NPR wrote an article about #eatuglyapples AND IT ALL STARTED WITH THIS BLOG!

Unsightly scars on the outside of fruit might reflect higher nutrition within.
Daniela White Images/Getty Images
When orchardist Eliza Greenman walks through a field of apple trees and gazes upon a pocked array of blemished and buckled fruits — scarred from fighting fungus, heat and pests — she feels a little thrill of joy. “I’m absolutely infatuated with the idea of stress in an orchard,” says Greenman, who custom grafts and grows pesticide-free hard cider apples in Hamilton, Va. These forlorn, scabbed apples, says Greenman, may actually be sweeter.
Read more, HERE.
Eliza â Congratulations!
Regards-
Niza Strike | Office Manager | U.S. Apple Association
8233 Old Courthouse Rd, Suite 200 | Vienna, VA 22182 | Office 703.442.8850 | ⢠nstrike@usapple.org
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