Chuck Wendig: Terribleminds

Apple-Obsessed Author Fella

Apple Review #32: Ruby Slipper

This is the apple in your hand.

Some would say it is so red that it looks black, but that’s not quite
right. It’s the color of wine and offal, of liver soaked in Pinot Noir.
Bruise-dark and blood-bright.

The skin shows little russeting, if any. But it is home to a peppering
of lenticels—the little white dots you sometimes see on appleskin. These
lenticels feel somehow deeper than the skin itself. As if you are staring
into a thing that is nothing as much as it is something: an object of depth,
of breadth, like a hole in the universe. In this way the lenticels are like
the stars of a moonless evening.

The skin is smooth and cold, always cold. It is a round apple, not
oblong, not tall, but also not squat. The Platonic ideal of an apple shape,
perhaps: roughly symmetrical, broad in the shoulders, narrow toward
the calyx. The apple is heavy, too. Dense-feeling. Heavy enough to crack
a window. Or break a nose.

Even before you bite it, a scent rises to meet you. It’s the smell of
roses—not unusual, because apples are related to the rose. Same family,
in fact: Rosaceae.

What is unusual is the moment, a moment so fast you will disregard
it, when the smell makes you feel something in the space between your
heart and your stomach: a feeling of giddiness and loss in equal measure.
In that feeling is the dying of summer, the rise of fall, the coming of winter, and threaded throughout, a season of funerals and flowers left on a grave. But again, that moment is so fast, you cannot hold on to it. It is
gone, like a dream upon waking.

Of course, what matters most is the eating.

In the first bite, the skin pops under your teeth—the same pop you’d
feel biting into a tightly skinned sausage. The flesh has a hard texture,
and if you were to cut a slice you’d find it would not bend, but rather, it would break like a chip of slate snapping in half. That snap is a satisfying
sensation: a tiny tectonic reverberation felt all the way to the elbow.
In the chew, the apple is crisp, resistant to its destruction, with a
crunch so pleasurable it lights up some long-hidden atavistic artifact in
your brain, a part that eons ago took great joy from crushing small bones
between your teeth. The flesh is juicy; it floods the mouth, refusing to be
dammed by teeth or lips, inevitably dripping from your chin. But for all
its juiciness, too, the tannins are high—and the apple feels like it’s wicking the moisture out of your mouth, as if it’s taking something from you
even as you take from it.

The taste itself is a near-perfect balance of tartness and sweetness—
that sour, tongue-scrubbing feel of a pineapple, but one that has first
been run through a trench of warm honey. The skin, on the other hand,
is quite bitter, but there’s something to that, too. The way it competes
with the tart and the sweet. The way the most popular perfumes are
ones that contain unpleasant, foul odors secreted away: aromatics of rot,
bile, rancid fat, bestial musk, an ancient, compelling foulness from the
faraway time when crunching those little bones made us so very happy.

And so very powerful.

The bitterness of the skin is a necessary acrimony: a reminder that
nothing good can last, that things die, that the light we make leaves us all
eventually. That the light leaves the world. A hole in the universe. So we
must shine as brightly as we can, while we can.

It speaks to you, this bitterness, this foulness.

It speaks to some part of you that likes it.

Because part of you does like it.

Doesn’t it?


Okay, this isn’t really an apple review, ha ha I tricked you because it’s Halloween, you sickos. Rather, a note that Black River Orchard is two bucks for your digital book reader of choice. Which is to say, you can find it at Bookshop.org, Kobo, Amazon, B&N, Apple, and so forth.

And The Book of Accidents is still five bucks.

I expect this is a today only thing, so hop to it. If you dare.

HAPPY APPLEWEEN, NERDS

Apple Review #31: Cosmic Crisp

Gotta chase that sweet, sweet Honeycrisp dragon — that’s the thing, right? So many of our grocery store apples are, at this point, chasing the success and the flavor of the vaunted and beloved Honeycrisp apple. They want that honeyed sweetness with the big crispness and the epic juice and, at the end of the day, if that comes in an apple that’s easier to grow and easier to transport, so be it. (Doubly so if it’s an apple they can control better in terms of who can sell it, grow it, distribute it.)

