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Food & Drink

The Next Big Apple Variety Was Bred for Deliciousness in Washington

Created at Washington State University, the Cosmic Crisp is growing beyond Cougar country.

By M. Sharon Baker, Seattle Business Magazine November 24, 2017

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Washington state is widely known as one of the best places in the world to grow apples, but it isn’t particularly well known for breeding them — a fact that bothered growers like Robert Kershaw and scientists like Bruce Barritt in the 1990s.

“When I got out of college, I was absolutely shocked that our industry was Reds and Goldens and that any new variety seemed to come from some other country,” says Kershaw, whose family started growing pears and apples in Yakima in the 1900s. “All the cool stuff was coming from somewhere else.”

Washington’s most successful apple, the Red Delicious, was developed in Iowa. The Golden Delicious got its start in West Virginia, the Gala in New Zealand and the Granny Smith in Australia. The Fuji was bred in Japan and the hugely popular — and expensive — Honeycrisp was created in Minnesota (and became Minnesota’s official state fruit in 2006).

Growers know it can take 20 to 30 years to breed and select a new variety viable enough for commercialization. And in the 1990s, the state’s reliance on the Red Delicious — notorious for looking appetizing even when it turns mealy from long storage — was leading the industry into a tailspin. It ultimately would cause some growers, packers and other industry players to go out of business.

Horticulturalist Barritt also thought the state’s popular varieties were obsolete and was already lobbying Washington State University (WSU) and the industry to fund an apple breeding program, which eventually began in 1994. Barritt’s quest for better commercial apples has resulted in what growers and industry players believe will replace the aging Red Delicious and the grass-roots consumer favorite, the Honeycrisp. 

The new apple, a variety named WA 38 by researchers and branded the Cosmic Crisp for marketing purposes, is leading WSU into uncharted territory. The university and its Yakima-based commercialization partner, Proprietary Variety Management (PVM), are trying to refine a new industry economic model being used for “premium” apple varieties. The model replaces the old “push” system, in which everyone involved — breeder, nursery operator, grower, packer, marketer and retailer — pushed varieties such as red delicious that were less prone to bruising, could be stored for a year, had a long shelf life, were easy to grow and weren’t susceptible to disease. The new “pull” approach is designed to get the customer involved earlier in the process via consumer research and feedback. Think taste tests and focus groups. Not surprisingly, consumers want varietes that are red, juicy, crunchy, taste good and don’t turn brown quickly. 

“The consumer has the money. We want the money. So, we have to find out what they want in order to get the money. It’s as simple as that,” argues PVM President Lynnell Brandt. Cosmic Crisp, it turns out, meets the criteria set out by both growers and consumers. 



After two decades in development, Cosmic Crisp is coming to fruition in Washington. Photo by Navid Baraty.

WSU and PVM are launching Cosmic Crisp at a time when more than 20 other varieties with premium aspirations are hitting the market. Even so, grower enthusiasm for Cosmic Crisp is so strong that the apple’s launch will be the biggest ever. If all goes well, it will be the state’s — and WSU’s — first commercially successful home-bred apple.

Bred by WSU’s Barritt, now retired, and his successor, Professor Kate Evans, the Cosmic Crisp is a dark burgundy-red apple with star-like flecks, or lenticels, that helped give the apple its name. It’s a cross between the Enterprise and the Honeycrisp. Earlier this year, 35 growers in Washington — the only ones allowed to grow Cosmic Crisp — planted an unprecedented number of the new trees, about 630,000 in all.

Demand for the new variety was so great that WSU and PVM held a random, computer-generated lottery in 2014 to award the first trees because there weren’t enough for every Washington grower who wanted in on the action. An additional 5.5 million trees have been ordered for 2018 by many of the 445 applicants who failed to win the initial lottery; 5.5 million more trees are expected to be planted in 2019.

At 11.6 million trees in a mere three years, the number of Cosmic Crisp trees planted and ordered exceeds the total number of trees currently in production in Michigan, the country’s third-largest apple-producing state, which boasts 11 million trees.

