Granny Smith apple

Description: Green, crisp and tart.

Use: eating, baking
Origin: Australia

Americans love the Granny Smith. We bake it, sauce it, slice it, caramel it, juice it, but most of all, we like to simply bite into it. It’s crisp and firm; tart with a light touch of sugar. It keeps well in storage, on the shelf or in the refrigerator. The flesh remains white longer than most tart apples making it a natural for fruit platters and salads.

The Granny Smith originated in Australia in 1868. Mary Ann (Grannie) Smith found the seedling (believed to be French Crab) growing in her garden where she had thrown out some apples. She began using its fruit for cooking. The trees were propagated and the fruit marketed. About a century later they were introduced to America where it has grown in popularity ever since.

Popular Recipes

Check our most popular recipes of this week

Dark beer with a frothy head in a pint glass on a rustic wooden table, accompanied by a spoon and a bottle in the background.

Black Velvet

5 min • Easy • 1 serving

Golden-brown bread pudding in a white dish, set on a wooden countertop with jars of flour and sugar in the background.

Not really Bread and Butter Pudding?!

50 min • Easy to Moderate • 6 to 8 servings

Creamy pasta dish garnished with grated cheese and black pepper, served on a plate with garlic and olive oil in the background.

Vegetarian Carbonara

30 min • Easy • 4 servings

Peruvian dish "Papa a la Huancaína" with potatoes, yellow sauce, boiled egg slices, and olives on a lettuce leaf.

Papa a la Huancaina

45 min • Easy • 4 to 6 servings

Gingerbread cake slice with whipped cream on a plate, with the rest of the cake in a baking pan in the background.

Gingerbread Cake

55 min • Moderate • 8 to 10 servings

From Our Table to Yours

Explore the Moments That Matter Most

Discover Stories