Scottish Daily Mail

Why the supermarke­t apples you buy today could be 3 years old!

- By Tom Payne

SUPERMARKE­T apples can be up to three years old, according to an expert on the fruit.

Food writer Pete Brown said apples are being kept in airless chilled warehouses to stop them from ripening.

He said shoppers are ‘horrified’ to learn that the fruit they buy today could have been picked in 2014.

Supermarke­ts do it to keep up with year-round demand for the perfect looking shiny varieties which customers prefer over ‘scabby’ British types, he said.

Tesco and Asda last year admitted they use companies that keep apples in this way. The average storage time is thought to be six months to a year.

Most shoppers are unaware that apples stored this way can lose much of their nutritiona­l value, Mr Brown said, although he doesn’t believe the practice is sinister or harmful to the public.

Speaking at the Hay Festival, he said: ‘We want apples all year round, and we want them perfect. We get upset if they’re not there. There is only one way they can do that, which is to store it.

‘They get these big warehouses where they suck the oxygen out and replace it with nitrogen. It’s like a fairytale – the idea of Sleeping Beauty. These apples are in there, and they’re not ageing. As and when demand is ready, they are sent to supermarke­ts.’

He added: ‘When people find this out, often they’re horrified they’re eating year-old fruit … it could be two or three years old.’

Apples purchased in months other than May, when apples are usually harvested, were unlikely to be fresh, he said: ‘How do you think you’ve got them in July if it hasn’t been aged in some way? We don’t think hard enough about where our fruit has come from.’

Apples sent for long-term storage are usually treated with SmartFresh, a synthetic ‘produce enhancer’. This has the effect of halting the release of ethylene, a chemical produced by fruit and vegetables when they ripen, effec- tively putting the fruit ‘to sleep’. However, this resulted in food ‘which tastes old and under-ripe at the same time’, he said.

Mr Brown, a regular contributo­r to Radio 4’s Food Programme, has written a book on the history of apples and spent seven years investigat­ing how the fruit is grown, picked and sold.

He said that while there had been a ‘revival in British apple growing,’ most varieties grown in the UK today originated abroad.

He said: ‘The three or four varieties we have now are shiny and green. They look lovely but they don’t taste of much.’ On the other hand, British apples such as the russet ‘look a bit scabby and rusty but taste much sweeter and richer and honey-ish’.

Tesco, Asda and Morrisons were contacted for comment.

A spokesman for Waitrose said they did not freeze their apples, while a representa­tive for Sainsbury’s said: ‘Our apples are not kept dormant for years as this would affect quality.’

‘Tastes both old and unripe’

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