American Apple Varieties and Characteristics - Alphabetical Listing (2024)

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (1)

Are you trying to choose the right variety of apple for your needs? There are many to choose from. There are heirloom varieties that have been around for hundreds of years and apple growers are constantly creating new varieties to meet consumer tastes and 2024 is no exception.Scroll down this page for a table of dozens of apple varieties including photos and their characteristics and best uses.This page has tips about harvesting andstoring apples. And if you bring home some apples and want to makeapplesauce,apple butter,apple juice, apple pie,apple cobbler,apple crisp, evenapple cider, just click the links for each to follow directions and recipes or see this page see thispage for a master list of simple, reliable, illustrated canning, freezing or preservingdirections. There are plenty of other related resources, such as thislist of local regional and applefestivals - click on the resources dropdown above.

If you have questions or feedback, please let me know!

What's in season in June 2024, andother timely information:

Notes for June 2024: Spring is here! Strawberry seasonis here. It started in February in Florida, Texas, southern California and a few other areas of theDeep South; then March along the Gulf coast, April in the Deep South and westcoast, May through much of the country, and June in northern areas. Blueberries arenext, about a month later. Of course, cool weather crops, like Rhubarb,asparagus and greens should be available almost everywhere. Check your area'scrop calendar (see this page) and call your local farms forseasonal updates.

Are carpenter bees boring holes into your house, shed or barn? There is a simplenon-toxic solution!

You may also be interested in finding a local:

We also havehome canning, preserving, drying and freezing directions. You can accessrecipes and other resources from the drop down menus at the top of the page or the site search.If you have any questions or suggestions,feel free to write me! It is easy tomake your own ice cream,even gelato, or low fat or low sugar ice cream - see this page.

NEW! Start your own tomato, pepper, squash and other vegetable plants from seed - It's easy andcosts about 50 cents per plant.
Also see our Master list of tomato varieties,with descriptions, details and links to ordering the seedss.

Also note,there are many copycat website listing U-pick farms now. They have allcopied their information from here and usually do not ever update. Since2002, I've been updating the information every day but Christmas; so if you seeanything wrong or outdated, pleasewrite me!

Master List of American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing!

2024 looks to have apples ripening on their normal schedule. There have been few late frosts in the main apple growing regions, rain and temperatures have been good, sothe year is shaping up well for a good apple crop. It's too early for prices, but I expect mostareas to see $14 to $30 a bushel, depending on variety! Scrolldown the page to see the chart, orclick here for a PDF print version.And for an explanation ofwhy apple slices turnbrown and how to stop it, see this page! To seehow to properly store apples for the winter, see this page!

Varieties which are exceptional for a trait are noted in the chart below(Best, very good, etc.). Varieties which are at least good and well-suitedhave an "X" in a column. A blank box simply means that they areaverage for the quality. Ultimately, it is personal preference and culturaltraditions. that often determines which varieties of apples are used forwhich purpose. That said, sweeter and softer apples make the best applesauce(like Gala), harder, drier apples are often used for baking and storing(like Rome and Arkansas Black), and tarter, more crisp and juicier applesare often eaten fresh (like Honeycrisp).

If you would like toprint a clean PDF version of thistable, click here.

Alphabetical List of American Apple Varieties andCharacteristics

Click here for a PDF printable version of this table

If you are lookingfor the summary table, click here.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (2)Ambrosia

  • Sweet, crisp, aromatic flavor reminiscent of pear and low acidity.
  • Mostly red coloration, with yellow patches.
  • Flesh is cream-colored, firm meat
  • Medium to large in size
  • Developed in British Columbia in the early 1990s.
  • Believed to be a cross of a Jonagold and Golden Delicious.
  • Ripens mid to late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (3)AshmeadKernal

  • A small heirloom apple, covered with a thick russet,
  • often found inVirginia, originated in England around 1700 and was brought to the UnitedStates much later.
  • Very sweet and acidic
  • Ripens from late September into October

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (4)ArkansasBlack

  • A medium to large apple
  • dark purple to almost black
  • Very, very hard texture and an excellent keeper.
  • Almost too hard-textured at harvest. Best after some storage time.
  • Great for baking; and terrible for applesauce
  • A Winesap type.
  • Late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (5)AutumnCrisp

  • Sweet tart flavor
  • flesh resists browning
  • high in Vitamin C
  • late season
  • Good for applesauce

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (6)Baldwin

  • good quality large red apple
  • An old variety, subject to cold injury in the winter
  • late mid-season
  • medium sweet

