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Why are red delicious apples so bad and terrible?

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    I remember the first time I went to a supermarket 
    in the United States I was so overwhelmed by all
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    kinds of apple varieties. Having no idea which 
    one to choose, I decided to go for the one that
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    looks good AKA Red Delicious. And soon I realize, 
    it was everything but delicious, it was an apple
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    abomination! So why are we still producing it and 
    blatantly lying saying it’s delicious? And really,
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    What the heck are Red Delicious apples? Well, let’s 
    find out with PAA.
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    Hi, I am Shao Chieh Lo,
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    welcome to what people also ask, where I search 
    something seemingly obvious and share with you
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    some of its PAA, aka People Also Ask, which 
    is a feature telling you what other people are
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    searching on Google that relates to your query. 
    Today's keyword is Red Delicious apple. We will
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    talk about what it is, some history about it, 
    and why Corporate America got the nerve to call
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    it delicious. So let’s start with our first 
    PAA: What are Red Delicious apples? The answer
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    to this question is extracted from Wikipedia’s 
    Red Delicious apple entry. According to this entry,
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    Red Delicious is a type of apple with a red 
    exterior and sweet taste that was first recognized
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    in Madison County, Iowa, in 1872. Today, the name 
    Red Delicious comprises more than 50 cultivars.
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    From 1968 to 2018, it was the most produced 
    variety in the United States. Gala became the
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    most produced after that. So it’s actually not one 
    cultivar but a variety. For those who don’t know,
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    a cultivar is a plant that is produced and 
    maintained by horticulturists but does not
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    produce true-to-seed; whereas, a variety 
    is a group of plants within a species that
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    has one or more distinguishing characteristics. 
    True-to-seed means plants whose seed will yield
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    the same type of plant as the original 
    plant. So as it turns out, the term Red
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    Delicious sometimes is referring to an apple 
    variety comprised of more than 50 cultivars,
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    not a single cultivar. No wonder its taste seems 
    to be very inconsistent. And what the heck,
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    how can it get away with being the most-produced 
    apple up until 2018? So Why do red delicious
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    apples taste bad? And regardless of the fact 
    that it tastes terrible, Why do we still produce
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    so many Red Delicious Apples? To answer these two 
    questions, we will have to learn some history of
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    Red Delicious. And four articles could give us 
    a very good overview. The first article titled
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    “The Red Delicious is an apple atrocity. Why are 
    we growing billions of pounds of them each year?”
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    was published by The Counter. The Counter is, 
    according to their about page, an independent,
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    nonpartisan newsroom investigating the forces 
    shaping how and what Americans eat. The second
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    article titled “This Is Why Red Delicious Apples 
    Suck So Hard” was published by huffpost.com, and
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    the third article titled “The Awful Reign of the 
    Red Delicious” was published by The Atlantic. And
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    finally, an article titled “Red Delicious Apples 
    Weren’t Always Horrible” published by New England
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    Today, which according to their about page is a “ 
    multi-portal website designed to be the ultimate
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    online resource for the New England region 
    offering original expert content on New England
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    travel, lifestyle, food, the best events and so 
    much more. “ According to these articles, In the
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    late 1880s, Iowa farmer Jesse Hiatt visited his 
    orchard and found a mysterious apple seedling. He
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    dug it up, but it kept coming up, and he decided 
    that perhaps it deserved to live because of its
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    tenacity. Hiatt eventually gave up and dubbed the 
    apple “Hawkeye”. Hiatt then submit Hawkeye Apple
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    in a competition held in 1893 by Stark Brothers' 
    Nursery of Louisiana, Missouri, which is a
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    competition aimed to find a successor for the Ben 
    Davis, which was then the most frequently planted
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    apple in America which was sturdy and beautiful 
    but bland.(hum…Sounds like red delicious itself,
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    but anyway) After one bite of Hawkeye Apple, 
    the president of Stark Brothers Clarence said,
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    “My! This apple is delicious!” He paused, 
    then declared, “That will be its name!” Stark
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    Brothers soon purchased the rights from Hiatt 
    and named the apple the “Stark Delicious.”
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    In 1914, to differentiate it from their new apple 
    variety Golden Delicious, it was renamed: Red
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    Delicious. Ok, so what’s wrong with Clarence? How 
    could he call that abomination delicious? Did he
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    just blatantly lie or there was some problem with 
    his tastebuds? Not necessarily! As it turns out,
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    the Red Delicious apples you can find in the 
    supermarkets might be a totally different thing
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    than the Red Delicious Apple Clarence bit into 
    in 1893. According to an apple grower Mike Beck
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    at Uncle John’s Cider Mill: “The original Red 
    Delicious was pretty awesome in the sense that
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    it was a highly edible apple that appealed to 
    many,” Beck says. “But it wasn’t red. It was red
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    and yellow-striped. The original Hawkeye had maybe 
    a little bit of pineapple or melon flavors. It was
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    fruity and sweet, but it didn’t look awesome.” 
    However, in 1923, a New Jersey grower discovered
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    that one branch of his Red Delicious apple 
    tree had not only ripened before the others,
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    but had also turned a deep crimson red. Soon, 
    the whole industry of Red Delicious growers was
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    on the lookout for their own mutation that would 
    produce prettier and redder apples. By the 1980s,
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    Red Delicious accounted for 75% of the crop grown 
    in Washington. Until the 1990s, when new varieties
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    developed by American growers originally for 
    export markets, like the Gala and the Fuji,
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    started to make their way back into the domestic 
    market, Americans finally realized, there are
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    apples that actually taste good. The industry was 
    caught off guard by a sudden change in consumer
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    preferences as well as growing competition from 
    Chinese orchards. American apple growers found
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    themselve having surplus crop worth close to 
    $800 million between 1997 and 2000. In 2000,
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    A total of $138 million bailout, or roughly 
    $30,000 per grower in Washington, was approved
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    by the government as the largest bailout of the 
    apple industry ever. However, this only partially
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    reduced growers' financial problems; as a result, 
    the industry has since focused on exports. So the
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    idea is like, okay. since Americans now have 
    realized how disgusting Red Delicious is, let’s
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    sell it to those foreigners who are still unaware 
    of how terrible it is before they figure it out.
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    classic Corporate America. Ok, that’s the big 
    picture of the whole Red Delicious shenanigan.
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    Let’s also talk about some interesting details 
    about it. So Where are red delicious apples grown?
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    This question is answered by an article titled 
    “All About Red Delicious Apples” published on
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    Minneopa Orchards’s website. According to this 
    article, Cooler climates are ideal for growing
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    Red Delicious apples. Washington State provides a 
    large portion of the Red Delicious apples consumed
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    in the United States. Red Delicious trees 
    thrive in the sunny fall and chilly winter.
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    That's because the apple only develops its 
    distinctive red color under environments of
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    sufficient sunlight, and it also requires 
    700–800 cooler hours to produce fruit. Why
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    are Red Delicious apples cheap? The question is 
    answered by an article titled “The Red Delicious
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    is an apple atrocity. Why are we growing billions 
    of pounds of them each year?” which was published
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    by The Counter. According to this article, Red 
    Delicious is particularly popular in markets with
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    low average incomes due to its low cost. For a 
    wide range of reasons, the variety typically costs
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    less. The price has plummeted due to weak domestic 
    demand and the fact that they are typically grown
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    on older trees, where the startup costs have 
    already been paid off. Additionally, because
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    the Red Delicious variety was created almost a 
    century ago, their production does not include
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    the "club fees" charged to orchards growing more 
    recent proprietary strains like the Honeycrisp.
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    Today we learned what is Red Delicious Apple, 
    Why it Tates bad, and why we still produce it
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    regardless, as long as some fun facts about 
    it. If you made it to the end of the video,
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    chances are that you enjoy learning what 
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Title:
Why are red delicious apples so bad and terrible?
Description:

