Cherry

Prunus avium (sweet cherry); Prunus cerasus (sour or tart cherry); together with the East Asian flowering cherries (Prunus serrulata and its kin, the sakura), whose blossoms and leaves are used in Japanese cookery

Origin: The temperate belt between the Black and Caspian Seas: Anatolia, the Caucasus, and northern Iran, homeland of the sweet cherry (<em>Prunus avium</em>) and the sour cherry (<em>Prunus cerasus</em>); with a wholly separate East Asian origin for the flowering cherries of Japan and China

The cherry belongs to the rose family and to the genus Prunus, the great clan of the stone fruits that also gives the plum, the peach, the apricot, and the almond; within it the cherries form their own group, the subgenus Cerasus, marked by their long-stalked fruit borne in clusters. Two species carry the whole weight of the cherry in the Western kitchen, and they are quite distinct. The sweet cherry, Prunus avium, the wild gean or mazzard, is a tall forest tree of Europe and western Asia, and it is the dessert cherry, eaten fresh and ripe: the Bing, the Rainier, the dark Lapins of the modern orchard all descend from it. The sour cherry, Prunus cerasus, is a smaller, hardier, more shrubby tree, and it is no simple species but an ancient natural hybrid, an allotetraploid born of a cross between the sweet cherry and the dwarf ground cherry (Prunus fruticosa) somewhere in the cool country between the Black and Caspian Seas. Its fruit is too sharp to eat raw with pleasure but unrivalled in the pot: the Morello, the Montmorency, the Amarena, the Persian albaloo, the cherry of pies, preserves, soups, and the bottle. The two were gathered and grown together across their shared homeland, the broad belt of Anatolia, the Caucasus, and northern Iran, and it is from a city of that coast that the cherry takes its very name. On the far side of the world, quite separately, East Asia raised its own cherries: the Chinese cherry (Prunus pseudocerasus, the yingtao), cultivated for its fruit for some three thousand years, and the flowering cherries of Japan (Prunus serrulata and its kin), the sakura, grown not for fruit at all but for blossom, whose salted flowers and leaves are a true ingredient of the Japanese kitchen. A handful of further cherries skirt the table: the mahaleb (Prunus mahaleb), whose ground kernels, mahleb, scent the festive breads of Greece and the Levant, and the cornelian cherry (Cornus mas), a dogwood and no true cherry at all, gathered for its tart red fruit across Anatolia and the Caucasus.

The cherry's westward journey is one of the best-documented of any fruit, for the Romans recorded it. Both the sweet and the sour cherry grew wild across the lands between the Black and Caspian Seas, and it was from the Pontic city of Cerasus, modern Giresun on the Black Sea coast of Turkey, that the cultivated cherry took its name. By tradition the Roman general Lucullus, having defeated Mithridates of Pontus, carried the cherry tree back to Rome in 74 BCE; whether or not he brought the first tree, the cherry was established in Italy within a generation, and Pliny the Elder, writing a century later, lists the varieties already grown. From Rome the legions and colonists carried the sweet cherry across the empire, planting it through Gaul, Germania, and Britannia, so that the orchard cherry spread the length of temperate Europe. In England it found its great home in the orchards of Kent, planted in earnest in the reign of Henry VIII and making that county the Garden of England; with the colonists it crossed the Atlantic, and in 1875 the orchard foreman Ah Bing gave his name to the dark, firm sweet cherry of the Pacific North-West that became the dessert cherry of America, whilst the tart-cherry orchards of Michigan supplied its pies. The sour cherry told a parallel tale. In Persia and the lands of the south Caspian it became the albaloo, the sour cherry whose dried and fresh fruit perfumes the great jewelled rice albaloo polo. Carried west across Anatolia and through the Byzantine and Ottoman Balkans, the sour cherry sank deep into the cooking of Central and Eastern Europe: the meggy of Hungary and its cold cherry soup, the wiśnia of Poland, the višnja of the Serbs, and the Schattenmorelle of the German Black Forest, where cherries and their kirsch crown the chocolate gâteau. On the Dalmatian coast the small dark marasca cherry was distilled into maraschino, the cherry liqueur of Zadar. And in the East, in Japan, the flowering cherry became something it became nowhere else: not a fruit but a flower for eating, its blossoms and young leaves salt-pickled to scent the sweets and rice of spring.

