Muscadet de Dieppe cider apple trees
Malus domestica - Picking season: Mid
- Self-fertility: Not self-fertile
- Flowering group: 2
Muscadet de Dieppe is a very old good quality French bittersweet cider variety, originally from the area around the Normandie port of Dieppe.
Muscadet de Dieppe organic cider apple trees for sale
1 yeartree on MM111 rootstock25.25€
Large tree
(3m-5m after 10 years)
Bare-root
Sold-out
Contact us if you would like to go on the waiting list for next season.
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Muscadet de Dieppe characteristics
- Gardening skillAverage
- Self-fertilityNot self-fertile
- Flowering group2
- Disease resistanceAverage
- Picking seasonMid
- Season of use2-3 weeks
- Food usesHard cider
- Cold hardiness (USDA)Zone 4 (-34C)
- Summer average maximum temperaturesCool ( 20-24C / 68-75F)Warm (25-30C / 76-85F)
- Country of originFrance
- Period of origin1700 - 1749
- Fruit colourOrange flush
Similar varieties
Amere NouvelleAmere Nouvelle is a traditional French bittersweet cider apple.
DabinettDabinett is a traditional English cider apple variety, producing a bittersweet juice.
Kingston BlackKingston Black is one of the premier English cider varieties and produces a bittersharp juice.
MichelinMichelin (or Normandie Blanc) is a traditional French cider apple variety producing a bittersweet juice.
More about cider apple trees
Cider production in Europe is traditionally associated with three main regions - Asturias in north west Spain, Bretagne and Normandie in north west France, and the "west country" area of south-west England. These regions all face the Atlantic ocean and have cool temperate maritime climates.
Cider can of course be made with any variety of apples, but in these three regions apple varieties have evolved which are specifically intended for cider production - they have high levels of tannins which give "body" to the resulting cider, but which make them very unpalatable to eat fresh.
Good quality cider is almost always made with a blend of different apple varieties, using bitter, sweet, and sharp flavour components. It is quite common to mix in regular cooking and dessert apples to lend extra flavours.
If you are in an area with a hotter continental climate (with average summer maximum temperatures routinely over 30C) then you might want to consider using apple varieties that can withstand warmer temperatures, but still have good juice qualities. In this case rather than using European varieties you might want to seek inspiration from the very different "hard cider" traditions of North America, where dessert and crab-apples are widely used.
We have a good range of traditional English and French cider varieties, as well as a number of mainstream apple varieties with good juice qualities that lend themselves to cider production.