Cherries
have pleased the palates of food lovers for centuries.
Their ruby-red color and tangy taste won cherries
a place on the tables of Roman conquerors, Greek
citizens and Chinese noblemen. Cherries were brought
to America by ship with early settlers in the
1600s.
Later,
French colonists from Normandy brought pits that
they planted along the Saint Lawrence River and
on down into the Great Lakes area. Cherry trees
were part of the gardens of French settlers as
they established such cities as Detroit, Vincennes,
and other midwestern settlements.
Modern
day cherry production began in the mid-1800s.
Peter Dougherty was a Presbyterian missionary
living in northern Michigan. In 1852, he planted
cherry trees on Old Mission Peninsula (near Traverse
City, Michigan). Much to the surprise of the other
farmers and Indians who lived in the area, Dougherty's
cherry trees flourished and soon other residents
of the area planted trees. The area proved to
be ideal for growing cherries because Lake Michigan
tempers Arctic winds in winter and cools the orchards
in summer.
The
first commercial tart cherry orchards in Michigan
were planted in 1893 on Ridgewood Farm near the
site of Dougherty's original plantings. By the
early 1900s, the tart cherry industry was firmly
established in the state with orchards not only
in the Traverse City area, but all along Lake
Michigan from Benton Harbor to Elk Rapids. Soon
production surpassed other major crops. The first
cherry processing facility, Traverse City Canning
Company, was built just south of Traverse City,
and the ruby-red fruit was soon shipped to Chicago,
Detroit and Milwaukee.
The
Montmorency is the primary variety of tart cherry.
It was planted in the early orchards and is still
used today. The fruit is excellent for pies, preserves
and juice. The newest American variety of tart
cherry is the Balaton. Dr. Amy Iezzoni developed
this cherry variety at Michigan State University.
It currently has limited production, but has great
potential for the fresh market and for juice.
In
the Northwestern part of the United States, cherry
orchards also flourished. In 1847, Henderson Lewelling
planted an orchard in western Oregon, using nursery
stock that he had transported by ox cart from
Iowa. Lewelling Farms became known for its sweet
cherries with orchards coming into production
during the 1870s and 80s.
The
most famous sweet cherry variety is the Bing cherry;
this cherry variety got its name from one of Lewelling's
Chinese workmen. Another sweet cherry variety
is the Lambert, which also got its start on Lewelling
Farms. The Rainier cherry, a light sweet variety,
originated from the cross breeding of the Bing
and Van varieties by Dr. Harold W. Fogle at the
Washington State University Research Station in
Prosser, Washington. The Bing, Lambert and Rainier
varieties together account for more than 95 percent
of the Northwest sweet cherry production.
Maraschino
cherries, the kind most often used in drinks and
on ice cream sundaes, are made from sweet cherries.
The maraschino cherry originated in Yugoslavia
and northern Italy where merchants added a liqueur
to a local cherry called the "Marasca." This cherry
product was imported to the United States in the
1890s as a delicacy to be used in the country's
finest restaurants and hotels. In 1896 U.S. cherry
processors began experimenting, using a domestic
sweet cherry called the Royal Anne. Less liqueur
was used in processing and almond oil was substituted
for some of the liqueur. Finally, the liqueur
was eliminated altogether. By 1920, the American
maraschino cherry was so popular that it had replaced
the foreign variety in the United States.
Today,
the U. S. cherry industry produces more than 650
million pounds of tart and sweet cherries each
year. Much of the cherry production is concentrated
in Michigan and the Northwest. Michigan grows
about 75 percent of the tart cherry crop. Oregon
and Washington harvest about 60 percent of the
sweet cherry crop. Other states with commercial
cherry crops are Utah, Wisconsin, New York, Pennsylvania
and California.
The
ultimate celebration of cherries is the National
Cherry Festival. It's held every year in July
in the "Cherry Capital of the World"-Traverse
City, Michigan. This festival originated from
a spring ceremony known as the "Blessing of the
Blossoms." Thousands of visitors come from all
over the world to celebrate the harvest and, of
course, eat cherries.
Story
provided by: Cherry Marketing Institute, Inc.