Beauty of Kent (apple)

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Malus domestica 'Beauty of Kent'
Pomological Watercolor POM00002031.jpg
Cultivar Beauty of Kent
Originprobably England, pre 1820 [1]

'Beauty of Kent' is a cultivar of apples; the fruit are used for cooking. [1] [2] It is known by various names including 'Countess of Warwick', 'Gadd's Seedling', and 'Wooling's Favourite'. [1] It received an Award of Merit from the Royal Horticultural Society in 1901 [1] but was judged of no value for the apple-growing areas of New York State in 1913. [3] Vitamin C 12mg/100g. [4]

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Blenheim Orange Apple cultivar

Blenheim Orange is a cultivar of apple. It was found at Woodstock, Oxfordshire near Blenheim in England in about 1740. It has been described as a cooking apple.

Rhode Island Greening Apple cultivar

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Beauty of Bath Apple cultivar

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Beauty of Kent", National Fruit Collection, retrieved 6 November 2015
  2. Beach, S.A.; Booth, N.O.; Taylor, O.M. (1905), "Beauty of Kent", The apples of New York, vol. 2, Albany: J. B. Lyon, p. 15
  3. U. P. Hedrick & G. H. Howe (1913), "Apples Old and New" (PDF), New York Agricultural Experimental Station Bulletin, 361: 79–135 pages 110-111
  4. Anton Pedersen, Danmarks frugtsorter