It also represents the fastest ramp-up of any variety — and it has some people worried. Nearly 12 million trees are 10 times the typical amount planted at this stage of development, and it is occurring in just three years, not the 20 years it took the last consumer favorite, the Honeycrisp, to reach such volume. 

Cosmic Crisp growers are ripping out old, less profitable varieties, often upgrading by planting more intensively with dwarfing rootstock, “V” or upright trellises, and planting 1,200 to 1,800 trees per acre. Typically, there are 110 to 120 very large trees per acre in older Red or Golden Delicious orchards.



Kate Evans, associate scientist at WSU’s Tree Fruit Research & Extension Center in Wenatchee, made the final decision on WA 38’s being ready for commercialization as Cosmic Crisp.

Growers are upgrading hundreds of acres at a cost of some $35,000 per acre, more than $60,000 if they are buying new land. But because the Cosmic Crisp is bred for dense planting, fewer than 1,500 acres can accommodate 2 million trees. The cost to Washington growers is estimated at $40 million.

So, why are apple growers willing to make this multimillion-dollar bet?

“A number of things are coming together at the same time to make it very exciting and intriguing,” says PVM’s Brandt, who also runs Brandt’s Fruit Trees in Yakima. “[Cosmic Crisp] was bred here for our conditions and it is a ‘wow’ apple. It really has exceptional eating quality, exceptional storage, exceptional shelf life and it doesn’t have much, if any, oxidation.”

Because it is slow to brown, the Cosmic Crisp doesn’t need to be kept in low-oxygen storage It also is hardier than the Honeycrisp, which can succumb to rot and mildew in the field — it’s not uncommon for half of a Honeycrisp crop to be left in the orchard — and to punctures and bruising in the packing house. 

“It’s the right thing for the right time,” Brandt waxes on about Cosmic Crisp. “The industry is recognizing their flagship Red Delicious is declining in popularity and reputation, and there is need to find a superior flagship. The hope is that this selection can be that apple.”

Brandt and other growers won’t know how consumers will react to the apple until 2019 or, more likely, 2020. Limited amounts of Cosmic Crisp will officially hit a small number of supermarkets in 2019, when Brandt’s computer models expect the young trees to bear their first fruit and to produce about 170,000 40-pound boxes.

Typically, a single grower, or maybe a handful, will bet on a new variety, and it takes 10 years or more to get a million trees planted. That volume can produce enough apples to fulfill regional orders; more trees are then needed to fill national demand. Year-round distribution requires an even larger volume of apples and trees. And that’s what Washington growers are shooting for.

“It’s the first time we’ve seen a variety that has to be an instant hit because there’s so much production going in on the front end,” says Kaari Stannard, owner and president of New York Apple Sales in Glenmont, New York, and secretary of the U.S. Apple Association.

“There’s no gentle curve leading up to it.”

Smaller apple-producing states simply can’t come up with that volume, she says. Washington state has about 165,000 bearing acres of apples and produces 65 to 70 percent of the nation’s supply. That’s more than twice the combined total of bearing acres in New York, the second-largest apple-producing state, and Michigan, according to 2016 USDA figures.

“We’re just waiting to see what kind of standards they set and how they plan to bring it to market,” Stannard says. “It’s going to be a very interesting story.”

Growers are betting the Cosmic Crisp will command a premium price, much like the Honeycrisp, which changed the economics of the commercial apple industry. Bred at the University of Minnesota, the Honeycrisp was the first widely accepted, patented, premium-priced apple. It fetches an average of $3.49 a pound in stores today and still brings to growers $50 to $60 per box. 

The Honeycrisp didn’t start out a commercial success. When it was released in 1991, there was no marketing behind it. Growers just paid a licensing fee to buy the tree. The fee went to the university to fund an apple-breeding program. Consumers, however, loved the apple’s explosive crunch and juicy sweetness. Through a grass-roots effort that took two decades, Honeycrisp demand soared, growers rushed to plant more trees and retailers charged premium prices. (Washington growers lead the nation in Honeycrisp plantings but many have found the tree hard to grow and the fruit difficult to store, pack and ship, so some are ripping them out to make way for newer varieties.)

