Adams Pearmain Explained

Malus domestica 'Adams Pearmain'
Species:Malus domestica
Cultivar:'Adams Pearmain'[1]
Origin: Herefordshire, UK, 1826[2]

Adams Pearmain, also called Adam's Parmane, is a cultivar of apple. It was introduced to the Horticultural Society of London in 1826 by Robert Adams, under the name Norfolk Pippin.[2] The fruit is large, varying from two and a half inches to three inches high, and about the same in breadth at the widest part. It is pearmain-shaped, very even, and regularly formed. The skin is pale yellow tinged with green, and covered with delicate russet on the shaded side; but deep yellow tinged with red, and delicately streaked with livelier red on the side facing the sun. The flesh is reddish, crisp, juicy, rich, and sugary, with an agreeable and pleasantly perfumed flavor.[3] This Cultivar is a sibling of Reinette de Hollande, a hybrid between Reinette Franche’ and ‘Reinettedes Carmes. (5)

See also

References

5: Muranty, H., Denancé, C., Feugey, L., Crépin, J. L., Barbier, Y., Tartarini, S., … Durel, C. E. (2020). Using whole-genome SNP data to reconstruct a large multi-generation pedigree in apple germplasm. BMC Plant Biology, 20(1), 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12870-019-2171-6

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Downing, Andrew Jackson. The Fruits and Fruit Trees of America. 1855. 123. adams pearmain.. John Wiley.
  2. Book: Robert Hogg. The Fruit Manual: A Guide to the Fruits and Fruit Trees of Great Britain. 1884. Journal of Horticulture Office. 4–5.
  3. The Fruit Manual, Hogg