Jonagold
'Jonagold' | |
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Details | |
Hybrid parentage | 'Golden Delicious' × 'Jonathan' |
Cultivar | 'Jonagold' |
Origin | New York, USA, 1953 |
Jonagold is a cultivar of apple which was developed in 1953 in New York, a cross between the crisp Golden Delicious and the blush-crimson Jonathan. They form a large sweet fruit with a thin skin. Because of their large size they are now favoured by commercial growers in many parts of the world. Jonagold is triploid, with sterile pollen, and as such, requires a second type of apple for pollen and is incapable of pollenizing other cultivars. The Jonagored Apple, a sport mutation of Jonagold, was once covered under United States Patent PP05937,[1] now expired.
Jonagold has a green-yellow basic color with crimson, brindled covering colour.
The apple has a fluffily crisp fruit. It is juicy and aromatic and has a sweet-sour taste.
The skin can also turn out fully red or green other than Golden-Red.
It is most popular in Belgium.[2]
Disease susceptibility
- Scab: high[3]
- Powdery mildew: low
- Cedar apple rust: high
- Fire blight: high
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jonagold. |
- ↑ http://www.patentgenius.com/patent/PP5937.html
- ↑ Browning, Frank. (1998). Apples. New York: North Point Press. p. 105.
- ↑ Dr. Stephen Miller of the USDA Fruit Research Lab in Kearneysville, West Virginia.