
Behold: the Crimson Crisp apple.
You may think, “Ah, this is another Honeycrisp deviant,” but nay, it is not a child of Honeycrisp, nor a mutated sport — same last name, but different parents. It in fact predates the Honeycrisp by (don’t quote me on this) about 20 years in release though maybe only three in actual development. Further, the Crimson Crisp was once known by the more romantic name–
*checks notes*
Coop 39.
*clears throat*
I do feel like this was an early step on the “let’s finally put Red Delicious in the grave” journey, whereupon America decided it needed new and better apples. And this gets us a good part of the way there. This feels like a solid first step on the “apples shouldn’t be indestructible Liar Fruit that we suggest is both Red and Delicious but is mostly Purple and Shitty* transformation, and sure, I’m here for it, mostly. (Less here for the fact most heirlooms have been kicked to the margins of food history in favor of apples that can travel to and exist in grocery stores coast-to-coast.)
Regardless, I’m to understand there might be a convoluted mix of apples that went into this — Jonathan? Rome Beauty? But also —
*checks notes*
Crandall.
Which is apparently an apple.
Crandall.
Crandall.
I definitely call dibs on using that as a character’s name someday. Some kind of corrupt CEO, maybe. Or a foot fetishy sorcerer. Hell, maybe just a hunchbacked gravedigger. CRANDALL, SECURE THE BRAIN. Anyway.
Let’s review.

My review of the Crimson Crisp apple, procured from Manoff Orchard (PA, Bucks County) in late September, blah blah blah:
Well, this apple is a fucking flavor journey, let me tell you.
I’ve had it before and I don’t recall the, ahhhm, complex roller coaster that whipped my tastebuds around my mouth when eating this apple. I honestly expected it just to be pretty much a line drive down the middle — you know, crisp, crunchy, sweet-tart, pleasing (if not memorable), totally serviceable, okay goodbye, what’s next.
Then I ate it.
On that first bite: hit of rose. Which, okay, not entirely unexpected. Apples are related to the rose, after all. I’m used to a floral hit with some apples.
Second immediate sensation in that first bite: horseradish.
Yeah, fuckin’ horseradish. In my opinion, one of God’s greatest mistakes, and one of the Devil’s cruelest roots — a spicy dirt log, a zesty shit potato, just a horrible thing, the horseradish. Some people love it and that’s fine, people can be wrong monsters if they want to be.
So, to clarify here, what I tasted in this apple was not the spicy part of the horseradish — at no point did it try to burn the hairs out of my nose. But rather, there’s a deeper taste to horseradish (what I might argue is the radishy part): an earthy funky miasma, and I got that with this apple. Earthy unzesty horseradish whiff wafting through my mouth.
I blame the Crandall, obviously. Whenever I taste something strange in an apple, something complex and mildly upsetting, I may simply refer to that as “the Crandall taste.” As in, “oh, you can really taste the Crandall in there.” And when people act like they don’t know what I’m talking about, I’ll just laugh in a dismissive, pompous fashion, as if to say, “You fool, you prole, you lumpish commoner, doesn’t know what a Crandall taste is.”
And then, then—
The third act of this flavor journey (and here I’ll remind you this is first bite):
Barley.
Like, malted barley.
Then, all that fades away and you’re hit with something altogether more appley. The sweetness, the tartness, huzzah and hooray. Got a deep crunch, fairly satisfying. Juicy, not crazy juicy. There’s a faint cantaloupe finish. And then, for the epilogue of this flavor journey —
The smell.
Once I bit into it, I took a sniff–
And smelled hay.
Not fresh hay! Not grassy alfafa. No, like dried hay. The kind you’d feed to a horse. Yeah, I don’t know either.
So: hidden in this seemingly normal apple was, for me, a very weird apple.
I admire that. I admire the complexity of this apple. It’s fucking goofy. It’s all over the place. At the same time, it can’t help being what it wants to be. Cue the Sammy Davis Jr I gotta be meeeee. Just the same, it also made me wonder if I was having a stroke, and it’s also not an apple I’m going back to anytime soon?
So — 6.5.
Onward we go. Bumping it to a 6.5 I think from the 6 I gave it here in this video. Does anybody watch those? Sound off if you do. Also sound off in the comments if there’s an apple you want me to find and review, yeah?
Crimson Crisp: Hay is for horses, and hay is also for horseradish apples.

Alma Katsu says:
One of my favorites. Recently discovered at a local farm.
September 27, 2025 — 2:53 PM
terribleminds says:
Yeah they tend to be one you can find at local orchards regularly, but not necessarily at grocery stores!
September 27, 2025 — 3:13 PM
strugglingwriter says:
I watch the videos. They are awesome.
I feel like I need to hit up the local fruit farm and try some new apples (I’m also in Pennsylvania)
September 27, 2025 — 3:50 PM
Jo says:
Please try the Cosmic Crisp (current favorite) and the Braeburn (old reliable)
September 27, 2025 — 6:27 PM
Innerspacegirl says:
Honestly I don’t know what to make of that flavor/aroma combo. I don’t think it sounds alluring.
September 27, 2025 — 4:16 PM
dangarble says:
Curious if you’re testing only one apple of the bushel for these tests or if you grab a second for confirmation. There is a slight possibility that you tasted the only hay flavored, horseradish laced cantaloupe in existence.
September 27, 2025 — 4:37 PM
dangarble says:
Just introduced my wife to Chuck Wendig through Apple #2 review. She loved it!
September 27, 2025 — 4:37 PM
prw says:
try the mountain rose. Amazing and beautiful.
September 27, 2025 — 9:34 PM
Jon_TWR says:
I sometimes watch the videos, but rarely because I rarely use Instagram.
I’d love to see you review the Kanzi! It’s highly variable, sometimes amazing, sometimes fine, but when it’s really good, it’s exceptional.
I mostly only see it at Trader Joe’s, has the same heritage as Jazz, but is better in basically every way.
September 28, 2025 — 10:17 PM
Katie D says:
Following you now, specifically for apple reviews, so yes, I am watching them.
September 29, 2025 — 6:04 PM
Christine Chrisman says:
Why did I read this as cinnamon crisp? I love the videos which I now only see on the web because I dumped Zuckerberg products cause he’s so…… you know….
September 30, 2025 — 10:27 AM
FRW-VA says:
If you wonder where to get a fun apple, check out your local farmers market. That’s where we get ours, can’t be bothered AT ALL with grocery stores. It’s worth an extra hour of shopping in your week or month to get the good stuff from closer to the source.
October 17, 2025 — 12:06 PM
FRW-VA says:
Wow. I eat Pennsylvania-derived crimson crisps frequently, and I’ve never had an experience like that. For my tongue, what I detect are
-Sweetness at a medium level
-Tartness reminiscent of lime
-noticeable floral notes
-a slightly herbaceous finish mixed with honey.
As someone suggested below, maybe try again? Possibly from a different orchard or a different point in the harvest season? I detest horseradish at least as much as you describe, and I’ve never detected anything remotely like that in a Crimson Crisp. Nor hay, which is an intimate smell built into my subconscious from approximately a million hours of play in my grandparents’ century-old barn.
October 17, 2025 — 12:23 PM
FRW-Landaff says:
Since you clearly have access to apples grown in Pennsylvania, please review Gold Rush! Some of us addicts are out here waiting anxiously—
By the way, your site is not coded quite correctly; when I subscribed I corrected my login, but the site reverts to an older one. It also NEVER remembers me, even though I check the box for “save my name etc for the next time I comment” every time. It has not remembered me, even once.
October 17, 2025 — 12:27 PM