Top Blueberry Varieties Chosen

CA Blueberry Evaluations

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The favorite blueberry varieties rated by 56 taste testers in California’s San Joaquin Valley for 2012 include Southmoon, Reveille, Biloxi, and Legacy. Following the top four were Jewel, Sharpblue, Misty, and Star. Most are Southern Highbush varieties, but some Northern Highbush varieties were also rated highly.

The organizer of the tasting, University of California (UC) Cooperative Extension Small Farms Advisor Richard H. Molinar, said it’s important to remember that taste tests are subjective, and that everyone has their own preferences. Some prefer sweet, some more acidic or tart. Other criteria that determine preferences include aroma, such as citrusy or floral, crunchiness, size, softness, stems attached, and appearance. “There is no right or wrong answer,” said Molinar, “but we do see trends.”

Flavor is of course affected dramatically by variety. Of the 62 varieties planted at the UC Kearney Research and Extension Center in Parlier by Manuel Jimenez, farm advisor for Tulare County, 11 were available to sample at the May 23 Blueberry Field Day. Flavor is also affected by weather, soil factors, plant nutrition, and irrigation frequency. An exceptionally good tasting variety one year might be only mediocre the next.

According to Molinar, “when we first started this project 14 years ago, some of the recommended varieties for the San Joaquin Valley included Reveille and Georgia Gem. Then came Star, Oneal, and Misty as good choices. Now Emerald, Jewel, and Springhigh are the new kids on the block, along with Snowchaser. It doesn’t mean they are the best tasting. They might be higher yielding, ripen at a certain time, are more disease resistant, or have better postharvest quality, etc.”

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Molinar said so many varieties are desirable because there are differences in when they ripen, flavor, or yield. Adaptation to a particular region or soil, shelf-life, adaptation to mechanical harvesting, and offering something new to buyers are all reasons for the different varieties. Growers might start picking May 15 with Snowchaser, and end with Centurion, a rabbit eye variety, in July. Molinar adds that his favorite variety has not changed for 10 years; it is still Southmoon. And is there agreement in the family? No, his wife prefers Sharpblue.

But do you ever see the variety names listed on the clam shells in the store? “Not usually,” says Molinar. “Oftentimes the varieties are mixed together at the packing facility, or the variety is just not named.  How many times do you go to the store and just see white peaches, or seedless personal watermelons, or strawberries? There are over 50 different white peaches grown in the valley. Buy locally from a roadside stand and chances are better you can find out the variety name.”

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Avatar for Dave Klatt Dave Klatt says:

About ten years ago when the average price was in the thirty dollar per flat (4.4 oz. shells) range, for Florida berries picked in April going to Europe, my broker required each flat to be labeled with the variety name and each flat needed to be at least 90% of that variety, in accordance European General Agricultural standards. The rows in my fields were organized by variety to make it easy to identify the variety. Sophisticated consumers demanded flavor and knew what to expect during each week of the season. Needless to say those prices and subsequent demand for quality made the parameters much different than today's billion pound production standards. Seeing moldy, shriveled, stemmy, or red berries in the shells of the supermarkets hurts overall demand and seems to have become standard practice in the stores of my state. Rather than spending millions more on advertising, perhaps growers could better increase consumption/demand by developing more accountability from the produce managers of the individual stores that market the labels of the various brokers. Specifically, old berries should not be commingled in with good ones and brokers should boycott the stores that flagrantly and repeatedly violate the spirit of offering top quality berries.

Avatar for Oprea Cornel Oprea Cornel says:

Very interesting,in Romania appear just duke,bluecrop and I have by a hazard one single hannah choice

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