The cherry divides cleanly into its sweet and sour halves, and the two are scarcely interchangeable. The sweet cherry (Prunus avium) is above all a fruit to eat fresh, the glossy dark Bing and the blushing yellow-pink Rainier of the early-summer market, and Turkey, the United States, and Chile lead the world in growing it; in the kitchen it is folded, dark and whole, into the batter of a French clafoutis, and it is the fruit of the fresh cherry season everywhere it will grow. The sour cherry (Prunus cerasus), too sharp for the hand, is the cherry of cooking: the Morello and Montmorency of the pie and the preserve, the Amarena of the Italian confectioner, the albaloo of the Persian rice pot, the meggy of the Hungarian soup, and the Schattenmorelle that, with its kirsch, defines the Black Forest gâteau. From sour cherries come the great cherry drinks, the Persian sharbat, the Dalmatian maraschino, and the kirschwasser of the Rhine. The cherry carries a weight of meaning beyond the plate. In Japan the flowering cherry, the sakura, is the very emblem of the nation and of the fleeting beauty of life, and its salted blossoms and leaves flavour the pink sakura mochi and the celebratory blossom tea of spring. In the West the cherry is the fruit of fleeting summer and of small indulgence, its season short and its image everywhere, from the glacé cherry of the cake to the bright maraschino of the cocktail, from the cherry orchard of Chekhov to the cherry tree of the young George Washington. Grown across every temperate land, eaten fresh by the handful and cooked into the most beloved of puddings and preserves, the cherry remains one of the most universally cherished of all the stone fruits.

Historical Journey of Cherry

Cerasus (Giresun), Pontus and the Anatolian Black Sea CoastAntiquity

The cherry's homeland is the broad, temperate belt that runs between the Black and Caspian Seas, across Anatolia, the Caucasus, and northern Iran, and it is here that both of the great Western cherries are native: the tall sweet cherry, Prunus avium, the wild gean of the forest, and the smaller, sharper sour cherry, Prunus cerasus, the hybrid of the sweet cherry and the dwarf ground cherry. From a single city of this coast the fruit took its name. Cerasus, the modern Giresun on the Black Sea shore of Pontus, gave the Greek 'kerasos' and the Latin 'cerasum', and through them nearly every European word for the cherry; and it was from Pontus, by the famous tradition, that the Roman general Lucullus carried the cultivated cherry home to Rome in 74 BCE. Anatolia has never given the cherry up. Turkey is today the largest grower of cherries on earth, of the sweet kiraz eaten fresh by the basketful and the sour vişne beloved in the kitchen, and the most cherished of all its cherry dishes is vişneli ekmek tatlısı, a glistening pudding of bread soaked in a syrup of sour cherries and crowned with thick clotted kaymak. In the cherry's birthplace the fruit is, as it has always been, both an everyday pleasure and a sweet of celebration.

The South Caspian and Northern IranAntiquity

On the humid, forested southern shore of the Caspian Sea, in the Iranian provinces of Gilan and Mazandaran and across the wider belt where the sweet cherry and the dwarf ground cherry meet, the sour cherry, Prunus cerasus, came into being and into cultivation. Persia made the sour cherry, the albaloo, peculiarly its own. Too sharp to eat fresh by the handful, the albaloo is the cherry of the Persian kitchen, and its supreme expression is albaloo polo, the jewelled rice in which layers of fluffy, saffron-scented basmati alternate with sweet-sour cherries stewed in sugar until they glow like garnets, the whole steamed to a golden crust and served at weddings and feasts. The same cherries are simmered with sugar into a thick ruby syrup and bottled as sharbat-e albaloo, diluted with iced water into the deep-pink sour-cherry drink that cools the Persian summer, and they are dried, pickled, and folded into stews besides. From this Caspian and Iranian heartland the taste for the sour cherry spread westward across Anatolia and, in time, into the cooking of the whole of Eastern and Central Europe.

Japan (the Flowering Cherry)Antiquity

East Asia raised its cherries quite apart from the West, and Japan made of the flowering cherry, Prunus serrulata and its many kin, the sakura, something found nowhere else: a cherry grown not for its fruit but for its flower, and a flower that is eaten. The Japanese flowering cherries, native to the islands and to the wider East Asian mainland, are the trees of the hanami, the spring blossom-viewing that is the great seasonal festival of the nation and the emblem of mono no aware, the bittersweet beauty of things that pass. From the Heian period the blossom was celebrated, and by the Edo period it had entered the kitchen: the pale-pink double blossoms and the young leaves of the cherry are pickled in salt and plum vinegar, and these salted blossoms (sakura no shiozuke) and leaves perfume the sweets of spring. The most beloved is sakura mochi, a sweet of pink-tinted glutinous rice wrapped around a heart of red bean paste and bound in a single salted cherry leaf, its faint, hauntingly floral-saline scent the very taste of the Japanese spring; and a single salted blossom, steeped in hot water, makes sakurayu, the celebratory cherry-blossom tea poured at weddings and betrothals in place of green tea. The Chinese, meanwhile, had long grown their own cherry, the yingtao (Prunus pseudocerasus), for its fruit, but it is Japan that turned the cherry into a flower for the table.