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (7)Bevan'sFavorite

  • Very early season
  • Mostly used for cooking
  • Old variety, from 1859
  • Firm white flesh

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (8)Blushing Golden

  • Medium-sized waxy coated modern yellow apple with a pink blush
  • Jonathan/Golden Delicious cross.
  • Firm flesh with flavor like Golden Delicious, but tarter.
  • Keeps well
  • Late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (9)Braeburn

  • Rich red color with white flesh
  • Sweet
  • Best for eating
  • Late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (10)Cameo

  • A large, round sub-acid apple
  • Red blush stripe over yellow.
  • Late ripening
  • Sweet/tart,
  • good all-purpose use apple

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (11)Cortland

  • A Ben Davis/McIntosh cross
  • large flat, dull red apple with a purple hue and soft, white flesh
  • Less aromatic than McIntosh
  • Good keeper.
  • Very good in salads.
  • Mid season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (12)Cox'sOrange Pippin

  • Popular in English markets.
  • Medium sized, golden yellow skin, with brownish orange
  • often russeted.
  • Flesh tender, crisp, semi-tart
  • early

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (13)Crimson Crisp

  • Tart and Juicy
  • Fresh Eating
  • Disease Resistant
  • mid to Late Season

Cripps - see Pink Lady below

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (14)Crispin/Mutsu *

  • Light green to yellowish white
  • Sweet, rich, full flavor, very juicy and super crisp.
  • Firm, dense texture
  • Best for: eating fresh
  • Mid - late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (15)Empire*

  • A McIntosh type apple
  • Long shelf life
  • Aromatic and crisp with creamy white juicy flesh.
  • Flesh does not brown quickly when sliced
  • Tasty blend of sweet and tart
  • Best for: eating fresh and baking
  • Early - Mid season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (16)Enterprise

  • Large, red apple
  • Disease resistant
  • Ripens 3 weeks after red delicious
  • Stores well, flavor improves in storage

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (17)Fuji

  • Very sweet, aromatic flavor
  • Yellow-green with red highlights
  • Originated in Japan.
  • Best for: eating, salads, best applesauce apple
  • Late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (18)Gala

  • Developed in New Zealand.
  • Sweet, aromatic flavor
  • Best for: eating, salad, best applesauce apple
  • medium to smaller in size with a distinctive red and yellow stripedheart-shaped appearance.
  • Early to mid season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (19)GingerGold

  • Very slow to turn brown, so it's a great choice for apple slices.
  • Early yellow apple that's sweet and mildly tart.
  • Best for: eating, sauce, salad
  • Early ripening

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (20)GoldenDelicious

  • Firm white flesh which retains its shape
  • Rich mild flavor when baked or cooked.
  • Tender skin
  • Stays white longer when cut;
  • Best for: salads, blend in applesauce
  • Early season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (21)GrimesGolden

  • Firm white flesh which retains its shape
  • Rich mild flavor when baked or cooked.
  • Tender skin, with a "grimy mottled surface";
  • there IS alsoMr. Thomas Grimes, who developed the variety, seeWikipedia)
  • Stays white longer when cut;
  • Best for: salads, blend in applesauce
  • Early season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (22)Granny Smith

  • Very tart
  • Bright green appearance, crisp bite and tart apple flavor.
  • Best for: people who like tart apples rather than sweet ones :-)
  • Mid to late season
  • Not good for applesauce unless you add sugar (or like a very tartapplesauce)

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (23)Gravenstein

  • Greenish-yellow with a lumpy appearance
  • Tart flavor
  • A good, all-purpose apple,
  • Good for applesauce and pies.
  • originated in the 17th century or earlier.
  • Picked in July and August and
  • Does not store well,

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (24)Hokuto

  • A Mutsu/Fuji cross
  • crisp texture of Fuji,
  • large size and shape of Mutsu,
  • sweet flavors
  • late mid-season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (25)Honeycrisp

  • Introduced in Minnesota
  • Very sweet and aromatic
  • Great for juice, as it is a very juicy apple
  • Best for: Eating, pies, baking
  • Mid season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (26)Idared

  • Crisp and juicy with a sweet tart flavor.
  • Great for pies and fresh eating.
  • Late season
  • developed at the University of Idaho Agricultural Experiment Station in 1942
  • it is a cross between Jonathan and Wagener
  • white flesh with a firm body,
  • Excellent for apple sauces, pies, and cakes.
  • harvested at the end of September to the middle of October.
  • EXCELLENT keeper, storing apple remains good until the end of January,

