Said Barny Butterfield, founder of Sandford Orchards: “ We were able to press long-forgotten apple varieties which were discovered whilst we were working with the University of Bristol to uncover and preserve lost cider apple cultivars.
"We entered the resulting ciders into The Westcountry Cider Championships: And they swept the board! We're really thrilled with earning these medals which are a celebration of our efforts to find and rescue the very best apples that produce the most delicious cider.”
Sandford Orchards is leading a DEFRA funded Innovate UK project with Keith Edwards, Emeritus Professor of Crop Genetics at Bristol University, to identify and map apple varieties in their ancient orchards and beyond.
By punching a tiny hole in leaves from individual trees, they are obtaining samples for DNA fingerprinting from thousands of apple trees with the aim of locating, preserving and propagating unique and threatened varieties. The results of their research will assist them in efforts to save lost apple trees and plan for diversity and climate-resilience in their orchards.
Barny adds: "This is beyond exciting, we were hoping we'd uncover something special, but we never imagined that the results would be so strong.
"There's been tragic, generational loss of orchards in the West of England, with glorious varieties quietly disappearing from our landscape, and, of course, with them recipes of centuries of cider makers. This stops right now!
"To my mind this is an utterly remarkable result, a rebuke from the old orchards. I feel we've been neglecting our role as custodians, we've simply forgotten to listen and to look and to taste, and here is the most fabulous evidence of what can be done if we make the effort to understand the huge diversity of fruit we have at our fingertips."
James Crowden, cider maker and author of 'Cider Country' was one of the cider judges at the show. He says: “This cider is rich, complex, fruity with depth and subtlety reminiscent of cider from 50 years back. It celebrates the rich harvest from old Devon cider apple trees whose names we've forgotten. It's a blast from the past and a stepping stone into the future!'
For further information on Sandford Orchards please visit www.sandfordorchards.co.uk, follow Sandford Orchards on X, Facebook and Instagram.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments are welcome!