There's an apple renaissance underway, an ever-expanding array of colors and tastes in the apple section of supermarkets and farmers markets.

Less visible is the economic machinery that's helping to drive this revolution. An increasing number of these new apples are "club apples" — varieties that are not just patented, but also trademarked and controlled in such a way that only a select "club" of farmers can sell them.

To understand the new trend, start with the hottest apple variety of recent years: Honeycrisp.

"It's incredible," says Sydney Kuhn, who owns Kuhn Orchards in Cashtown, Pa. "That apple has such a following at this point." It's the most popular variety that Kuhn sells, by far.

Honeycrisp came from the University of Minnesota. Apple breeders there cross-pollinated different apple trees, created new genetic combinations and picked this one.

"I still remember the first day that I tasted it," says David Bedford, one of the university's apple breeders. This new, as-yet-unnamed apple was crisp. Bedford calls it "explosively crisp."

"That texture was so different that I had to pause and kind of think for a minute: Is this good? Is this bad?" he says.

Consumers decided it was good; so good, in fact, that they were willing to pay extra for it. And it dawned on people that there might be serious money in new apple varieties.

There's now a race underway to create the next Honeycrisp.

Which brings us to another variety, another product of the University of Minnesota. It's called SweeTango, and Bedford says it has all the crispness of Honeycrisp, plus more flavor: "I think this one has all the potential of Honeycrisp. It's actually a child of Honeycrisp."

But there's a crucial difference between the way these two varieties have found their way to consumers.

Anyone could plant a Honeycrisp tree. Apple growers just called up a nursery and ordered their trees. The variety was patented, so growers did have to pay a royalty of about a dollar per tree to the University of Minnesota, but that patent has now expired.

Pinatas are among the new generation of club apples — varieties that are not just patented, but also trademarked and controlled in such a way that only a select

Pinatas are among the new generation of club apples — varieties that are not just patented, but also trademarked and controlled in such a way that only a select "club" of farmers can sell them.

Stemilt Growers LLC

SweeTango, on the other hand, is much more tightly controlled.

The University of Minnesota licensed it to a single group of apple growers — 45 of them, mainly in the states of Washington, Michigan and New York. The group is called the Next Big Thing cooperative.

SweeTango apples come only from these growers. And their exclusive rights could last forever, because SweeTango is not just covered by a patent. The name SweeTango is also a trademark, which never expires. And for every bushel of SweeTango apples that these growers sell, they pay a royalty to the University of Minnesota.

The apples started arriving in stores a few years ago, joining a raft of other apples that are controlled in a similar way. More than a dozen of these so-called "managed" or "club" varieties are available, or will be soon. They're called "club apples" because you have to be part of a particular group to grow them.

Tim Byrne, president of the Minnesota-based Next Big Thing cooperative, which controls SweeTango, says there are good reasons for this trend.

The first is quality control. "If you have one management company overseeing the whole thing, you get to select the group that you want to manage the commercialization, the growing, the harvesting, the packing," he says. That way, you can make sure that all SweeTango apples in the store are of consistently high quality.

Also, there's control over quantity. You can grow enough to satisfy the demands of supermarket chains, but not so many that you drive down prices.

Perhaps most important, Byrne says, is the ability to organize marketing campaigns that convince consumers to buy the variety, and stores to stock it. Nobody did that for previous varieties, because anyone could plant them.

"If anyone can plant [a new variety], why could I put half a million dollars into a marketing campaign, out of my pocket, when everyone else can ride the coattails of that campaign?" says Byrne.

This is the future of the apple section in your supermarket, he says. Apple-growing clubs will compete for shelf space. Traditional "open" varieties, because they lack marketing muscle, will have trouble competing and may disappear. "It is going to be a world of managed brands, just like the soup aisle or the potato chip aisle or any other aisle," he says.

For a lot of people in the apple industry, this is an unsettling change.

Philip Baugher is right in the middle of it. He runs Adams County Nursery in Aspers, Pa., in the heart of one of the biggest apple-growing areas on the East Coast. When farmers are deciding what apple varieties to grow, they come to him to buy young trees.

Baugher shows me two rows of trees in his nursery. On the right, he says, is a variety called Sweetie. "That one we can sell to anybody," he says.

"But that one?" I ask, pointing to a row on our left. It's a variety called Kanzi.

"That one, we can't," Baugher says. "Only to those who are working within the managed program."

Baugher tells me he's trying to figure out, himself, what the new trend will mean for the industry. Maybe it will be good, he says. Maybe this club arrangement can help to promote new apple varieties, which apple growers have sometimes failed to do in the past. "There have been some very, very good apple varieties introduced over the past 30 years that have never, ever generated much interest," he says.

On the other hand, what if you're a farmer, and your customers come to you looking for some hot new apple variety that you are not allowed to grow?

This has, in fact, happened to apple grower Sydney Kuhn. "We've actually had customers at market ask us about SweeTango," she says. "And we explain that it's a club variety, and we are not part of the club, so we cannot grow that apple."

But Kuhn says she's not really worried. There are lots of great apples she still can grow. And her customers, she says, usually respond that "Honeycrisp is just as good. I'll buy your Honeycrisp!"

Kuhn is interested in another new child of Honeycrisp, a variety called EverCrisp. A group of Midwestern apple growers created EverCrisp, and they're managing it a little bit like a club apple — but with a crucial difference. If you want to grow this apple, you just sign up with the Midwest Apple Improvement Association and pay your dues.

It's a club that anyone can join.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

There's something of an apple renaissance underway, with new varieties promising evermore crispness, taste, even color, and these new types of apples are both trademarked and patented. That means many farmers aren't allowed to grow them. NPR's Dan Charles decided to take a bite out of the story.

