Meridian apple

Malus domestica

An attractive well-flavoured modern English apple, difficult to detect the Cox parentage though.

Parentage: Falstaff x Cox's Orange Pippin
Origin: England
Introduced: 2000
Season: Oct-Dec
Apple cultivar ID: 104200


Meridian is another great example of modern English apple development from the famous East Malling Research Station. It was developed during the 1970s and released in 2000. It has all the characteristics which we like about modern apples: clean-looking and tasting, easy-going, consistent quality, and gives you an instant hit of juice and flavour.

Meridian is a cross between another modern variety, Falstaff, and Cox's Orange Pippin. Students of apple geneology will note that Falstaff is itself related to Cox so you might expect this to be a very complex and aromatic apple. However Falstaff is in some respects more like its other parent, James Grieve, and Meridian seems to have also inherited these characteristics - notably its juiciness. The juice bursts out of every pore when you bite into it. The flavour is well-balanced but not especially complex. We have been told that the Cox-like characteristics are more apparent if the apple is left on the tree longer. It seems that Meridian is a particularly difficult variety in which to guage ripeness, and at one time was going to be marketed as an early Cox-style variety. We think it is fair to say that Meridian is reminscent of Cox's Orange Pippin but we don't think it has the same depth of flavour.  The flavour is more delicate, rather like a tarte aux citron, there is a hint of lemon or melon.  This delicacy is no  bad thing, and Meridian is one of the best modern UK-developed apple varieties.



Relationships to other apple varieties

Parents and other ancestors of this variety

Visitor comments

(Use the form at the bottom to add your own comments, or reply to one of the existing comments)

18 Feb 2008 13:47   Louise Perry from London, UK
I bought these apples at Waitrose in their "regional produce" section. I don't know whether they have exclusive right or whether enough of these apples for national distribution. They are a lovely apple.Reply to this comment
04 Nov 2007 09:50   Derek Prestwich from East Malling, UK
I tasted the apple 2 years ago and have never found it in the shops. Does someone have exclusivity and if so who? Why not sell it at the Research Station?Reply to this comment

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