Ellison's Orange (apple)

'Ellison's Orange'

Ripe red fruit.
Genus Malus
Hybrid parentage Cox's Orange Pippin x probably Calville Blanc d'hiver[1]
Cultivar 'Ellison's Orange'
Origin  England, Lincolnshire, before 1905[1]

Ellison's Orange is an English cultivar of domesticated apple, an offspring of the famous Cox's Orange Pippin, which it resembles at most in looks and taste, but can develop a distinct aniseed flavor in storage. Is much more disease resistant than Cox's and therefore easier to cultivate.[2]

In growth.

This cultivar is named after its developer, C. C. Ellison, a priest from Lincolnshire, United Kingdom, who probably crossed it c. 1905 with an old French Calville style apple.[2]

Ellison's is a mid-season apple. Flesh texture is quite soft, and much juicier than Cox's, more resembling the flesh of a pear.[2] Easy to grow, but requires good drainage, since it is highly susceptible to apple canker.[3]

Overall it is considered an English classic apple and according to Orange Pippin it should be placed in the first rank of quality apple. It has earned the Award of Garden Merit of the Royal Horticultural Society, in 1993.[2]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ellison's Orange (apple).
A blossom of Ellison's
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