DAN CHARLES, BYLINE: On a quiet hillside, in the apple growing country of Adams County, Pennsylvania, alongside a narrow country road that doesn't see much traffic, Sydney Kuhn has set up a kind of trial orchard. She has about 30 different kind of apples growing here.

SYDNEY KUHN: A lot of these different rows - there might be 10 trees of this and 10 trees of that.

CHARLES: Oh, so it's not even entire rows of anything?

KUHN: Oh, no (laughter). No, no, no, no.

CHARLES: Kuhn's family has been selling apples for five generations. What she takes to farmers' markets these days is a mix of old and new. There's the traditional Mid-Atlantic favorite - Stayman apples. But also newcomers - Goldrush, Zestar!, Pink Lady - plus the variety that changed the apple industry - Honeycrisp.

KUHN: It's incredible. That apple has such a following at this point. And we probably sell two crates of Honeycrisps to the total of all the other varieties at market.

CHARLES: Honeycrisp came from the University of Minnesota. Apple breeders there cross-pollinated different trees, created new genetic combinations and picked this one.

DAVID BEDFORD: I still remember the first day that I tasted it.

CHARLES: David Bedford is one of the university's apple breeders. This apple, he says, was crisp - explosively crisp.

BEDFORD: That texture was so different that I had to pause and kind of think for a minute, you know, is this good? Is this bad?

CHARLES: Consumers decided it was good, so good, in fact, they were willing to pay extra for it. And it dawned on people there might be serious money in new apple varieties. Now there's a race underway to create the next Honeycrisp. One candidate is another product of the University of Minnesota - SweeTango.

BEDFORD: I think this one has all the potential of Honeycrisp. It's actually a child of Honeycrisp.

CHARLES: David Bedford says SweeTango has all the crispness of Honeycrisp plus more flavor. But there's a crucial difference between the way Honeycrisp arrived on the scene and the coming-out parties for SweeTango and many other new varieties. That difference is shaking up the apple industry. Honeycrisp, anybody could grow. You just called up a nursery and ordered your trees. For as long as the patent lasted, the nursery paid a royalty - about a dollar per tree to the University of Minnesota. SweeTango is much more tightly controlled. The University of Minnesota licensed it to a single group of apple growers - 45 of them, mainly, in the states of Washington, Michigan and New York. SweeTango apples come only from those growers, nobody else. They started arriving in stores a few years ago. This is the new trend in apples - more than a dozen of these so-called controlled or club varieties are available or will be soon. They're called club apples because you have to be part of a particular group to grow them. The apples have names like Opal, Kanzi and Ambrosia. Tim Byrne, who's president of the Next Big Thing Cooperative in Minnesota, which controls SweetTango, says there are good reasons for this trend - the first is quality control.

TIM BYRNE: If you have one management company overseeing the whole thing, you get to select the group that you want to manage the commercialization, the growing, the harvesting, the packing.

CHARLES: Also there's control over quantity. You can grow enough, but not so many that you drive down prices. Tim Burns says clubs can organize big marketing campaigns. Nobody did that for varieties that anybody can plant.

BYRNE: If anyone can plant it, why would I put a half a million dollars a year into a marketing campaign - out of my pocket - when anyone else can ride the coattails of that campaign?

CHARLES: One more reason = these controlled varieties aren't just patented, they're trademarked. The Next Big Thing Cooperative, for instance, controls the SweeTango name. Unlike a patent, a trademark never expires. So Next Big Thing could have exclusive rights to sell SweeTango apples forever. This is the future of the apple section in your supermarket, says Tim Byrne. Apple-growing clubs will compete for shelf space.

BYRNE: It is going to be a world of managed brands, just like the soup aisle or the potato chip aisle - or any other aisle.

CHARLES: Now, for a lot of people in the apple industry, this is an unsettling change. Phil Baugher is right in the middle of it. He runs the Adams County nursery in Pennsylvania. When farmers are deciding what apple varieties to grow, they come to him to buy young trees.

PHIL BAUGHER: We'll take a look.

CHARLES: Baugher takes me out to a tree-covered hillside at his nursery. The trees are filled with fruit. That row of trees on the right, Baugher says, that's a variety called Sweetie.

BAUGHER: We can sell that to anybody.

CHARLES: But that one?

BAUGHER: But that one we can't. That one only to the people that are working within managed program.

CHARLES: I'm trying to figure out what this will mean, Baugher tells me. It could be good. Maybe this club arrangement can help promote new apple varieties. We've sometimes failed at that in the past.

BAUGHER: There have been some very, very good apple varieties introduced over the past 30 years that have just never generated any real interest.

CHARLES: On the other hand, what if you're a farmer and your customers want some new apple that you cannot grow? This has, in fact, happened to apple grower Sydney Kuhn.

KUHN: We've actually had customers at market ask us, you know, about SweeTango, and we explain that's a club variety. We cannot be - you know, we are not part of the club, so we cannot grow that apple.

CHARLES: But Kuhn says, I am not really worried. There are still lots of great apples that I can grow. And when I explain the situation to our customers they say...

KUHN: You know, Honeycrisp is just as good, so we'll buy your Honeycrisp.

CHARLES: But she is interested in another new child of Honeycrisp, a variety called EverCrisp. A group of Midwestern apple growers created EverCrisp, and they're managing it a little bit like a club apple, except that if you want to grow this apple, you just sign up and pay dues. This is a club that anybody can join. Dan Charles, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

300x250 Ad

Support quality journalism, like the story above, with your gift right now.

Donate