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (27)Jazz

  • Cross between Royal Gala and Braeburn, developed in Australia
  • Very sweet, more flavor than Gala
  • Vewry good fresh eating and applesauce, apple butter
  • A "Club" variety, meaning licensed with limited commercial growing, first appeared on the shelves in 2004.
  • late ripening

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (28)Jonathan

  • One of the first red apples of the fall
  • Sweet-tart taste with firm texture
  • Light red stripes over yellow or deep redd
  • Best for: eating and cooking
  • Good all-purpose apple
  • Early season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (29)Jonalicious

  • Flavor like Jonathan but a little less tart and darker red skin.
  • Larger, crisper, and juicier than Jonathan,
  • a better keeper than Jonathan
  • Slightly sour -acid balance.
  • early midseason

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (30)Jonamac

  • A medium-sized Jonathan/McIntosh cross
  • Sour flavored, aromatic
  • Tender fleshed like McIntosh.
  • Early season, a few days prior to McIntosh.
  • Poor keeper.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (31)Jonagold*

  • A cross of Jonathan and Golden Delicious.
  • Best for: eating, sauce, pies, salad, baking
  • Mid season
  • A sweet/tart flavor
  • Good all-purpose apple

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (32)Jubilee

  • Best for: eating, sauce, pies, salad
  • Mid season
  • developed in British Columbia
  • It is a cross between McIntosh and Grimes Golden.
  • flavor is sweet, but is only crispy when just picked.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (33)Keepsake

  • Best for: baking, sauces or eating raw.
  • Small apple with a red outer skin and a cream colored fine textured flesh.
  • very sweet flavor with a high sugar content
  • best of all winter storage apples, can keep until July in a cold root cellar
  • Flesh is hard, crisp, juicy and sweet.
  • Excellent aromatic flavor improves with a month of cold storage.
  • Try this apple if you need to store apples for a very long time

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (34)Liberty

  • A highly disease-resistant introduction from Geneva New York.
  • Liberty has superior dessert quality, similar to one of its parents,Macoun
  • Best for: eating, sauce, salad
  • flavor improves in storage
  • late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (35)Lodi

  • Very early apple
  • yellow
  • also called Yellow Transparent
  • hybrid of the 'Yellow Transparent' and 'Montgomery Sweet'
  • originally from the New York Agricultural Experiment Station in 1924
  • commonly grown in the Southern US

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (36)Macoun

  • Named after a famous fruit grower in Canada
  • Best for: eating, sauce, salad
  • Very good, sweet, all-around apple
  • cross between the 'McIntosh' and 'Jersey Black' cultivars.
  • developed at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva,
  • first introduced in 1923,

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (37)McIntosh*

  • Popular in America since 1811
  • Best for: eating, sauce, salad, good as part of a blend for applesauce
  • Sweet, tart, mild flavor
  • It is, the national apple of Canada.
  • red and green skin, tender white flesh
  • Ripens in late September.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (38)Melrose

  • The official apple of Ohio
  • Similar to a Jonathan but sweeter.
  • Good for pies: the slices hold together in pies
  • Keeps well

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (39)Mutsu

  • Lousy name, but a great apple
  • It is sweet and crisp
  • It is similar to Golden Delicious. but keeps a little bit better
  • Best for eating fresh and it makes a great applesauce

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (40)NorthernSpy

  • Large, high quality fruit
  • green base color, flushed with red stripes
  • Good for storage
  • Mid-late season
  • originated in East Bloomfield, New York in about 1800
  • juicy, crisp and mildly sweet white flesh with a rich, aromatic subacid flavor, tarter than most popular varieties
  • noted for high vitamin C content.
  • flesh is harder/crunchier than most, with a thin skin.
  • commonly used for desserts and pies, as well as juice and cider.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (41)PaulaRed

  • A tart apple
  • bright red with some yellow and tan spots; the skin often has a dusty sheen with light to creamy flesh.
  • Good for eating, in pies and sauces.
  • Paulared arose as a seedling next to an orchard of 'McIntosh' trees
  • ripens late in the summer
  • becomes extremely soft when cooked, which suits them to some dishes (applesauce) and not others (pies).

