Akane (apple)
Malus domestica 'Akane' | |
---|---|
Hybrid parentage | 'Jonathan' x 'Worcester Pearmain' |
Cultivar | 'Akane' |
Origin | Japan, 1937[1] |
'Akane' also known as 'Tokyo Rose', 'Tohoku No.3' and 'Prime Red'[2] is a Japanese cultivar of domesticated apple, that according to Orange Pippin is one of the best early season apples.[3]
'Akane' was developed by the Morika Experimental Station of Japan sometime between 1900 and 1949,[4] by crossing a Jonathan apple with a Worcester Pearmain,[3][5] and was introduced to the United States in 1937, where it is very popular.[3][6]
Description
'Akane' is of moderately good disease resistance, best at warm climates but tolerates cold also. It is flowering mid-late season, and harvesting early-mid season. Is self-sterile and needs to be cross pollinated.
It produces heavy crop of variable sized fruits,[3] usually more to the smaller side,[5] but good sized apples can be obtained by thinning.[7]
'Akane' carries the fruit shape of the English 'Worcester Pearmain', and the unusually good balanced flavor of the 'Jonathan'.[8] Shape is flattened to hearth shaped.[5] Fruits are of very good flavor, a blend of sweet and sharp, preferable for eating, keeps shape in cooking. Flesh color is white,[3] with a yellow tinge. The flesh does not oxidize quickly. The apple is crisp, but not too dense; it is easy to eat.[5] Skin color is red. And keeps fresh about one week.[3]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Akane (pomme). |
- ↑ See text and references.
- ↑ National Fruit Collection, retrieved 18 December 2015
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Akane at Orange Pippin.
- ↑ Fruit Gardener says 1930, Trees of Antiquity says 1937.
- 1 2 3 4 Fruit Gardener
- ↑ Fruit Gardener says, not as popular as Orange Pippin implies.
- ↑ Trees of Antiquity
- ↑ Akane tree by Orange Pippin Trees.