Prunus cerasus ( sour cherry, tart cherry, or dwarf cherry) is an Old World species of Prunus in the subgenus Cerasus (cherries). It has two main groups of : the dark-red Morello cherry and the lighter-red Amarelle cherry. The sour pulp is edible.
It is closely related to the sweet cherry ( Prunus avium), but has a fruit that is more .
Its fruit persists for an average of 17.4 days, and always bears 1 seed per fruit. Fruits average 84.9% water, and their dry matter includes 39.7% and 1.0% .
There are two main varieties (groups of ) of the sour cherry: the dark-red Morello cherry and the lighter-red Amarelle cherry. Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language. Springfield, Massachusetts: G. & C. Merriam Co., 1913. See amarelle at p. 67.
In England, their cultivation was popularized in the 16th century in the time of Henry VIII. They became a common crop amongst Kentish growers, and by 1640 over two dozen named were recorded.
Before the Second World War there were more than fifty cultivars of sour cherry in cultivation in England; today, however, few are grown commercially, and despite the continuation of named cultivars such as 'Kentish Red', 'Amarelles', 'Griottes' and 'Flemish', only the generic Morello is offered by most nurseries. This is a late-flowering variety, and thus misses more frosts than its sweet counterpart and is therefore a more reliable cropper. The Morello cherry ripens in mid to late summer, toward the end of August in southern England. It is self-fertile, and would be a good pollenizer for other varieties if it did not flower so late in the season.
Sour cherries require similar cultivation conditions to , that is, they prefer a rich, well-drained, moist soil, although they demand more nitrogen and water than sweet cherries. Trees will do badly if waterlogged, but have greater tolerance of poor drainage than sweet varieties. As with sweet cherries, Morellos are traditionally cultivated by budding onto strong growing rootstocks, which produce trees too large for most gardens, although newer dwarfing rootstocks such as Colt and Gisella are now available. During spring, flowers should be protected, and trees weeded, mulched and sprayed with natural seaweed solution. This is also the time when any required pruning should be carried out (note that cherries should not be pruned during the dormant winter months). Morello cherry trees fruit on younger wood than sweet varieties, and thus can be pruned harder. They are usually grown as standards, but can be fan trained, cropping well even on cold walls, or grown as low bushes.
Sour cherries suffer fewer pests and diseases than sweet cherries, although they are prone to heavy fruit losses from . In summer, fruit should be protected with netting. When harvesting fruit, they should be cut from the tree rather than risking damage by pulling the stalks.
Unlike most sweet cherry varieties, sour cherries are self-fertile or self-pollenizer. Two implications of this are that seeds generally run true to the cultivar, and that much smaller pollinator populations are needed because pollen only has to be moved within individual flowers. In areas where pollinators are scarce, growers find that stocking beehives in orchards improves yields.
+ Sour cherry production 2022, in tonnesFAOSTAT of the United Nations |
297,200 |
183,800 |
180,240 |
176,770 |
164,446 |
134,055 |
110,770 |
1,593,025 |
Sour cherries are particularly common in Turkey, especially in the form of vişne suyu (sour cherry nectar), a widely consumed beverage, and vişne reçeli (sour cherry jam), often eaten as part of a traditional breakfast or mixed into plain yoghurt.
Sour cherries or sour cherry syrup are used in and drinks, such as the Romanian vișinată or the Portuguese ginjinha. In Iran, Turkey, Greece and Cyprus, sour cherries are prized for making spoon sweets by slowly boiling pitted sour cherries and sugar; the syrup thereof is used for sharbat-e Albalou, vişne şurubu or vyssináda, a beverage made by diluting the syrup with ice-cold water. A particular use of sour cherries is in the production of kriek lambic, a cherry-flavored variety of a naturally fermented beer made in Belgium. In Germany and Austria, sour cherries are used for desserts such as the donauwelle.
==Gallery==
For commercial production, "Morello" is the main cultivar grown in Central Europe, while the "Montmorency" variety is the most common in the US.José Quero-García, Amy Iezzoni, Gregorio López-Ortega, Cameron Peace, Mathieu Fouché, Elisabeth Dirlewanger, Mirko Schuster, 2019: Advances and challenges in cherry breeding, DOI 10.19103/AS.2018.0040.17 Kütahya is the most important in Turkey, Oblačinska in Serbia.
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