Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Pink Pearl (apple)

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Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Origin
  
USA

Rank
  
Pink Pearl (apple) Pink Pearl Apples Are Like Fruit From Another World Photos

Species
  
Malus domestica (x Malus niedzwetskyana?)

Hybrid parentage
  
'Seedling of 'Surprise'

Scientific name
  
Malus domestica 'Pink Pearl'

Similar
  
apple, Esopus Spitzenburg, Newtown Pippin, Ashmead's Kernel, Knobbed Russet

Pink Pearl Apple | NatureHills.com


The 'Pink Pearl' apple is a purple-fleshed apple Cultivar developed in 1944 by Albert Etter, a northern California breeder. It is a seedling of 'Surprise', another pink-fleshed apple that is believed to be a descendant of Malus niedzwetskyana.

Contents

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History

Pink Pearl (apple) Pink Pearl Apples Information Recipes and Facts

In 1940, after many years of work on breeding red-fleshed apples, Etter set up a partnership with George Roeding Jr.'s California Nursery Company, one of the goals of which was to introduce some of Etter's Surprise-derived cultivars to the public. Eventually Roeding settled on test seedling #39, which apparently impressed him with its looks (translucent skin, medium size, and tapered shape), its tart-sweet flavor, and its late-summer ripening date. He secured U.S. plant patent 723 for it on Etter's behalf, christened it 'Pink Pearl', and featured it in his 1945 catalog.

Pink Pearl (apple) Pink pearl apple Darya Pino daryapinocom

'Pink Pearl' apples are generally medium-sized, with a conical shape. They are named for the color of their flesh, which is a bright rosy pink sometimes streaked or mottled with white. They have a translucent, yellow-green skin, and a crisp, juicy flesh with tart to sweet-tart taste. 'Pink Pearl' apples ripen in late August to mid-September. It is susceptible to scab, and the fruit tend not to keep well on the tree once ripe.

Pink Pearl (apple) wwwthedailymorselcomwpcontentuploads201109

Among Pink Pearl's descendants is 'Pink Princess', a carmine-striped apple with pink to dark pink flesh. It was originally named 'Pink Lady' by its developer, Fred Jansen of Ontario, Canada, but Jansen did not patent the name and it was subsequently taken over for a quite different Australian apple, forcing Jansen to change the name of his own apple.

Pink Pearl (apple) Recipe Pink Pearl Apple Carpaccio

References

Pink Pearl (apple) Wikipedia