Rome, Roman Republic and Empirec. 74 BCE

The cherry entered the Western world through Rome, and the Romans told the story of its arrival with unusual precision. The general Lucullus, having defeated Mithridates VI of Pontus, is said by tradition to have brought the cultivated cherry tree back to Italy from the Pontic city of Cerasus in 74 BCE, and whether or not his was the first tree, the cherry took at once to Italian soil. Pliny the Elder, writing in the next century, names a string of varieties already cultivated, sweet and sour alike, and the Romans carried the tree the length of their empire, planting it in Gaul, Germania, and Britannia, so that the orchard cherry spread across temperate Europe in the wake of the legions. Italy has loved the cherry ever since, above all the dark sour amarena and visciola of the centre and south, which the Italian kitchen turns into preserves, gelato, and tarts. The most celebrated is the crostata di visciole, the lattice-topped tart of sour cherries that is a glory of the Roman Jewish kitchen, its filling of dark, winey, sugar-stewed wild cherries enclosed in a crisp short pastry: a dish that carries the memory of the very fruit Lucullus is said to have brought home.

The Limousin and Francec. 1500 CE

France took the sweet cherry the Romans had planted in Gaul and made it one of the fruits of the rural table, and nowhere more lovingly than in the Limousin, the green, orchard country of the centre, where the black cherry gave rise to the most famous of all French cherry dishes: the clafoutis. A clafoutis is simplicity itself, a thick, sweet, flan-like batter of eggs, milk, flour, and sugar poured over a dish of dark cherries and baked until set and golden, somewhere between a pancake, a custard, and a cake. The Limousin insists, with some passion, that the cherries be left unstoned, for the kernels lend a faint almond fragrance to the batter as it bakes, and that a clafoutis made with any other fruit is no clafoutis at all but a flaugnarde. Eaten warm and dusted with sugar, the cherry clafoutis is the taste of the French early summer, of the orchard and the farmhouse kitchen, and it has become, like so much of French country cooking, a dish loved far beyond the region that made it. France grows fine cherries the length of the Rhône and in the orchards of the south, and the fruit runs through its confectionery and its eaux-de-vie besides.

Hungary and Central Europec. 1500 CE

Carried west across Anatolia and through the Byzantine and Ottoman Balkans, the sour cherry sank deep into the cooking of Central and Eastern Europe, and nowhere did it find a more distinctive use than in Hungary, where the meggy, the Morello cherry, is made into one of the most surprising of all European dishes: meggyleves, cold sour cherry soup. Sour cherries are simmered with sugar, a little cinnamon and clove, and a splash of red wine, then enriched with soured cream whisked in off the heat and chilled until ice-cold, to be served not as a pudding but as a first course, a startling sweet-sour-creamy soup that opens the summer meal. The sour cherry runs through the whole of the Central and Eastern European table besides: folded into the strudel and the dumpling, baked into the Polish and Hungarian cakes, stuffed into pierogi and the steamed yeast dumplings of the region, and bottled as juice and liqueur. From the Hungarian plain to the Polish orchard and the Serbian garden, the višnja, the wiśnia, and the meggy are the cherries of cooking, the sharp red fruit that the cold-winter countries of Europe turn to soups, pastries, and preserves.

Kent, Englandc. 1533 CE

The Romans first brought the cherry to Britain, but it was in Tudor times that it found its English home. Around 1533 Richard Harris, fruiterer to Henry VIII, planted a great orchard of imported cherry and apple stock at Teynham in Kent, and from that planting grew the cherry country of England: Kent, the Garden of England, whose blossom-white orchards and summer cherry harvests became a fixture of English life, sold from barrows and celebrated in cherry fairs. The English took the sweet cherry to the pie and the pudding, and the orchard cherry of Kent became the fruit of high summer, eaten fresh from the bag and baked, dark and sweet, into the cherry pie beneath a sugared lattice. In the grand kitchens the cherry rose higher still: it was in London, for one of Queen Victoria's jubilee celebrations, that the great chef Auguste Escoffier is said to have created cherries jubilee, dark cherries warmed in syrup, flamed dramatically at the table with kirsch, and spooned over vanilla ice cream, a piece of theatre that became one of the most celebrated cherry desserts of the age.

