← All varieties

Ene's Winter Sweet

Apple

Ene's Winter Sweet

Origin/History

A southern apple introduced by J. S. Downer of Elkton, Kentucky. Warder (1867) notes it is "a southern fruit of some merit."

Tree

Not described in source.

Fruit

Size and Form: Medium size. Warder describes the form as flat and regular; Downing describes it as oblate.

Stem: Medium length.

Cavity: Wide, wavy, brown.

Calyx: Large, open.

Basin: Abrupt, regular, leather-cracked.

Skin: Roughish and uneven. Color greenish-yellow, blushed (Downing specifies blushed in sun), and russeted.

Dots: Numerous, minute, russet-veined.

Flesh/Flavor: Yellow, fine-grained. Flavor very sweet and rich. Quality rated "quite good" (Warder) / "Good" (Downing).

Core/Seeds: Core round, closed, clasping. Seeds numerous, angular, and imperfect.

Season

December.

Uses

Table fruit.

Subtypes/Variants

Not described in source.

Other

Not described in source.

Book Sources

Described in 2 period pomological works

View original book sources (2)

Ene's Winter Sweet.

From J. S. Downer, Elkton, Kentucky ; a southern fruit of some merit.

Fruit medium, flat, regular ; Surface roughish, uneven, greenish-yellow, blushed and russeted ; Dots numerous, minute, russet veined.

Basin abrupt, regular, leather-cracked ; Eye large, open.

Cavity wide, wavy, brown ; Stem medium.

Core round, closed, clasping ; Seeds numerous, angular, imperfect ; Flesh yellow, fine grained ; Flavor very sweet, rich ; Quality quite good ; Use, table ; Season, December.

— John A. Warder, American Pomology: Apples (1867)

Ene's Winter Sweet.

A Southern Apple, introduced by J. S. Downer, Elkton, Ky.

Fruit medium, oblate, greenish yellow, blushed in sun, russeted, Flesh yellow, fine-grained, sweet. Good. December.

Ellsworth.

A.J. Downing, The Fruits and Fruit Trees of America (1900)