Enter: the Cosmic Crisp.

It is, itself, a Honeycrisp x Enterprise collab — it’s hardier than the Honeycrisp, and arguably crunchier and juicier at the same time. It can only, only be grown in Washington state — er, also, Chile, apparently? — and has actually led to instances of apple piracy, with people stealing trees to plant in other states. And if you read that link, you’ll further see what a massive fucktangle you get looking at Big Agriculture — these are not small, scrappy entities. You’ll see private equity in there. You’ll see names like Goldman-Sachs, Bill Gates, Harvard University in there. I think like with so many things inside our capitalist nightmare, at the ground level of these monster-sized corporate entities you have people who genuinely care about both the individual product and the category of products — meaning, people who care very much about their apple, but also, apples in general. But then as you go up the chain, interest in the product is superseded by interest in money. The product is just a chit, a marker, a physical representation of investment and profit, a money tulpa. Doesn’t matter what the widget or dongle is; as long as it conveys cash, it’s interesting to them for that singular characteristic. And that’s a bummer. Money is a bummer. I’m not saying I hate people getting paid for cool things, but when you leap containment and that thing just becomes a wealth amulet, you know you’re in dicey territory. And with apples…

I mean, do we need to re-do the Red Delicious lesson?

Or the encroaching Honeycrispocalypse?

(It’s kind of like publishing. The people I know in publishing are nearly all amazing, thoughtful, fascinating people who care very much about books and writers. The publishing industry, meaning the giant ever-shifting architecture around and above them, is also controlled by people, many of whom don’t probably give one sticky fuck about books or authors — and it’s enough that this mechanized architecture becomes ultimately faceless and profit-driven. And so the industry stops caring about individual books and more about TRENDS and COOL GENRES and POPULAR TROPES and it aims for them even if that’s… the equivalent of overplanting Honeycrisp or breeding Red Delicious until it’s very red, but not very delicious.)

(Sorry, little bitta inside baseball there.)

So — the Cosmic Crisp.

It’s viewed by some as the heir to the Honeycrisp throne. And I’ve liked it quite a lot in the past. How did it hold up this time? Did it win my heart? Did it win my mind? Have I formed a sinister cult around it?? AM I IN THE CORNER, GIBBERING ITS NAME OVER AND OVER AGAIN?

My review of the Cosmic Crisp from Giant grocery store, PA, late-Oct:

Well, shit.

That’s the review.

Well, shit.

To unpack this a bit:

This wasn’t as good as I wanted it to be!

The positive: probably the juiciest apple I’ve yet eaten this season, maybe ever. You can watch the video here and honestly, it gets pornographic how the juice floods out of the apple. And it was lovely juice. It’d be wise to buy a batch of these and just juice them to drink — it would be phenomenal.

That said… you know, the rest wasn’t as good.

The crunch was nice! It’s a good crisp, breaking apple. Honestly better cut into slices you can break them like pieces of slate — biting into it outright is not as pleasing. The flavor, well. Well. It was fine? It’s fairly straight-down-the-middle with the one notable complexity being: redolent with rose. And that is not one of my favorite apple flavors. It tastes like grandma perfume a little. And I don’t want my apple-eating experience to be in any way reminiscent of macking on someone’s Gamgam, you know?

Leave GamGam outta this.

So, it’s floral, but not a floral I like.

This is not the Cosmic Crisp I’m used to. Now, I’m willing to believe this was simply not the best example sample of a Cosmic Crisp apple — after all, the one I had was beat-to-shit. It looked like it had been shanked in apple prison. Someone slashed it with a shiv made from apple seeds or something. It was a rough customer, and so that is indicative that maybe it’s not the best version of this apple at the outset, and that maybe translates to lesser flavor.

Still, what a bummer.

As such, I can’t rank this higher than the Honeycrisp, and if I’m being honest, I can’t even rank it as high as the Honeycrisp. I know! I know. To be honest, if it weren’t for the absolutely lovely flood of cidery juice this thing purged from its cells, it might’ve even ranked lower.

I’ll try to eat another before the season is over and add to the review.

