hanshotfirst...you´ll have to wait because I will be posting my delicious apple pie and you´ll gonna love it!

A very useful post.
Apple is a very useful fruit.
Especially for patients with colesterol and heart disease.
The fruit is very good consumed by them.
Because the content in this fruit can lower cholesterol levels and can make the heart healthy.
I always consume this fruit 2 pieces every day.
I consume it before I eat the main meal (rice).
And I also really like the apple juice.
Make our body healthy and fresh.
I like your posts @donkeypong...

sweet apple :)

Got time for a pint Tom??

If it's apple cider, I do!

Well i hope it's that and not balsamic ;)

Indeed Denmark's are the best if where talking about apple, i love that fresh apple too! BTW, thanks sir @donkeypong for supporting us as minnow's here at the philippines. We cannot give you alot because we are most 100+ steem power but still we give upvotes for you even its not that worth! Thanks for your kindness sir! God Bless!

Looks and sound great! Looking forward to trying these apples out. Thank you for sharing @donkeypong

I'm going to have to get my hands on the apple cider vinegar & at least one hard cider. I wonder how it is in an apple butter... If any make their way to Oregon, I'll have to find out because those look delicious.

Obsessed with apple 🍎 picking!!!!😍❤️❤️❤️ You forgot to mention honey crisp in your collection! The best of them all!!!! Xxxxxx

Yes, I didn't even mention the other good ones, only Gravs and the normal supermarket varieties. I agree Honeycrisp is a special apple. It needs to be grown in the north and fully ripened, not like the ones that are grown out west near me and picked too green; they do not have that special aromatic taste that a Honeycrisp should have. If you can experience that where you live, then good for you. I have only tasted a Honeycrisp that good one time and it was an amazing apple.

Awwww if I could id send you a batch!!! 🍎 yeah they are indeed very special apples! They are only in specific grocery stores where I live! But apple picking season is right around the corner and I will make sure to get my hand on them! At least there's a good reason to be in Montreal!!:P sending some love your way! Apple cider is dope too!!🍎😎

I should give my Mom an apple for her birhtday this August 30. As a sign of joy! I accept August is an joy of apple! Thanks for the great article sir @donkeypong

holy hell that's a lot of pics... i've never heard of gravenstein. looks nice. i think when i retire i'll sit around and drink some apple brandy, like a calvados... sounds good

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