An Answer to (one of) the World’s Food Problems

Discoblog
By Lizzie Buchen
May 1, 2008 7:10 PMNov 5, 2019 8:43 AM

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Australia may save this suffering child

We've all witnessed the tragedy of apple oxidation: Take a crisp, refreshing bite from a ripe Granny Smith, set it down for a minute or two—and when you return the luscious white flesh has been tinted an offending shade of brown. Well, if you thought the Grapple marked the zenith of apple technology, Western Australia has another surprise: apples that don't turn brown after they've been cut. Sure, we're in the midst of a global food crisis, with Costco cutting people off from rice while the US turned a fifth of its corn into biofuel—but what's really on (some) people's minds is what to do with those brown bits of apple. So Australian Agriculture and Food Minister Kim Chance has answered the prayers of millions by launching a new apple variety—branded the Enchanted™ apple—that can be exposed to air for hours before turning brown. Chance hopes the Enchanted apples, with their, "delicate eating qualities of its Golden Delicious parent, but with a crisp and slightly tart style reminiscent of, but lighter than, its sibling, Cripps Pink (Pink Lady™)," will soon be creeping out apple eaters throughout Australia. Image: jessicafm/Flickr

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