About $20 a box is the minimum needed to make a profit with traditional commodity apples, says Desmond O’Rourke, a former WSU agricultural economics professor and founder and CEO of Belrose Inc., a market analysis firm in Pullman. Commodity varieties typically sell in stores for much less than the premium Honeycrisp; nationally, Red Delicious was selling for an average of $1.13 per pound in early August and growers were getting $15 a box.

Recognizing that consumers would pay premium prices led the industry to pioneer a new economic model, one the Cosmic Crisp is helping to refine. Historically, access to apple varieties was “open,” meaning growers could plant as many as they wanted and could market them as they saw fit. That system, some say, led to overplanting of Red Delicious and other common varieties, such as Fuji and Gala, which were considered “premium” varieties in the 1980s. With too many on the market, their prices plummeted.

Today, apple varieties are patented, trademarked intellectual property, which breeders license to select growers, often exclusively. Through “clubs” or branded programs, the growers pay about a $1-per-tree licensing fee and then a royalty on boxes to cover marketing costs and trademark protection. Some clubs also charge an annual fee. It’s a model loosely adopted by WSU and the nation’s other land-grant colleges with apple-breeding programs — the University of Minnesota and Cornell University in New York — for their latest apple releases, as well as by private cooperatives and clubs worldwide.


Like Fuji and Gala, shown here, the WA 38’s cultivar, commercialized as Cosmic Crisp, is densely planted, with growers using trellised trainintg systems and smaller trees. Planting more trees per acre produces higher yields than older rootstock.

A club or managed brand can set quality standards, restrict the number of apple trees planted, if desired, and, most important, market the apple brand, a practice that previously was left to an individual grower’s marketer or sales team. No club or managed brand seems to operate alike, though; everyone is searching for the magic formula.

In the case of Cosmic Crisp, the “exclusive” group of growers is geographic: Any grower in Washington who is interested can grow the apple. Commercial growers pay a licensing fee of $1 per tree and, when sales top $20 a box, they also pay a fruit royalty of 4.75 percent of a total box sale. 

After expenses like PVM’s undisclosed management fee, marketing services and other outlays are paid, the remainder is split as set forth in the WSU faculty handbook, says James Moyer, associate dean of research at WSU’s College of Agricultural, Human and Natural Resource Sciences, known as CAHNRS. Ten percent goes to the university, 10 percent to the college, in this case CAHNRS, 30 percent to the breeders and 50 percent to WSU’s plant-breeding programs. 

The $1-per-tree royalty on 12 million trees and the later 4.75 percent royalty on fruit sales mean that if Cosmic Crisp is loved by consumers who are willing to pay Honeycrisp-like premium prices of, say, $60 a box, the royalty could bring in about $17 million in 2020, based on PVM’s “conservative” prediction of 1.8 million boxes. 

This outcome would be a distinct improvement over WSU’s first attempt with a variety known as WA 2, which failed to gain traction. That apple was problematic because WSU didn’t give WA 2 a brand name. Instead, growers simply paid the $1 tree-licensing fee and were encouraged to market WA 2 under whatever name they wanted. There was no marketing plan or royalty based on fruit sales.  

After several growers pressed WSU for a name, citing the confusion different names would cause in the marketplace, the university came up with Crimson Delight but didn’t trademark it. WSU has now branded and trademarked the apple as Sunrise Magic and is working with PVM to relaunch it, says Albert Tsui, technology transfer coordinator at WSU.

Meanwhile, Cosmic Crisp is debuting at a time when many other varieties are hitting the market or ramping up production, and all have similar premium aspirations. Cornell University has launched the Ruby Frost and SnapDragon with Crunch Time Apple Growers in New York. The University of Minnesota bred and is licensing SweeTango. The Midwestern Apple Improvement Association has high hopes for EverCrisp. The list of new premium varieties also includes Rave, Kiku, Opal, Koru, Aurora, Smitten, Juci, Autumn Glory and 100 or so others that Susan Brown, the top apple breeder at Cornell, has identified.

Many of these new varieties are being licensed, grown and sold exclusively by a single grower or a select group of growers. And nearly all the largest Washington growers have at least one premium apple already in their portfolios. 

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