Fruit The secret cherry taking over Canada

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
I don't have any experience with these cherries but thought the article was interesting. Anyone here have any experience with them? - OGM

Fair use.

BBC
The secret cherry taking over Canada
By Ryan MacDonald
22 March 2018

Able to survive temperatures as low as -40C, Saskatchewan’s prairie cherries are tarter than traditional sweet cherries and can be eaten straight from the tree.

Link to source:
http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20180321-the-secret-cherry-taking-over-canada
My eyes drifted toward a mound of pastries on the counter of 33 1/3 Coffee Roasters, a cafe in downtown Regina, Saskatchewan, and my stomach growled with hunger. But a simple handwritten card piqued my interest, distracting me for a moment.

Placed directly in front of a large pile of bulbous-shaped scones, it read ‘Prairie Cherry’.

They grow them everywhere around here

As a first-time visitor to this western Canadian province, I didn’t know it was possible for this fruit, which traditionally thrives in temperate regions, to grow out on the prairies. During winter, temperatures can drop to as low as -40C, while drought-like conditions can persist for months during summer. Such extremes, I thought, would limit what farmers could harvest.

So somewhat meekly, I asked the barista, “What’s a prairie cherry?”

“It’s a variety of the fruit we’re known for in Saskatchewan,” he said, handing me my coffee. “They grow them everywhere around here.”

More than just a clever rhyme to lure hungry tourists, these dwarf sour cherries have been a culinary staple on the prairies for decades. Growing hardy and plentiful on short, stout bushes, their ornamental blooms and glossy leaves produce a deep-red fruit that is fully ripe from late July to early August. They’re tarter than traditional sweet cherries, and can be eaten straight from the tree.

One reason for their popularity can be attributed to the region’s immigrant communities who commonly incorporate them into their diets, according to Bob Bors, assistant professor and plant scientist at the University of Saskatchewan.

“The people who love it the most are the people who come from Eastern Europe and settled down here,” he explained. “They get totally thrilled that they have a sour cherry.”

Bors leads the Fruit Programme for the university – one of the largest of its kind in North America – which has been breeding a variety of hardy, cold-weather plants for the last 90 years. As well as overseeing a dozen crops across 50 acres of property, the programme also includes a Prairie Fruit Genebank that preserves plants suited for prairie life. While their work focuses primarily on crops that can be commercialised, the university has also spent the last two decades marketing these tart and tangy fruits to the public to help distinguish them from other varieties.

“A lot of people don’t understand what a sour cherry is,” Bors said. “In my early years of promoting it here, I had to take our cherries physically around places before they would try growing them because they didn’t believe it was possible.”

That’s not the case anymore. In recent years, these cherries have become near ubiquitous on menus across the province due to their high sugar content, powerful antioxidants and durability. Unlike other varieties, these cherries maintain their intense flavour and colour even when cooked at high temperatures. Locals gloat over their medicinal properties, said to help treat things like inflammation. Regional chefs and bakers pop them in everything from cookies to pies to ice cream, while orchards and restaurants combine their juice into things like wine, beer and even whisky.

Today, dwarf sour cherries may be grown in abundance by a wave of new commercial farmers, but it’s the storied history of how they came to be that has become a local legend.

Beginning in the late 1960s, professors and plant technicians at the university began growing dwarf-sized sour cherry plants from seedlings they’d collected from the Siberian Botanical Garden in Russia. When even these plants struggled to survive an entire Saskatchewan winter, the programme, led at the time by Dr Stewart Nelson, didn’t bother cross-breeding them with other hardy varieties, assuming they would never survive the extreme cold weather found in this part of the world.

“Those cherries were crap except one tree,” said Rick Sawatzky, research technician for the university for the past 46 years, who worked with the early generations of these plants. “I made no headway.”

But that was all about to change. Unbeknown to most of the growers and farmers in the area, a local federal government employee named Dr Les Kerr had been working in private since the 1940s to improve the quality of sour cherries. As a lone grower, he was doing work no-one else thought could be done.

A lifelong horticulturist, Kerr had developed a keen interest early in life for breeding new fruits, especially those that needed improvements to outlast the cold weather. He experimented (with varying degrees of success) with a multitude of plants, such as crab apples, hazelnuts and peaches, and even dabbled in hybridizing dogs and coyotes, a project that didn’t go very far.

“He probably just did it out of curiosity,” Bors said. “Maybe that’s the key to his psyche. That he just did stuff just because he was curious.”

He probably just did it out of curiosity

It was his work breeding and crossing sour cherries that Kerr longed to perfect. Not only was the fruit the right size to be mechanically harvested – key to large-scale, commercial fruit production – but there was nothing else on the market like them. This financial viability was something Kerr understood from the beginning.

“I’m sure that was his goal right from the get-go,” Sawatzky said. “He was a very capable man.”

