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"Every Single Night" marked Fiona Apple's first single in six years since "Get Him Back" (2006). She began writing and recording the song in secret, unbeknownst to her label Epic. [1] She and producer Charley Drayton opted to use minimal musical arrangement in the song by performing on a celesta and a marimba.
It is the first widely grown apple variety developed in Washington. [6] The apple ripens at the same time as the Red Delicious and is expected by producers to replace a large part of Red Delicious stocks. The Cosmic Crisp apple was made available to consumers in 2019, [7] after twenty years of development. [8] [9]
Not every apple is a good "baking" apple—and I’m not just talking about all-American apple pie. I’m talking cobbler , cake , tarts , muffins , and all sorts of apple-infused baked goods .
The music video for "Every Single Night" premiered on the Sundance Channel on June 10 [21] and was directed by Joseph Cahill. [22] On the same day, the entire album streamed online on NPR . [ 23 ] On June 18, Apple made her first television appearance since 2006 on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon .
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Eating, cooking, pie Barcelona Pearmain [12] [51] [13] [28] England <1837 One of the best dessert apples. Cells roundish oblate, axile. The tree is a free grower, but does not attain the largest size. Eating, cooking Bardsey Island Apple: Bardsey Island, Wales 1998 A medium-sized eating apple with a unique lemon aroma. Sweet and juicy.
This single was followed by "Werewolf" and "Anything We Want". [6] [7] That year also saw Apple record "Dull Tool", her first original song for a film soundtrack, for the film This Is 40. [8] After an eight-year hiatus, Fetch the Bolt Cutters (2020) was released by Sony. Its lead single, "Shameika", was released soon after. [9]
As a result of the Honeycrisp apple's growing popularity, the government of Nova Scotia, Canada, spent over C$1.5 million funding a five-year Honeycrisp Orchard Renewal Program from 2005 to 2010 to subsidize apple producers to replace older trees (mainly McIntosh) with newer higher-return varieties of apples: the Honeycrisp, Gala, and Ambrosia.