But for now?

Can’t go higher than 6.7 out of 10.

GO ON, GEN ALPHA, HAVE YOUR WAY WITH IT. SAY YOUR LITTLE CATCHPHRASE. DO YOUR LITTLE GESTURE.

In the meantime, the Opal holds the “best grocery store apple” award this season.

Cosmic Crisp: So far, not out of this world, but rather, very much of this world, probably somewhere not that awesome like Scranton, PA or Ohio, even though it was grown in Washington state, or maybe Chile

Reviews so far this yearHoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortlandMaiden’s BlushCox’s Orange PippinReine des ReinettesIngrid MarieHudson’s Golden GemHolsteinSuncrispAshmead’s KernelOpalescentOrleans ReinetteBlack GilliflowerRed Delicious Double FeatureJonathanRuby MacCrimson TopazEsopus SpitzenburgMutsuHunnyzWinesapStayman WinesapWinter BananaRibston PippinRhode Island GreeningRoxbury Russet, Opal

Apple Review #30: Opal

I don’t care much for grocery store apples, but I do love me a good grocery store. I recall in reading White Noise way back in the day, that Don DeLillo captured the sort of overwhelming sensory assault from the grocery store — but also the comfort of it, the almost psychospiritual vibe of it. You walk down the aisles and it feels like you’re traveling a corridor of video-game colors — bright Atari shit in every direction, food in requisite Minecraft blocks, branding ranging from old-timey classics to new postmodern on-trend dystopian surreality. It’s glorious and disorienting and frustrating and I really do enjoy the grocery store experience just for how powerful and deranged it feels. WELCOME TO THE HALL OF FOOD SCIENCE. BEHOLD THE COLORS. TASTE THE SALT AND THE SUGARS. THIS AISLE IS HEALTH! THIS AISLE IS CAVITIES! EAT THE TIDEPODS AND WASH THE PIZZAS, ROLL IN THE MEAT, DRINK THE FIZZY DRINKS, WAKE UP, DON’T MIND THE SHRINKFLATION — SNACKTOWN AWAITS.

Of course, the produce section is often a bit less exciting — though a good produce section is a thing to behold, too. Humid and rainforesty, bright greens and oranges and reds. Shelves flush with lush vegetation. The gleam of the peppers, the feel of the yams, and of course the shine of the apples.

I did just come back from a grocery store and it was… less this, at least in the produce section. Everything looked rough — browned at the edges, antiqued with the sepia of time and decay. It was not a good situation. Maybe we disappeared the people who pick the produce. America, I guess, in 2025.

To circle back around, there are few grocery store apples I tend to like — most are too sweet or too old and shitty to regard as anything but a thing to hurl at a bear in the hopes it stops chasing you. But there are two I liked in the past, and so it’s a good time to revisit those today — and first up of those two?

The Opal.

My review of an Opal from (shudder) Walmart, late-Oct:

Here’s what I want you to imagine —

I want you to imagine fruit punch.

It’s red, right? So no, not that fruit punch. Instead, let’s imagine we blended together pretty much all the fruits that are orange and yellow. I’m talking, what? Pineapple. Pear. Orange. Lemon. Passion fruit because, okay, it’s purple on the outside I think but it’s got orange goop innards. Blend those fruits together, and that, to me, was the experience of the Opal apple.

Which is to say, I actually really liked it. It’s got good crunch, good juice, probably a 60/40 split on sweetness to tartness. It is, like its exterior, a sunny apple. It wants you to like it. It wants to be liked. It hopes you’ll vote for it for Prom Queen, or Most Likely To Be The Bestest Apple Ever, or for President of The United Stems of Applemerica. I don’t know that it deserves all those kudos and plaudits, but you know, it’s a truly pleasant apple. If I had a complaint, it’s that maybe some of its similar-looking cohorts in the apple world tend to offer a kind of lip-slicking or even buzzy lemon-lime tartness on the lips, and this falls just short of that.

And the texture is good but not great — it’s got just a few extra seconds on the clock, taking it into too much chew territory.

Still, I love this apple. Good apple, maybe even a great apple.