Even though Kerr’s initial attempts proved futile, he continued crossing his hardiest selections with other varieties, including some it’s believed he acquired from Siberia.

“His first crosses didn’t result in food quality that was all that great,” Sawatzky said. “But it made that very important first step.”

Over several generations, his plants improved to commercial quality. All the while, only a handful of his closest friends knew about his fruit-breeding projects; as a government employee who was mandated to grow shelterbelt trees, a type of shrub used for land borders and protection from wind and snowstorms, Kerr believed that if his superiors found out about his work they would put a stop to it immediately. So he kept his work secret from the public.

"He didn’t want to see it wasted,” Sawatzky explained. “He saw the value in it for the future."

But eventually Kerr had no choice but to share his success. In 1983, when he was nearing death, he invited several people to his hospital bedside to provide them with details of where they could find his work. Kerr had kept virtually no records, and only he knew where the several hundred plants were dispersed and hidden among two farms in the province.

“He may have had some in other places, but I was never made aware,” said Sawatzky, who helped locate the trees.

Before this discovery, the university had no longer been pursuing its own cherry breeding programme. But with Kerr’s bequeathal, along with an additional financial donation for research, the students were able to pick up where he left off.

And it’s those plants that not only live to this day, but continue to inspire new growers, some of whom have built entire businesses around them.

“I do tours of the orchard, and I explain how it all started with Les Kerr,” said Dean Kreutzer, owner of Over the Hill Orchards in Lumsden, Saskatchewan.

Along with his wife Sylvia, Kreutzer opened the farming business in 1999 after retiring from his job as a computer programmer to pursue fruit breeding full time.

“I basically learned through trial and error how the actual trees worked and the different issues that horticulturists or orchard growers have to face,” he said. “I had absolutely no agricultural background at all.”

Today, Over the Hill Orchards produces more than 50 different products, many of which are cherry flavoured, and hosts suppers on their 40 acres of property. They even had some luck feeding the Royal Family when Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip visited the province for its 100th anniversary in 2005.

“When I heard that she was coming, I said, ‘She’s gotta eat something!’” Kreutzner exclaimed, explaining that he supplied 500 chocolate-covered cherries for the event.

Kerr’s the man with the vision. And the rest of us are just technicians just working on it

“It’s one of those things when you sit back and think, ‘I was a computer programmer and I just fed the Queen’. Quite a cool thing.”

And while the cherry industry continues to make strides improving the hardiness of these extraordinary plants, Kerr’s legacy will always remain strong.
Link to source:
http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20180321-the-secret-cherry-taking-over-canada
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
I need to find some of these. I've lost sour cherries to winterkill twice now, and trees are expensive...

Summerthyme
 

TerriHaute

Hoosier Gardener
I need to find some of these. I've lost sour cherries to winterkill twice now, and trees are expensive...

Summerthyme

I grow one kind of cherry that sounds like this one, called Carmine Jewel. It is about 7 feet tall and maybe 5 feet wide, and grows like a bush. The dark red cherry is somewhere between sour and sweet, closer to sour, and works fine for baking if you can get enough before the birds eat them. Carmine Jewel is available from several growers in the U.S., mine came from Stark Brothers.

This web site has a bit more info: http://uncommonfruit.cias.wisc.edu/carmine-jewel/

‘Carmine Jewel’ is a dark red, almost black fruit and is said to be the first tart cherry to ripen. The dark red pigment goes throughout the fruit, which may indicate high levels of anthocyanins. This could put them in the category of a superfruit in terms of nutritional value, specifically for antioxidants. Products like pies and jams made from the fruit are considered gourmet by those familiar with other pie cherries.

It is said to be very productive, though there might be a tendency toward biennial yield fluctuations where higher that average crops will be followed by lower than average crops. It is recommended to let the fruit hang until it turns a dark shade of black-red. When the cherries first turn red, they are not actually ripe. More sugars and flavors develop during the next several weeks. The University of Saskatchewan says that the fruits can hang on the plants for a very long time while they are dead ripe, but experience in North Dakota suggests that for best quality they should be harvested shortly after they turn black-red. The difference may be due to warmer temperatures.

‘Carmine Jewel’ grows to be 6 to 8 feet tall. It can be planted in hedgerows and mechanically harvested. The overall quality and yield of ‘Carmine Jewel’ has given it a good reputation and devoted following by Canadian growers.

After ‘Carmine Jewel’, five other dwarf sour cherry cultivars were released in Canada in 2003 as the Romance Series. They include: ‘Crimson Passion’, ‘Cupid’, ‘Juliette’, ‘Romeo’ and ‘Valentine’. Some Canadian propagators have virus-free certified ‘Crimson Passion’ plants for sale to the U.S. but the other four cultivars are yet to be released in the U.S. When all six dwarf sour cherries are grown in an orchard, harvest can span from late-July to early September. The sweetest cultivars make excellent fresh eating.
 
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