Strasberry Explained

Strasberry
Species:Fragaria × ananassa
Cultivar:Strasberry
Origin:Fragaria Lucida perfecta x Johannes Müller

The Strasberry or Fragaria × ananassa 'Mieze Schindler' is a variety of the garden strawberry, with a raspberry-like appearance, originally developed by the German breeder Otto Schindler in 1925.[1] It is similarly soft textured, with characteristics that are similar to raspberries, such as being a deeper red, being rounder and having a bumpy exterior.[1] They are also smaller than an average garden strawberry and have deeper achenes. Unlike other garden strawberry varieties, 'Mieze Schindler' produces no fertile pollen and will need a pollinator. Despite its much-valued flavor, the variety was threatened by extinction, but plants survived in amateur gardens in the former German Democratic Republic until they were reintroduced as a commercial variety by a Dutch farmer in the twenty-first century.[2] Since 2013, a hybrid, self-pollinating version of this strawberry has been marketed under the new trade name Framberry.

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Notes and References

  1. News: Fabricant. Florence. Curious Berries to Tide You Over. The New York Times. 15 May 2012. 21 May 2012.
  2. News: Fancy A Taste Of A Summer Strasberry?. Sky News. 29 March 2008.