Ben Davis (apple)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Ben Davis apple is an apple variety originating in the American South. During the 19th century it was a popular commercial apple due to the ruggedness and keeping qualities of the fruit, but as packing and transportation techniques improved the variety fell out of favor, replaced by varieties considered to have better flavor (Ben Davis was thought to be unpleasantly dry and mealy). It was known to fruit growers of the late 19th and earth 20th centuries as a "mortgage lifter" because it was a reliable producer and the fruit would not drop from the trees until very late in the season. By mid-twentieth century it was mostly used as a process apple rather than a table apple, and orchards were being pushed out for more popular varieties.

The variety is now very rare to nonexistent in the commercial trade, now being grown mostly as a historical curiosity. The Ben Davis was crossbred with the McIntosh to create the Cortland, which has been a very successful pie apple.

A superficially similar variety known as "Gano" or "Black Ben Davis" appeared in parts of the American South (notably Arkansas and Virginia) in the 1880s. Its exact relation to the original Ben Davis is unknown.