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (42)PinkLady/ aka Cripps

  • Rich red/pink color with white flesh
  • Very sweet and crisp
  • Best for eating and makes a naturally sweet, smooth applesauceand it is good in salads and pies.
  • A cross between a Golden Delicious and a Lady William.
  • Late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (43)Pristine

  • Very early yellow apple
  • Very sweet and juicy,
  • bruises easily, not a good keeper
  • the tree is known for its resistance to apple scab, but is susceptible to cedar-apple rust

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (44)RedDelicious

  • WAS the most popular apple variety in the world! for decades (nowbeing replaced by Fuji and Gala)
  • Best for: eating, salad, very good as a base apple for applesauce
  • Thin bright red skin with a mildly flavored fine-grained white flesh.
  • Bruises easily and does not keep well.
  • Early to mid season
  • There are many, many varieties of red delicious, so there is a range ofproperties. Not all red delicious are the same!

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (45)Redfree

  • early season, ripening around mid-August.
  • Firm and crunchy flesh
  • Can be stored up to 2 months without loss of quality orfirmness.
  • early-season apple
  • The flesh is light cream. medium grained


American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (46)Rome

  • Best for: baking and cooking - but not applesauce - not sweet enough,and it has a fairly bland flavor
  • Very smooth red apple with a slightly juicy flesh.
  • Very hard flesh
  • Mid to late season

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (47)RubyFrost

  • tart, all around apple
  • can be compared to Empire and Granny Smith.
  • stores well,
  • Late season, ripens later in the fall

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (48)Sansa

  • Sweet
  • Early season
  • Good for Fresh Eating
  • Not a great keeper

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (49)Shizuka

  • Large, green-yellow apple with a red-orange blush
  • Mid season, mid-October
  • great for salads, eating fresh or juicing
  • Fruit is juicy, firm with and it's slow to brown when cut
  • A sister to Mutsu/Golden Delicious and Indo apples developed in Japan, with milder flavor.
  • Sweeter with less acid than Mutsu, but an excellent flavor and lack of acidity
  • Stores well.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (50)Snowsweet

  • from the University of Minnesota, released in 2006
  • sweet taste, with a slight tart balance and rich overtones.
  • white flesh is very slow to oxidize and turn brown after cutting.
  • fresh eating, snack trays, salads, sauces
  • Late, approximately 2 weeks after Honeycrisp

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (51)Snapdragon

  • Newer variety, derived from Honeycrisp so it is very crispand sweet
  • Spicy-sweet flavor
  • Long shelf life.
  • crisp apple
  • juicy, sweet flavor

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (52)Spartan

  • A cross between the McIntosh and Pippin apples.
  • Good all-purpose apple.
  • medium size and has a bright red blush, but can have background patchesof greens and yellows.
  • introduced in 1936 from the Federal Agriculture Research Station in Summerland, British Columbia, now known as the Pacific Agri-Food Research Centre
  • a small sweet apple, like a McIntosh"
  • bright crimson skin and very bright white flesh

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (53)Stayman or Stayman-Winesap

  • Juicy, cream-colored to yellowish flesh with a tart wine-like flavor.
  • often also called winesap
  • crisp crunch flesh
  • Good storing apple, bruise resistant, dull redcoat.
  • Best for: Cooking, pies and cider

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (54)Strawberry, aka Chenango Strawberry

  • A crunchy, juicy apple
  • a red striped exterior with slight yellow blush
  • sweet-tart flavor.
  • Antique variety, originates from Chenango, New York, circa 1854.

Summer Banana

  • Mid-August
  • A sweet apple for eating or making fried apple pies.
  • Old variety from South Carolina in the 1800s
  • When fully ripe it has the faint smell of banana.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (55)Suncrisp

  • A hard tart, long keeping apple.
  • Red over orange color; Golden Delicious-type
  • Ripens late in the season
  • Best for Baking, storing
  • Formerly known as NJ55, SunCrisp was developed at Rutgers University
  • Cross of Golden Delicious, Cortland, and Cox's Orange Pippin apples.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (56)Sundance

  • Sweet, tart yellow apple with reddish highlights
  • very firm, very crisp and breaking flesh.
  • Late season
  • Good for eating fresh, applesauce
  • cross between Golden Delicious and 1050 NJ 1,
  • released for sale in 2004

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (57)SweeTango

  • Similar to Honeycrisp
  • Ripens mid August - September
  • Developed at University of Minnesota
  • Tightly licensed

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (58)William's Pride

  • A cross of Jonathan x Melba x Mollie's Delicious, Rome found in 1975 in West Lafayette, Indiana, by the Indiana, New Jersey, and Illinois(PRI) joint apple-breeding program, and released commercially in 1988
  • early-maturing, early July, the very earliest known commercial red apple in the Midwestern United States. It ripens 1 week after 'Lodi'and 7.5 to 8 weeks before 'Delicious'.
  • very attractive entirely dark red/purple apple, medium to large in size, slightly conical, .
  • Slightly tart, with complex sweet and rich flavor
  • attractive, dark red apple

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (59)Winesap

  • Rich red color with white flesh
  • Crisp texture and juicy
  • Sweet, tangy flavor
  • Best for cooking
  • Winesap is an old apple cultivar of unknown origin, dating at least to American colonial times.
  • used for eating fresh, cooking, and apple cider.

