Cooking apple

A cooking apple or culinary apple is an apple that is used primarily for cooking, as opposed to a dessert apple, which is eaten raw. Cooking apples are generally larger, and can be tarter than dessert varieties. Some varieties have a firm flesh that does not break down much when cooked. Culinary varieties with a high acid content produce froth when cooked, which is desirable for some recipes.[1] Britain grows a large range of apples specifically for cooking. Worldwide, dual-purpose varieties (for both cooking and eating raw) are more widely grown.

Bramley apples
Red Gravenstein apples
Yellow Gravenstein
Baked apple with vanilla sauce

Apples can be cooked down into sauce, apple butter, or fruit preserves. They can be baked in an oven and served with custard, and made into pies or apple crumble. In the UK roast pork is commonly served with cold apple sauce made from boiled and mashed apples.

A baked apple is baked in an oven until it has become soft. The core is usually removed and the resulting cavity stuffed with fruits, brown sugar, raisins, or cinnamon, and sometimes a liquor such as brandy. An apple dumpling adds a pastry crust.

John Claudius Loudon wrote in 1842:[2]

Properties of a good apple — Apples for table are characterised by a firm pulp, elevated, poignant flavour, regular form, and beautiful colouring; those for kitchen use by the property of falling as it is technically termed, or forming in general a pulpy mass of equal consistency when baked or boiled, and by a large size. Some sorts of apples have the property of falling when green, as the Keswick, Carlisle, Hawthornden, and other codlins; and some only after being ripe, as the russet tribes. Those with this property when green are particularly valuable for affording sauces to geese early in the season, and for succeeding the gooseberry in tarts.

History

Popular cooking apples in US, in the late 19th century. Tart: Duchess of Oldenburg, Fallawater, Gravenstein, Horse, Keswick Codlin, Red Astrachan, Rhode Island Greening, Tetofsky. Sweet: Golden Sweet, Maverack Sweet, Peach Pound Sweet, Tolman Sweet and Willis Sweet.[3] Popular cooking apples in the early 20th century´s England: Alfriston, Beauty of Kent, Bismark, Bramley, Cox Pomona, Dumelow, Ecklinville, Emneth Early, Golden Noble, Grenadier, Lord Grosvenor, Lord Derby, Newton Wonder, Stirling Castle, Warners King. [4]

Cooking apple cultivars

D = Dual purpose ( table + cooking). Cooking result[5] P = Puree K = Keeps Shape

See also

References

  1. The new Oxford book of food plants|Vaughan & Geissler
  2. Loudon, J.C. (1842), The Suburban Horticulturist; Or, an Attempt to Teach the Science and Practice of the Culture and Management of the Kitchen, Fruit, and Forcing Garden to Those who Have Had No Previous Knowledge Or Practice in These Departments of Gardening, London: William Smith, p. 529
  3. Downing, Fruits and Fruit-Trees of America, 1885
  4. Journal of RHS, 1906
  5. The Book of Apples, 1993
  6. Robert Hogg: The Fruit Manual.... 2nd ed. (London: 1862). Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  7. Fertig, Judith M. (2011). Prairie Home Cooking. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 69. ISBN 978-1558325821.
  8. Thomas, Harry Higgott (1902). The Book of the Apple. J. Lane. pp. 71.
  9. Mulvihill, Mary (2003). Ingenious Ireland. Simon and Schuster. p. 135. ISBN 0684020947.
  10. DK Publishing (contributor) (2012). Cooking Season by Season. Penguin. p. 335. ISBN 978-1465405180. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  11. Platt, Rutherford (2014). 1001 Questions Answered About Trees. Courier Dover Publications. p. 169. ISBN 978-0486167817.
  12. Weathers, John (1901). A Practical Guide to Garden Plants. Longmans, Green. pp. 1056–1059.
  13. Knox County Farm Bureau Bulletin. The Bureau. 1922. p. 6.
  14. Gordon, Don (1991). Growing Fruit in the Upper Midwest. U of Minnesota Press. p. 47. ISBN 1452901066.
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