'Brown Snout' is a 19th-century cultivar of cider apple originating in Herefordshire in the United Kingdom,[1] though now grown in other counties and parts of the world.

'Brown Snout'
SpeciesMalus domestica
Origin England, c.1850

History edit

Although several different apple varieties have been given this name in the past,[2] the familiar 'Brown Snout' cultivar of apple is said to have been discovered on the farm of a Mr Dent at Yarkhill, Herefordshire, in the middle of the 19th century.[3] It was subsequently widely propagated by the H. P. Bulmer company of Hereford,[2] and was planted in orchards across the west Midlands and, less commonly, in parts of the West Country. The Brown Snout remains a popular cultivar in traditional cider making.

Characteristics edit

It is a late-flowering variety, classed as a "bittersweet" apple, with relatively high tannins and low levels of malic acid. It makes a medium-sized tree with a stiffly upright habit. The fruit are small and green, with patches of russeting, and a large patch of russeting at the calyx end, giving the variety its name.

'Brown Snout' is very susceptible to fire blight.

References edit

  1. ^ "Brown Snout", National Fruit Collection, University of Reading and Brogdale Collections, retrieved 12 November 2015
  2. ^ a b Morgan, The New Book of Apples, 2013, lvii
  3. ^ Copas, L. A Somerset Pomona: the cider apples of Somerset, Dovecote, 2001, p.26