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Hooray for apple season! Everyone loves a crisp apple fresh off the tree, but when it comes to cooking, not all apples are created the same. Here are some of our top choices for baking and cooking—including the best apples for apple pies, applesauce, apple cider, and apple butter. Plus, find a handy apple variety chart listing apples from sweet to tart.
Choosing the Right Apple Variety
Ever eaten a mushy apple pie? Often, this results from the baker using a soft apple variety that doesn’t hold up in the oven. When you use the right kinds of apples in your recipes, your dishes can go from good to delicious!
Amy Traverso, apple expert and author of the award-winning The Apple Lover’s Cookbook, breaks apples into categories.
Firm apples are best for pies and crisps, as they hold their shape during cooking, while soft apples are best for applesauces, apple butter, drinks, and recipes where the apples need to be cooked down.
Apples also range from sweet to tart. It’s personal preference, but here is how we would rank some of the most common apple varieties …
The Best Apples for Cooking
Note: Some familiar apple varieties may be missing because they are best eaten fresh, not baked or cooked. If you have apple varieties in your region that aren’t listed here, please comment below and let us know what you prefer to use!
Best Apples for Pies and Crisps
For apple pies and crisps, use “firm” apples. Ideally, bake a pie with more than one apple—an equal amount of 1. “firm-tart” and 2. “firm-sweet” apples for depth of flavor. (See chart below.)
The Best Baking Apples for Pies and Crisps
Name
Best Uses
Flavor Characteristics, Appearance
Firm-Tart
Arkansas Black
Pie
A favorite of many Southern cooks, with deep red skin that turns purple-black in storage. Aromatic, crisp, with a cherry-spice finish.
Calville Blanc d’Hiver
Pie, Tarts
A French apple that dates back to the 16th century, it is the classic variety used in tarte tatin.
Granny Smith
Pie
Classic “green apple” is slightly sour and a favorite apple for pie. Available in supermarkets everywhere.
Newtown Pippin
Pie
Sweet-tart flesh, crisp, greenish-yellow skin
Northern Spy
Pie
Our favorite apple variety for pie-making
Rhode Island Greening
Pie
Very tart, distinctively flavored, grass-green skin, tending toward yellow/orange
Roxbury Russet
Pie
America’s oldest apple, it’s heavily russeted and tastes like honeyed lemonade. Flesh is dense and rather coarse. A great keeper.
Sierra Beauty Stayman Winesaps
Pie
Popular on the West Coast, Sierra Beauty is complex and tart-sweet with floral and spice flavors.
Firm-Sweet
Baldwin
Pie
A New England favorite, this fruit is prized for both cooking and cider. Very aromatic, with spice and apricot flavors.
Ginger Gold
Pie, Muffins, Cakes
Sweet and crisp. Great for pie and light baking.
Golden Delicious
Pie
Fairly mild variety but easily found. Tastes best when paired with bolder apples.
Gravenstein
Pie
A California favorite, the Gravenstein ripens early. Sweet-tart with a hint of raspberry. Very juice and tender, but bakes well.
Honeycrisp
Pie
Crisp, with balanced sweetness and acidity. Doesn’t brown quickly when sliced.
Jazz
Pie, Raw snacks
Exceptional taste and found in supermarkets year-round.
Jonagold
Pie
Yellow top, red bottom. Tangy-tart-sweet combo. Cross between the Jonathan and Golden Delicious and could fill a pie on its own.
Pink Lady
Pie, Baking, Snacking
Balance of sweet and sour undertones and widely available in supermarkets any time of the year.
York
Pie
A great all-purpose apple popular in the mid-Atlantic region. Honey and vanilla flavors dominate and the flesh is juicy and fine-grained.
Best Apples for Applesauce
Below is a list of apples that are best for sauces and fresh preparation. Softer apples tend to work best for sauces as well as baking dishes that cook quickly, like muffins. Use firmer apples (such as above) for dishes that cook for 45 minutes or more.
The Best Apples for Applesauce
Name
Best Uses
Flavor Characteristics, Appearance
Cortland
Applesauce
Tender-sweet, these large purple-red apples with yellow streaks are moderately juicy and fairly sweet compared to McIntosh.
Macoun
Applesauce
Striated green and red color, these tender apples have snow-white flesh and a sweet-tart flavor with a hint of strawberry and spice.
Empire
Applesauce, Fruit Salad
Doesn’t brown quickly when sliced
Cox’s Orange Pippin
Applesauce
Lightly red-striped with an orange hue, this medium-sized apple has a spicy or nutty fragrance.
Davey
Applesauce
Red with some light yellow striping and small dots, this Mac-type apple is sweet-tart, very juicy, and crunchy.
Jonathan
Applesauce
Tart flesh, crisp, juicy, bright red on yellow skin
McIntosh
Applesauce
Juicy, sweet, pinkish-white flesh with two-toned red and green skin. Slightly tart, and the most aromatic of all apples.
Liberty
Applesauce
A popular apple for organic growers, it’s naturally resistant to disease and pests. Tender and sweet, great for sauces, with a wine-like flavor.
Best Apples for Cider
The Best Apples for Cider
Name
Best Uses
Flavor Characteristics, Appearance
Baldwin
Cider
Crimson red with coppery green skin, Baldwin’s cream-white flesh is crisp and juicy with a spicy, sweet-tart flavor that’s great for cider.