The Black Forest, Germanyc. 1600 CE

In the cool uplands of the Black Forest in south-western Germany, the sour cherry and its spirit became the heart of a culinary tradition famous the world over. The region grew the dark Schattenmorelle and other sour cherries in quantity, and from them distilled kirschwasser, the clear, fierce cherry brandy that is the soul of the local kitchen. The two come together in the Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte, the Black Forest gâteau, which took its modern form in the early twentieth century: layers of dark chocolate sponge soaked in kirsch, stacked with whipped cream and sour cherries, and finished with more cream, a drift of chocolate shavings, and a crown of cherries. The dish became, in the second half of the century, one of the most famous cakes in the world, an emblem of German baking carried into every café and dinner party from Berlin to Sydney. Kirsch and the sour cherry run through the wider German and Alpine table besides, into the cherry strudel and the Kirschmichel, the batter pudding of the south, and into the chocolates and confections of the region; but it is the great cream-and-cherry gâteau of the Black Forest that the world remembers.

Zadar, Dalmatia (Croatia)c. 1700 CE

On the Dalmatian coast of the Adriatic, around the city of Zadar, grows a small, dark, intensely flavoured sour cherry, the marasca, and from it the Dalmatians made one of the most refined of all cherry products: maraschino, the clear cherry liqueur. Unlike the fruit brandies of the north, maraschino is distilled from the whole crushed cherry, stones and all, so that the bitter-almond note of the kernel marries the dark sweetness of the fruit, and the spirit is then sweetened and aged to a clear, fragrant, faintly bitter liqueur of great delicacy. Made in Zadar since at least the eighteenth century and carried across the courts of Europe, maraschino became the prized cherry cordial of the cocktail and the kitchen, the liqueur in which true maraschino cherries are steeped and the perfume behind a hundred classic drinks and desserts. The marasca cherry and its liqueur are the signature of the Dalmatian coast, and a reminder that the sour cherry, too sharp to eat, has always given its best in the bottle.

The Pacific North-West and the Great Lakes, United Statesc. 1850 CE

The cherry crossed the Atlantic with the colonists, but it was in the nineteenth-century American West that it became a great commercial fruit. In the orchards of the Willamette and the Columbia, in Oregon and Washington, the sweet cherry found a near-perfect climate, and in 1875 a dark, firm, sweet cherry raised on the Oregon farm of Seth Lewelling was named for his Chinese-American orchard foreman, Ah Bing: the Bing cherry, which became the dessert cherry of America and one of the most widely grown sweet cherries in the world. Around the Great Lakes, meanwhile, in the fruit belt of Michigan along the shore of Lake Michigan around Traverse City, the tart Montmorency cherry found its home, and the Michigan tart-cherry harvest came to supply the nation's pies. From these two orchards, sweet in the West and sour in the Midwest, came the American cherry pie, the deep, lattice-topped pie of sugared cherries that is one of the icons of American baking, bound up in the national imagination with summer, with the Fourth of July, and, by way of a tale every American child is told, with the honesty of young George Washington and the cherry tree he could not lie about.

The Gastrographer

The Gastrographer

Mapping Culinary History

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Ingredient originTrade or transit route
Became a culinary stapleColonial / trade control
c. 1850 CE
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1850 CE
Antiquity74 BCE1533 CE1850 CE
Cherry

Cherry

Prunus avium (sweet cherry); Prunus cerasus (sour or tart cherry); together with the East Asian flowering cherries (Prunus serrulata and its kin, the sakura), whose blossoms and leaves are used in Japanese cookery

FruitsRosaceae

🌍Origin

The temperate belt between the Black and Caspian Seas: Anatolia, the Caucasus, and northern Iran, homeland of the sweet cherry (Prunus avium) and the sour cherry (Prunus cerasus); with a wholly separate East Asian origin for the flowering cherries of Japan and China — Gathered wild since prehistory, named for the Pontic city of Cerasus, and carried to Rome by Lucullus in 74 BCE

🌱Domestication

The cherry belongs to the rose family and to the genus Prunus, the great clan of the stone fruits that also gives the plum, the peach, the apricot, and the almond; within it the cherries form their own group, the subgenus Cerasus, marked by their long-stalked fruit borne in clusters. Two species carry the whole weight of the cherry in the Western kitchen, and they are quite distinct. The sweet cherry, Prunus avium, the wild gean or mazzard, is a tall forest tree of Europe and western Asia, and it is the dessert cherry, eaten fresh and ripe: the Bing, the Rainier, the dark Lapins of the modern orchard all descend from it. The sour cherry, Prunus cerasus, is a smaller, hardier, more shrubby tree, and it is no simple species but an ancient natural hybrid, an allotetraploid born of a cross between the sweet cherry and the dwarf ground cherry (Prunus fruticosa) somewhere in the cool country between the Black and Caspian Seas. Its fruit is too sharp to eat raw with pleasure but unrivalled in the pot: the Morello, the Montmorency, the Amarena, the Persian albaloo, the cherry of pies, preserves, soups, and the bottle.

