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  2. Cripps Pink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cripps_Pink

    Cripps Pink is a cultivar of apple.It is one of several cultivars sold under the trade mark name Pink Lady. [1] It was originally bred by John Cripps at the Western Australia Department of Agriculture (Stoneville Research Station), by crossing the Australian apple Lady Williams with a Golden Delicious; the result is a combination of the firm, long-storing property of Lady Williams with the ...

  3. Pink Pearl (apple) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_Pearl_(apple)

    Pink Pearl (apple) Malus domestica (× Malus niedzwetskyana?) The ' Pink Pearl' apple is a pink-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.

  4. List of apple cultivars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_apple_cultivars

    A large, conic apple. Light yellow-green skin strewn with white dots, occasionally with a faint reddish orange blush. Light pink to deep red flesh is crisp, sweet and mildly tart. Eating Akane (a.k.a. Tohoko) [23] [4] Fujisaki, Aomori, Japan Cross made 1939, selected 1953, introduced 1970. A red apple. Parentage Jonathan × Worcester Pearmain ...

  5. Lady apple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_apple

    The Lady is a historic apple cultivar originating in Brittany, France in at least 1628. The cultivar has gained a variety of known names in English, and is commonly referred to as Api or the Lady Apple[a]. As a seedling, the apple has the names Helen and Highland Beauty. The cultivar is known for its miniature "tiny" size, generally less than 2 ...

  6. Zestar apple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zestar_Apple

    Origin. University of Minnesota, 1999. The Zestar! apple (trade mark) or Minnewashta (cultivar) is an apple cultivar released in 1999. It was developed by the horticulturalists at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum 's Horticultural Resource Center, at the University of Minnesota. [1]

  7. Cox's Orange Pippin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cox's_Orange_Pippin

    Cox's Orange Pippin, in Britain often referred to simply as Cox, is an apple cultivar first grown in 1825 [citation needed] or 1830 [1] at Colnbrook in Buckinghamshire, England, by the retired brewer and horticulturist Richard Cox.