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (60)Yates

  • Mid to late season
  • Rich red color with white flesh
  • Sweet
  • Best for eating
  • Late season
  • Small

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (61)York

  • Crisp and flavorful
  • "lop-sided" shape
  • Deep red with green streaks
  • Best for eating. holds texture during cooking and freezing

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (62)Zestar

  • Sweet-Tart
    Best for Fresh Eating and Cooking
  • Early-Mid season

Tart or Sweet?

Check the chart below for a comparison

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (63)

Images from the U.S. Apple Association (mostly)!

English Apple Varieties

These links take you to photos on GardenAction.co.uk

  • Bramley - The English gush over this apple with a fever(fevour?:) that borders on mania. It's basically a granny smith type, ahigher acid content and lower sugar apple, with a stronger, more tangytaste. Bramley's are considered to be an ideal cooking apple.
  • Charles Ross
  • Crispin
  • Early Victoria
  • Early Worcester
  • Ellisons Orange
  • Epicure
  • Gibsons Scarlet
  • Golden Spire
  • Greensleaves
  • Howgate Wonder
  • Ingrid Marie
  • James Grieve
  • Jonagored
  • Jupiter
  • Katy
  • Orleans Reinette
  • Peasgood Nonsuch
  • Red Gravenstein
  • Red Victoria
  • Rev W. Wilks
  • Ribston Pippin
  • Rosemary Russett
  • Spartan
  • Sturmer Pippin
  • Sunset
  • Superb
  • Tydermans Late Orange
  • Warners King
  • Winston

More about apple varieties can be found:

University of Illinois Apple page

More Apple Varieties

Apple photos and brief descriptions

Credits:

photos:
Jonamac, Macoun, PaulaRed: Courtesy of New York Apple Association, © New YorkApple Association

And if youare looking for shipping containers for apples and other fruit, see thispage.

These are my favorite essential canning tools, books and supplies. I've been using many of these for over 50 years of canning! The ones below on this pageare just the sampling of. my preferred tools. but you can find much more detailed and extensive selections on the pages that are linked below.

  • Strainers, pit removers, seed-skin-stem removers, jelly strainers, etc.All types, makes and prices (from $19 to $350)
  • Selecting aKitchenAid mixer and attachments for home canning
  • Vacuum Foodsealers for freezing, dried foods, and refrigerated foods - the FoodSaver line
  • Cherry pitters reviews, prices and ordering
  • Steam Juicers
  • Food dehydrators - easy and fast to dry your own fruits, veggies, sun-dried tomatoes, etc.

The All New Ball Book Of Canning And Preserving: Over 350 of the Best Canned, Jammed, Pickled, and Preserved Recipes Paperback

This is THE book on canning! My grandmother used this book when Iwas a child.; It tells you in simple instructions how to can almostanything; complete with recipes for jam, jellies, pickles, sauces, canningvegetables, meats, etc.

If it can be canned, this book likely tellsyou how! Click on the link below for more information and / or to buy (noobligation to buy)The New Ball Blue Book of Canning and Preserving

Canning and Preserving for Dummies by Karen Ward

This is another popular canning book.Clickhere for more information, reviews, prices for Canning and Preserving For Dummies

Of course, you do not need to buy ANY canning book as I have about 500 canning, freezing, dehydrating and more recipes all online for free, just seeEasy Home Canning Directions.

Home Canning Kits

I have several canners, and my favorite is the stainless steel one at right. It is easy to clean and seems like it will last forever. Mine is 10 yearsold and looks like new.

The black ones are the same type of standard canner that my grandmother used to make everything from applesauce to jams and jellies to tomato and spaghetti sauce.

This complete kit includes everything you need and lasts for years: the canner, jar rack, Jar grabber tongs, lid lifting wand, a plastic funnel, labels, bubble freer, It's much cheaper than buying the items separately.It's only missing the bible of canning, the Ball Blue Book.

You will never need anything else except jars & lids (and the jars are reusable)!