I feel like this is going to get an 8.0 out of 10 from me. Question is, my other favorite grocery store apple is the Cosmic Crisp —

Will it beat it?

Stay tuned, apple dorks. We shall see. We shall see.

Video of me chomping down here.

Opal: A sunny happy-go-lucky gee-shucks gee-whiz gosh-darn fruit-punchy-but-with-all-the-orange-yellow-fruits apple

Reviews so far this yearHoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortlandMaiden’s BlushCox’s Orange PippinReine des ReinettesIngrid MarieHudson’s Golden GemHolsteinSuncrispAshmead’s KernelOpalescentOrleans ReinetteBlack GilliflowerRed Delicious Double FeatureJonathanRuby MacCrimson TopazEsopus SpitzenburgMutsuHunnyzWinesapStayman WinesapWinter BananaRibston PippinRhode Island Greening, Roxbury Russet

Apple Review #29: Roxbury Russet

Apples have a season. We don’t necessarily think of it like that, because in a grocery store, all things are available always, which is an illusion conjured by our large (and mostly successful, and pretty functional) agricultural complex. It’s good that a lot of produce is available year-round! People need to eat and it’s good that they have a lot of choice in what they get to eat. Otherwise winter would be like, WELP, TIME TO GO DOWN THE BEET-AND-TURNIP AISLE AGAIN TO SEE IF THEY HAVE GOOD BEETS AND TURNIPS. OH SHIT, THEY GOT A SPECIAL ON ORNAMENTAL KALE. TIME TO FLENSE THE COLON!

That said, I do think it’s good to remind ourselves that apples have their time, and that time is now — though we are coming to a rough close of the season, too. By Thanksgiving, it’s pretty much done. Apples are’t necessarily done-done by then, though — they aren’t falling off trees anymore, but some apples are quite good as keepers. In fact, some apples are better when kept for a few weeks, even a couple months. The Goldrush, coming likely in a couple-few weeks, is truly one of my favorites — it’s not particularly good right off the tree, unlike many apples. Rather, it is well-deserved by its time in storage, where it develops all these great flavors.

Other good keeper apples: Arkansas Black, Ashmead’s Kernel, Tydeman’s Late Orange, Red Elf, Baldwin, Black Oxford, Cranch’s Speckle Hen, Stayman, Bryson’s Seedling Cannon Pearmain, Egremont Russet, Possum Delight, Pitmaston Pineapple, The Charlie, Cane Corso, Rough-Faced Shag, and the Blacktwig. I’m definitely not making any of those up. *coughs into hand*

Anyway, this is my favorite point in the apple season, I think — a lot of the late-season (aka winter apples) that drop tend to be more interesting, better lasting, and altogether tastier.

So the question is, does today’s Roxbury Russet pass that test?

My review of a Roxbury Russet from Scott Farm (VT), late-Oct:

Russet apples tend to be odder apples, which is one of the reasons I appreciate them. They trend sweeter, which normally I don’t like, but the funkier presentation of flavors present in most russets balances that out for me. They’re just weird. Russets are forever the weird kid, the one some people make fun of but when you get to know the weird kid that weird kid is also pretty fucking awesome and he’ll invite you to play D&D with him and he also knows a lot of facts about narwhals and supernovas.

As a russet, the Roxbury Russet is appropriately an odd little apple, though perhaps not as distinctly odd as many of its russeted peers. It’s certainly not as odd as the Knobbed Russet, which is definitely some kind of ogre testicle masquerading as fruit. And it’s probably not as overtly interesting as a Golden Russet, which I tend to like quite a lot and often has expressions of some interesting flavors like black licorice.

This is a dry, scholarly apple — it’s russeted skin is definitely elbow patches and tweed. But it’s sweet, too, which I think is a nice counter to that, which indicates a scholarly apple who is a bit cheeky, as well. Dry humor, but not mean, you know? It’s a dense, compressed apple — all that wisdom it contains, one supposes — and is high in tannins, which is to say it gives you that feeling you get with certain wines where it dries you mouth out even as you drink it. This apple feels like it’s Daniel Day Lewis yelling I drink your milkshake, I drink it right up at you as you chew it.