The two were gathered and grown together across their shared homeland, the broad belt of Anatolia, the Caucasus, and northern Iran, and it is from a city of that coast that the cherry takes its very name. On the far side of the world, quite separately, East Asia raised its own cherries: the Chinese cherry (Prunus pseudocerasus, the yingtao), cultivated for its fruit for some three thousand years, and the flowering cherries of Japan (Prunus serrulata and its kin), the sakura, grown not for fruit at all but for blossom, whose salted flowers and leaves are a true ingredient of the Japanese kitchen. A handful of further cherries skirt the table: the mahaleb (Prunus mahaleb), whose ground kernels, mahleb, scent the festive breads of Greece and the Levant, and the cornelian cherry (Cornus mas), a dogwood and no true cherry at all, gathered for its tart red fruit across Anatolia and the Caucasus.

Global Voyage

The cherry's westward journey is one of the best-documented of any fruit, for the Romans recorded it. Both the sweet and the sour cherry grew wild across the lands between the Black and Caspian Seas, and it was from the Pontic city of Cerasus, modern Giresun on the Black Sea coast of Turkey, that the cultivated cherry took its name. By tradition the Roman general Lucullus, having defeated Mithridates of Pontus, carried the cherry tree back to Rome in 74 BCE; whether or not he brought the first tree, the cherry was established in Italy within a generation, and Pliny the Elder, writing a century later, lists the varieties already grown. From Rome the legions and colonists carried the sweet cherry across the empire, planting it through Gaul, Germania, and Britannia, so that the orchard cherry spread the length of temperate Europe. In England it found its great home in the orchards of Kent, planted in earnest in the reign of Henry VIII and making that county the Garden of England; with the colonists it crossed the Atlantic, and in 1875 the orchard foreman Ah Bing gave his name to the dark, firm sweet cherry of the Pacific North-West that became the dessert cherry of America, whilst the tart-cherry orchards of Michigan supplied its pies.

The sour cherry told a parallel tale. In Persia and the lands of the south Caspian it became the albaloo, the sour cherry whose dried and fresh fruit perfumes the great jewelled rice albaloo polo. Carried west across Anatolia and through the Byzantine and Ottoman Balkans, the sour cherry sank deep into the cooking of Central and Eastern Europe: the meggy of Hungary and its cold cherry soup, the wiśnia of Poland, the višnja of the Serbs, and the Schattenmorelle of the German Black Forest, where cherries and their kirsch crown the chocolate gâteau. On the Dalmatian coast the small dark marasca cherry was distilled into maraschino, the cherry liqueur of Zadar. And in the East, in Japan, the flowering cherry became something it became nowhere else: not a fruit but a flower for eating, its blossoms and young leaves salt-pickled to scent the sweets and rice of spring.

🍽Modern Culinary Role

The cherry divides cleanly into its sweet and sour halves, and the two are scarcely interchangeable. The sweet cherry (Prunus avium) is above all a fruit to eat fresh, the glossy dark Bing and the blushing yellow-pink Rainier of the early-summer market, and Turkey, the United States, and Chile lead the world in growing it; in the kitchen it is folded, dark and whole, into the batter of a French clafoutis, and it is the fruit of the fresh cherry season everywhere it will grow. The sour cherry (Prunus cerasus), too sharp for the hand, is the cherry of cooking: the Morello and Montmorency of the pie and the preserve, the Amarena of the Italian confectioner, the albaloo of the Persian rice pot, the meggy of the Hungarian soup, and the Schattenmorelle that, with its kirsch, defines the Black Forest gâteau. From sour cherries come the great cherry drinks, the Persian sharbat, the Dalmatian maraschino, and the kirschwasser of the Rhine.

The cherry carries a weight of meaning beyond the plate. In Japan the flowering cherry, the sakura, is the very emblem of the nation and of the fleeting beauty of life, and its salted blossoms and leaves flavour the pink sakura mochi and the celebratory blossom tea of spring. In the West the cherry is the fruit of fleeting summer and of small indulgence, its season short and its image everywhere, from the glacé cherry of the cake to the bright maraschino of the cocktail, from the cherry orchard of Chekhov to the cherry tree of the young George Washington. Grown across every temperate land, eaten fresh by the handful and cooked into the most beloved of puddings and preserves, the cherry remains one of the most universally cherished of all the stone fruits.

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