The complete list of canners is on these pages:

  • Water bath canners- Good for acidic foods, like applesauce, pickles, salsa, jams, jellies, most fruits
  • Pressure canners- needed for low and non-acidic foods, like canned vegetables (corn, green beans, etc), and meats
  • Canners for glass top stovesif you have a glass or ceramic stove
  • Canners for induction stovetops

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (64)

Pressure Canners

If you plan on canning non-acidic foods and low acid foods that are not pickled - this means: meats, seafood, soups, green beans corn, most vegetables, etc., then you ABSOLUTELY must use a Pressure Canner.

Of course, you can use a pressure canner as a water bath canner as well - just don't seal it up, so it does not pressurize. This means a Pressure Canner is a 2-in-1 device. With it, you can can almost ANYTHING.

There are also other supplies, accessories, tools and more canners, of different styles, makes and prices, click here!

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (65)

Basic Canning Accessories

From left to right:

  1. Jar lifting tongsto pick up hot jars
  2. Lid lifter - to remove lids from the potof boiling water (sterilizing )
  3. Lids- disposable - you may onlyuse them once
  4. Ring- holds the lids on the jar until after the jars cool - then you remove them, save them and reuse them
  5. Canning Jar funnel - to fill the jars

Strainers

These are very useful for making sauces like applesauce, tomato sauce, spaghetti sauce, jellies, etc. Below are my favorites. The complete list is on thesepages:

  • Strainers, pit removers, seed-skin-stem removers, jelly strainers, etc.All types, makes and prices (from $19 to $350)
  • Selecting aKitchenAid mixer and attachments for home canning

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics- Alphabetical Listing (66)

Inexpensive Old School Strainers: hand cranked Foley Food Mills

  • The hand-cranked Foley food mill (seethis page or clock the ad box) has been used for well over100 years in homes all over America (and variants around the world). It is effective and inexpensive, and ideal for small batches. However, if youneed to make many quarts, you will sure end up with tunnel carpel syndrome or some other repetitive strain injury.

Norpro 1951 Manual Food Strainer and other brand stariners, with optional motors; (almost identical to Victorio V250, Villaware and Roma models, all discontinued)

This is The next step up from the Foley food mill. First, it's far more ergonomic, and its handle is easier to use. Next, it works in continuous moderather than batch mode. So you can do much larger volumes easily. Finally, It has an optional motor, so you can. remove the manual labor. It alsooffers many different size strainers to use for different types of berries, vegetables and fruit.

See the seller's website for more information, features, pricing and user reviews!

  • A Johnny, Weston or Oxo strainer (about $60 - $100, see further down the page)or
  • This trainer is. simply a more upscale and improved version of the one above.
  • See this page for more information, reviews, descriptions of other strainers and supplies or to order!

KitchenAid - Best Large Volume Strainers

If you're going to do large volumes of fruit or vegetables , or do it year after year, then. you really should think about getting a higher end kitchen.utility device. Kitchen aids are the cream of the crop. Once you buy one of these, you keep at the rest of your life and it gets handed down to the nextgeneration. . My sister is using one she inherited from my mother 25 years ago, who got it in the 1940s as a wedding gift. So, although the initial cost ishigh, they literally last for many lifetime. So the cost on an annual basis is pretty trivial, especially when you consider the cost of therapy andtreatment for. the repetitive strain injuries you will get from manual cranking day after day. Add to that of course the cost of therapy for the emotionalinjuries you'll get from going insane, standing there hand cranking something for hours.

KitchenAid's with a sieve/grinder (with the attachments, costs about $400,but it lasts a lifetime and is fast and easy to use - I can make 100 quartjars of applesauce per day with one of these).

FREE Illustrated Canning, Freezing, Jam Instructions and Recipes

Don't spend money on books. that you don't need to. Almost everything you can find in some book sold online or in a store is on my website here for free. Start with theEasy Home Canning Directions below. That is a master list of canning directions which are all based upon the Ball Bblue book, the National Center for Home Food Preservation and other reputable lab tested recipes. Almost every recipe I present in addition to being lab tested com. is in a step by step format with photos for each step and complete. explanations. that tell you how to do it, where to get the supplies and pretty much everything you need to know. In addition, there almost always in a PDF format so you can print them out and use them while you cook.

[ Easy Home Canning Directions]

[FAQs - Answers to common questions and problems]

[Recommended books about home canning, jam making, drying and preserving!]

[Free canning publications to download and print]

American Apple Varieties and Characteristics - Alphabetical Listing (2024)
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