Photographer’s Note
There are more than 7,500 known cultivars of apples. Different cultivars are available for temperate and subtropical climates. Reputedly the world's biggest collection of apple cultivars is housed at the National Fruit Collection in England. Apples do not flower in tropical climates because they have a chilling requirement.
Commercially popular apple cultivars are soft but crisp. Other desired qualities in modern commercial apple breeding are a colourful skin, absence of russeting, ease of shipping, lengthy storage ability, high yields, disease resistance, typical "Red Delicious" apple shape, long stem (to allow pesticides to penetrate the top of the fruit), and popular flavour.
Old cultivars are often oddly shaped, russeted, and have a variety of textures and colours. Many of them have excellent flavour (often better than most modern cultivars), but may have other problems which make them commercially unviable, such as low yield, liability to disease, or poor tolerance for storage or transport. A few old cultivars are still produced on a large scale, but many have been kept alive by home gardeners and farmers that sell directly to local markets. Many unusual and locally important cultivars with their own unique taste and appearance are out there to discover; apple conservation campaigns have sprung up around the world to preserve such local cultivars from extinction. In the United Kingdom old cultivars such as Cox's Orange Pippin and Egremont Russett are still commercially important even though by modern standards they are low yielding and disease prone.
Although most cultivars are bred for eating fresh (dessert apples), some are cultivated specifically for cooking (cooking apples) or producing cider. Cider apples are typically too tart and astringent to eat fresh, but they give the beverage a rich flavour that dessert apples cannot.
Modern apples are, as a rule, sweeter than older cultivars. Most North Americans and Europeans favour sweet, subacid apples, but tart apples have a strong minority following. Extremely sweet apples with barely any acid flavour are popular in Asia and especially India.
Tastes in apples vary from one person to another and change continually over time. As an example, the U.S. state of Washington made its reputation for apple growing on Red Delicious. In recent years, many apple connoisseurs have come to regard the Red Delicious as inferior to cultivars such as Fuji and Gala due to its merely mild flavour and insufficiently firm texture.
From Wikipedia
ktanska, Loic_bzh, elihesamian, PixelTerror has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
ktanska
(16733) 2007-09-24 3:58
Hi Paul,
Those apples really look perfectly red and shine like glazed. Not that it would necessarily have anything to do with their taste but at least they look good. Well chosen shallow DOF where those apples show further away as nice red dots.
Kari
sandpiper
(1635) 2007-09-24 5:28
Amazing red apples
Great composition and exposure
Excellent rich colours
Chris
Loic_bzh
(7061) 2007-09-24 8:06
Bonjour Paul,
superbe couleur, ces pommes. Le 1er plan est parfaitement net et les pommiers pleins à crauser font un superbe arrière plan flou. Une réussite!
Bonne journée,
Loïc
elihesamian
(26091) 2007-09-24 11:20
Hello Paul,
nice to see you with this red eatable photo :)
a very nice pleasant red apples in a perspective that totaly made a pattern in the green,well worked and excellent sharpness and colors you reached,a great note you prepared here,useful one,Thanks.
Best Wishes
M
placombe
(7187) 2007-09-24 19:10
Salut Paul
Splendide composition et effet de profondeur. Bien nette et rouge, surement bonne a croquer. Similitude avec photo 735491.
Pierre
PixelTerror
(87137) 2007-09-25 3:28
Salut Cousin,
An apple a day keeps the doctor away !
Je vois que tu sors quand meme un peu pour t'aerer et depoussierer le 20D en fin de semaine... Joli cadrage et belle profondeur de champ resseree sur ton sujet, on dirait qu'elles ont ete cirees pour paraitre encore plus appetissantes ces pommes, miam miam ;-)
Bonne journee,
Jean-Yves
bazal
(7898) 2007-10-06 10:02
Salut, Paul.
Voila une contribution originale, bie faite, et vraiment agréable à regarder. La profondeur est bien vue et on a envie de croquer dans ces pommes appétissantes. J'aime bien le format et la disposition des sujets au sein du cadre.
Merci du partage!
Clairedelune
(4885) 2007-10-08 15:07
Allo Paul,
Dis-donc, tu es en forme! Tu es "aux pommes" [excellent, parfait]! Tu te remets à publier! :)) Et moi qui suis en mode "dormance" sur TE depuis quelques temps... Je suis tombée dans les pommes! Je suis dans les pommes cuites [état de fatigue, d'usure] par rapport à TE. Mais, je jette un coup d'oeil sur les photos publiées par mes photographes favoris de temps en temps, histoire de voir leurs bons coups!
Ah le temps des pommes! L'un de temps préféré parmi nos saisons québécoises. C'est une photo presque sonore que tu nous présentes là. Je ne peux faire autrement que d'entendre le bruit inimitable de la pomme que l'on croque à belles dents. Mmmmmmmm!
C'est rouge à souhait, ça semble pétant de santé! Je te soupçonne d'avoir "shiné" ta pomme avant de la photographier! :)) Ben non, je ne me paye pas ta pomme [se moquer], il ne faudrait pas que tu en aies gros sur la pomme [être plein de dépit] à cause de moi! C'est simplement un petit délire de fin de congé!
Bienvenue sur TE!
Claire
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Paul Leduc (PLD_images)
(7143) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2007-09-23
- Categories: Food, Nature
- Camera: Canon EOS 20D
- Exposure: f/14.0, 1/15 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2007-09-24 3:30