The skin is of course a russet’s skin, which is to say it has its own presence and will not be ignored. But it’s also not terrible, for a russet, and is nice enough, though I did find that, just as the Ribston Pippin had a “used bookstore” flavor, the skin in particular here carried the scent esters of an antique store. Like, if you’ve ever been in an antique store, I find the smell to be distinct — that commingling of dust, and wood oil, and haunted dolls, and the ghost of a cat who once lived there. And that “taste” is there in the apple, but really, only carried forward by and in the skin.

Oh! Apple facts time? Apple facts time. The Roxbury Russet is not only an odd little apple, but also reportedly the oldest apple in America. Er, not the oldest surviving apple — it’s not like I ate a 400-year-old cursed apple, some kind of mummy fruit. I just mean, it’s reportedly the first true American variety, trackable back to the 1600s when, and I shit you not, someone chucked an apple core from a European variety onto the ground and fucked off, and up from the seeds grew the Roxbury Russet. How does one even track that sort of thing? How does one obtain the knowledge of this very particular, peculiar non-story from 400 years in the past? Has John Green been time traveling again? Hard to say. One assume it’s purely apocryphal and bullshit, but hey, sure, if someone drop-kicked an apple core into the understory and up grew the first proper American apple, so be it.

That feels pretty ‘America’ to me.

Anyway. This apple. It’s good, if not earth-shattering. I prefer the Golden Russet but I don’t have one of those, so fuck me, I guess.

Feels like a 6.5 outta 10.

I drink your milkshake, I mean eat this apple, here.

Roxbury Russet: Not only a sweet little funky chonker of an apple, but also my drag name

Reviews so far this yearHoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortlandMaiden’s BlushCox’s Orange PippinReine des ReinettesIngrid MarieHudson’s Golden GemHolsteinSuncrispAshmead’s KernelOpalescentOrleans ReinetteBlack GilliflowerRed Delicious Double FeatureJonathanRuby MacCrimson TopazEsopus SpitzenburgMutsuHunnyzWinesapStayman WinesapWinter BananaRibston Pippin, Rhode Island Greening

Apple Review #28: Rhode Island Greening

Rhode Island! A nice state with a perfectly pedestrian, run-of-the-mill, mediocre state fruit: the Rhode Island Greening apple. I’d much rather they choose as their state fruit a truly gonzo choice, like their (in)famous New York System Wieners, a greasy hot dog in a steamed bun topped with a mysterious meat sauce, chopped onions, and I dunno, probably ground up sailor’s teeth or something. A gastronomical delight, and also may cause anal leakage. Have one of these with a nice cold coffee milk and kick the apple to the curb.

Or better yet, save it for a pie. See, not every apple is for eating out of hand. Many aren’t! Nor should they be! Arguably, I’m contributing to the ruination of our agricultural output because I’m over here reviewing every apple for how desserty it is, how good of a snack it ends up being, but some apples are snacks, some are pies, some are saucey, some are for cider, and some are for DOING EVIL. And that’s okay! Make the pie! Do the evil! But sadly, I’ve dedicated myself to the act of eating apples and telling you how good they are when rawdogged. And yes, I’m also part of the problem in watering down the meaning of the word “rawdogging.”

(Last night, while carving pumpkins, my son asked me if I was doing a specific design or what, and I just said, “Nah, I’m gonna rawdog it.” To which my son said, “Ah yes, unprotected pumpkin sex.” Children are a true joy, and I say that with zero irony.)

Anyway, let’s do this.

My review of a Rhode Island Greening apple, Scott Farm (VT), late-Oct:

I already spoiled this a little by saying, “Hey, some apples just aren’t for eating out of hand,” aaaaaand yeah, that means this apple.

Listen, I had one a little earlier in the season, and it was pretty unpleasant — tart, dry, a light lemon-elderflower taste, ultimately just a huge chore to get through. I didn’t review it at the time, and should have, but just as life finds a way in Jurassic Park, I live in Real People Park, where life gets in the way.

So, this was my second sample of the apple, and it was better.

Not like, crazy better, but better.