0:00 Today's Keyword Red Delicious Apple
0:55 What are Red Delicious apples?
2:08 Why does Red delicious apple tastes so bad and are we still producing it?
7:04 Where are Red Delicious Apple Grown
7:40 Why are Red Delicious Apples so cheap?

References:

Red Delicious-Wiki

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Delicious

The Awful Reign of the Red Delicious
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/09/the-evil-reign-of-the-red-delicious/379892/

The Red Delicious is an apple atrocity. Why are we growing billions of pounds of them each year?
https://thecounter.org/history-economics-red-delicious-apples/

Red Delicious Apples Weren’t Always Horrible

https://newengland.com/today/food/red-delicious-apple/

This Is Why Red Delicious Apples Suck So Hard
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/red-delicious-apples-suck_n_5b630199e4b0b15abaa061af

All About Red Delicious Apples
https://minnetonkaorchards.com/red-delicious-apples/

CC
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8QJGsX5bXg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrpusUuFNpY

Golden Delicious apples.jpg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Delicious#/media/File:Golden_Delicious_apples.jpg

Malus-Gala

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gala_(apple)#/media/File:Malus-Gala.jpg

Rosaceae_Malu spumila Malus pumila Var domestica Apples Fuji

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuji_(apple)#/media/File:Rosaceae_Malus_pumila_Malus_pumila_Var_domestica_Apples_Fuji.jpg

THE GREAT RED DELICIOUS BAILOUT OF 2000
https://nowiknow.com/the-great-red-delicious-bailout-of-2000/

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
09:17

English subtitles

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