Gravenstein
Cider
Heirloom apple with a thin skin and a juicy, sweet flavor
Esopus Spizenburg
Cider
Large, yellow-green apple with a sweet, slightly tart flavor.
McIntosh
Cider
Juicy, sweet, pinkish-white flesh with two-toned red and green skin. Slightly tart, and the most aromatic of all apples.
Cox’s Orange Pippin
Cider
Lightly red-striped with an orange huge, this medium-sized apple has a spicy or nutty fragrance that’s great for cider.
Snow Apple
Cider
Large, white apple with a sweet, mild flavor.
Goldrush
Cider
Yellow-orange skin, juicy, sweet-tart flavor with a hint of spice.
Stayman Winesap
Cider
Very juicy, sweet-sour flavor, winey, aromatic, sturdy, red skin
Best Apples for Apple Butter
Soft apples work best for apple butter because they cook down faster. Use any mix of apples.
The Best Apples for Apple Butter
Name
Best Uses
Flavor Characteristics, Appearance
Braeburn
Apple Butter
Sweet-tart, complex flavor, firm texture, red skin with yellow undertones
Cortland
Apple Butter
Mild, sweet flavor, firm texture, red skin
Fuji
Apple Butter
Sweet, juicy, crisp, white to pale yellow flesh, red blush
McIntosh
Apple Butter
Juicy, sweet, pinkish-white flesh, red skin
Liberty
Apple Butter
Sweet, slightly tart, firm texture, red skin
The Apple Lover’s Cookbook
Are you an apple lover? Do you know an apple lover? We highly recommend The Apple Lover’s Cookbook by Amy Traverso, who quite literally wrote the book on cooking with apples. Winner of the IACP Cookbook Award (Best American Cookbook) and finalist for the Julia Child First Book Award, Traverso’s cookbook has been called “the perfect apple primer” by the Splendid Table. We call it a perfect and fantastic gift for any apple lover!
Why an apple book? Click the cover below to look inside—and find out! Plus, find a brief history of the apple (Adam and Eve?), how to match an apple to a recipe, and 100 amazing apple recipes! Look inside the book to see ALL the apple recipes!
Apple Cooking Measurements
When it comes to cooking with apples, it may be helpful to know the following:
1 pound of apples = 2 large, 3 medium, or 4 to 5 small apples
1 pound of apples = 3 cups peeled and sliced apples
Of all our apple pies, this Caramel Apple Crumb Pie is the winner! The cinnamon-spiced oat topping is wonderful. And the caramel sauce adds that special taste of fall!
Catherine Boeckmann is the Executive Digital Editor of Almanac.com, the website companion of The Old Farmer's Almanac. She covers gardening, plants, pest control, soil composition, seasonal and moon c...
Yellow Transparent!
Grandma, in west-central Ohio, grew several apple trees, and would use ONLY yellow transparent for making apple sauce, but they were good in pies too.
Reply to comment
<span>Jim Krug</span>Tue, 09/22/2009 - 08:53
I think you forgot one of the finest pie apples...the Northern Spy from upper NY state. My mother wouldn't use any other for her great apple pies!
Reply to comment
<span>Piemakingmama</span>Wed, 10/24/2012 - 21:21
I live in MI and we grow Northern Spy's here. They have to be the best pie apple ever! I have used many others, but nothing can beat a Northern Spy on taste and texture.
Reply to comment
<span>Bob From Nyc</span>Wed, 09/19/2012 - 21:13
Absolutely!!!! the best for cooking. Northern Spies were my dear friend Bici's favorite. She would buy a box in the Fall and the whole apartment would smell like an orchard. She let them marinate overnight sliced with peels on in brown sugar and lemon juice and then cook. Served hot or cold with a dollop of sour cream. Great. She was my best friend and mentor when I was a younger man. A lovely Victorian lady born in 1886.
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<span>Kingskid312</span>Wed, 09/19/2012 - 10:28
Northern Spys... In our house, the rule was: "Spies for Pies!" They are a Michigan favorite, too! But, if you like a "crunchy " apple in your pie, this is NOT the apple for you.
Reply to comment
<span>Cathie R</span>Tue, 09/18/2012 - 11:06
Thank You for mentioning NY apples! They are the best. My NC daughter loves to receive these tasty apples when we visit. Have you heard of Seneca apple chips? Read the back and discover that this company uses Washington State apples. Shame on you Seneca apple company.
Reply to comment
<span>Lynne C.</span>Wed, 09/19/2012 - 11:52
Re: NY apples...depends on where you live for your idea of the best apples. So, I respectfully disagree with you...GOOD for you, Seneca company! Speaking from taste experience, Washington State apples are VERY good! Lots of research is done at Washington State University, and Tukey Orchard at WSU has GREAT organic apples, and other fruit and vegetables! They open to sell to the public in the fall, and I can't wait to go there to stock up for winter. Some of the old varieties are grown, with limited amounts available for purchase. (Last year, they had Ben Davis, remmbered from my childhood in N.C., excellent for sauce or pies.) My stash from last fall lasted until mid 2012!
(Thanks for providing this website, I love it!)
Reply to comment
<span>Appleguy</span>Wed, 04/17/2013 - 21:27
WSU's research has helped me lots with my little home orchard in TN. I love them.
Yellow transparent are great for sauce - but they don't keep or ship at all. Check out Calhoun's book on Old Southern Apples for loads of great cooking apple options! Carter Blue, Kinnaird's Choice, Yellow June, Limbertwigs, all the winesaps, Blacktwig, Virginia Beauty!
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