It was not a total chore to get through, and that lemon-elderflower taste become more overall effervescent and refreshing. It was finely-grained, and fairly crisp. The second example was juicier than the first. I’ve heard these keep for a while, and when they do, they develop better flavor, though still remain pretty mild.

I didn’t hate it. But it gets some cred, I guess — it’s one of the oldest apples in America, though for the oldest apple, I’ll be reviewing that tomorrow. (Spoiler: it’s the Roxbury Russet.) This one, though, dates back to the 1600s, grown by a fella named John Green of Green’s End, and I am 100% sure that this is referring to the author John Green, who is surely a time-traveler. I mean, he kind of has a time-traveler vibe, that guy. There is a wisdom to his eyes, and he’s clearly very smart, so I totally believe he’s capable of not only building a time machine but also using it to travel back through the centuries to give us a weird cool apple. The Rhode Island Johngreening.

Hank Green, also a time traveler, probably? (Also, Hank did a very good video about an older, now-largely-inaccessible banana, the Gros Michel, and whether it did or did not contribute to the banana flavor you find in candy. It mostly doesn’t, that’s a myth, but he did then help identify what the flavor is that goes into those candies from bananas: isoamyl acetate. And sometimes I’ve noted that there are bananas that taste not like banana, per se, but banana runts, and so then I looked up isoamyl acetate and apples, and sure enough, apples got it, too. And some have more of it, especially as they ripen! Which explains a bunch of stuff, like why I sometimes taste banana runts inside apples. Though you’re also free to believe in the INTELLIGENT DESIGN THEORY OF GOD PUTTING BANANA RUNTS FLAVOR INTO THINGS BECAUSE GOD REALLY LOVES BANANA RUNTS.)

Anyway. Still not an amazing apple eating raw. Or raw-dogging. Whatever.

Call it a 2.7 and head on home.

I eat it here, and also my dog makes an appearance if that’s your thing.

Rhode Island Greening: If pie, yes, if not pie, no

Reviews so far this yearHoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortlandMaiden’s BlushCox’s Orange PippinReine des ReinettesIngrid MarieHudson’s Golden GemHolsteinSuncrispAshmead’s KernelOpalescentOrleans ReinetteBlack GilliflowerRed Delicious Double FeatureJonathanRuby MacCrimson TopazEsopus SpitzenburgMutsuHunnyzWinesapStayman WinesapWinter Banana, Ribston Pippin

Apple Review #27: Ribston Pippin

Halloween should be a whole week. Halloweek. I mean, for those who are truly devoted, it’s the whole month of October, or for those truly obsessed (which is to say, correctly obsessed), it’s the whole year. Still, I just mean — it’d be great to have this week be a formalized week-long holiday. Or helliday! The Seven Days of Scares, like the Twelve Days of Christmas.

On the seventh night of Scare Week my Ghoul Love gave to me

Seven wolves-a-werein’

Six freaks-a-flayin’

Fiiiiiive Frankensteeeeeiiins

Four demon clowns

Three night hags

Two strangle gloves

And a slasher in a cornfiiiieeeeld

Anyway.

The big question is, why did I try to make apples scary? I love apples. Why make them the monster in Black River Orchard? (That book is available now hint hint poke poke oh and also Book of Accidents has references to that book even before I formally wrote it and oh shit TBOA is still only $4.99 at your various e-book merchant sites for reasons mysterious)? Why create the sinister Ruby Slipper apple? IF LOVE APPLES, WHY BETRAY THEM SO

Well, first, really the apple isn’t evil, per se — I mean, it is, but it’s really what it does to the people who eat it. Those who eat it and let the monster in, so to speak, were already capable of doing evil — the apple is just there to give them that sweet, sweet nudge. But still, the question persists: why apples?

I think in part it’s because eating an apple is such a visceral experience. You could argue, as many have in the past, that there’s something almost carnal about it — apples have long been associated with romance and sex, but also like, immortality and forbidden knowledge, too. Hell, Eris’ apple helped foment the envy necessary to start a whole goddamn war. And in eating an apple, it’s not a hard jump to find that carnal, erotic space and spin it to something altogether more grotesque at the same time. Juices flooding the mouth: sexy. Biting through a deep crunch of flesh: less overtly sexy and more cannibalistic. (Though don’t let me kink-shame you sexy cannibals out there.) This red, lush, round apple — biting through it, skin into flesh, all that sweetness flooding out, but don’t eat the seeds, they say — it’s just a very, and I know I used the word already, visceral thing.

And then the whole grafting process is its own kind of horror — the sheer human ego of saying, I want more of this fruit and so I must rip the limbs off this one tree, then cut the limb off a second tree and force the new limb onto the old injury. You might even clip the branches off the tree to which you grafted the new branches in order to ensure it no longer grows the apple you don’t want it to grow. Or you might try to get one apple tree to grow multiple varieties. That’s fucked up! That’s botanical body horror, baby. Doctor Frankenstein as a mad orchardist was part of that seed (ahem) that planted in my brain meat before writing the book. Hell, Johnny Appleseed considered grafting an act that was an affront to God! How fucking horror genre is that??

Plus, when you get into the cultural ramifications of the apple — not just mythological, but the American aspect of apples — you might see it as a fruit of colonization, a fruit given to indigenous who were then punished for being too successful (maybe even more successful) with it. It’s a fruit where once, if you planted the trees, it conferred ownership of the land upon you. And the apple itself was first a fruit associated with prurient attitudes — lustful carnality — and further tied to alcoholic consumption through cider. Then, there’s that cultural shift, demanding we view those things (sex and drinking) as sins, and the apple is forced into a role of serving as an icon of purity. That, done through Prohibition, through the act of burning down Johnny Appleseed’s cider orchards. Also done through the commodification of agriculture (see: the Red Delicious). Fruits that are shiny and perfect and inevitably dull. Glossed up, but flavorless, dry, absolutely unsexy. Plus, no drinking the boozy fruits, no no no. That’s a sin. No drink, no sex, no drinky sexy apple time. The phrase arose: as American as apple pie — even though apple pie isn’t even American at all. Just one more aspect of our cruel, callous cultural domination and colonization.

Anyway. All that stuff is fascinating. Even glimpsing the dark heart of agriculture and farming — fascinating stuff. So, that’s where you get apple horror. At least, that’s where my head goes. Even though apples are a thing I love, it’s both fun and interesting and, yes, horrifying to tackle that thing and turn it into terror.

Anyway, fuck all that, let’s review an apple.

My review of a Scott Farm (VT) Ribston Pippin, late-Oct:

As I’ve noted, most heirloom apples are either vampires or hobbits, and I’d say Ribston Pippin is a hobbit, for sure — though he might also be a cruel clergyman from Jane Eyre, who can say.

It’s going to be difficult not to keep this review short, because, the Ribston Pippin is a parent of the Cox’s Orange Pippin, one of my favorite apples. And as such, it’s like a lesser version of the Cox. That’s it. Take a Cox’s Orange Pippin, dial down most of the things about it, and you have the Ribston Pippin. The one thing it has is, it’s easily as nice looking as the Cox (tee-hee). It has that reddish-orange vibe and is pleasing to the eye, just less pleasing to the mouth.

It’s a perfectly nice apple!

Just, a little less sweet.

A little less tart.

A lot less of its tropical vibe.

Overall, just less interesting. The one interesting flavor is that it has kind of a weird musty dusty “used bookstore” flavor.

It’s a good apple, and I liked it, but the Cox’s is the superior apple, full-stop.

Watch me eat it here.

Ribston Pippin: The student has become the master, which puts the master out to pasture, sorry Ribston Pippin, you’re old news

Reviews so far this yearHoneycrispSweetieCrimson CrispKnobbed RussetCortlandMaiden’s BlushCox’s Orange PippinReine des ReinettesIngrid MarieHudson’s Golden GemHolsteinSuncrispAshmead’s KernelOpalescentOrleans ReinetteBlack GilliflowerRed Delicious Double FeatureJonathanRuby MacCrimson TopazEsopus SpitzenburgMutsuHunnyzWinesapStayman Winesap, Winter Banana