How the Government Almost Killed the Apple
...and how the free market is saving it.

Prohibition's 14-year span in the early 20th century caused a boozy brain drain as droves of American bartenders shuttered their watering holes and moved abroad. With them went America's Golden Age of Cocktails. Reason's Peter Suderman in 2017 brilliantly laid out the backstory behind how the federal government almost killed the cocktail. But the government's anti-alcohol tantrum also nearly killed off another product further up the alcohol supply chain—the humble apple.
America's Apple Exceptionalism
Today, the produce section of your average American grocery store is dominated by a small handful of commercial apples. A mere 5–10 varietals—such as the ubiquitous Red and Golden Delicious, Gala, Granny Smith, and Honeycrisp—rule the country's apple market. In my humble opinion, other than the flavorful Honeycrisp (developed via cross-breeding at the University of Minnesota in the 1960s), these varietals are largely bland, flavorless, and uninspiring.
It wasn't always this way. In the 18th and 19th centuries, America was home to well over 10,000 apple varieties, more than any other nation on earth. The names were as wide-ranging and extraordinary as the species diversity, with monikers like Yarlington Mill, Spitzenburg, Northern Spy, and Winter Banana.
America's apple exceptionalism came long before the Department of Agriculture doled out millions of dollars in annual grants to farmers, and even before land grant colleges were established to advance the nation's agricultural knowledge. Instead, it was almost entirely a bottom-up, grassroots groundswell that solidified the country's apple hegemony, with nearly every farm in early America containing an apple orchard—and nearly every American (nine out of 10) living on a farm.
To understand the story of the apple, one must first understand the story of cider. Nowadays called "hard cider," cider's American bona fides ironically far outstrip that of apple pie—with alcoholic cider's roots tracing back to the very birth of our nation. Heralded by some as the "fuel of the revolution," cider was not only allegedly passed out to both colonial and British troops during lulls in the action at the Battle of Concord, but it helped propel George Washington's first election to the Virginia House of Burgesses by ensuring his voters were well-lubricated. John Adams drank a gill of cider for breakfast before his daily five-mile walks, Thomas Jefferson made cider at his Monticello orchards, and Ben Franklin famously quipped: "He that drinks his cyder alone, let him catch his horse alone."
Given its role as cider's irreplaceable ingredient, the apple rose hand in hand with cider as a sine qua non of early American life. Needless to say, cider is only as good as the apples that go into it, which is why the nearly endless variety of apples found in 18th and 19th century America produced some of the most unique and flavorful ciders the world has ever known. In the words of cicerone Michael Agnew, these early apples were "cultivated for their tannins and acidity, [and] produced complex quaffs with flavors that rivaled fine wine, quite unlike the sweetened, alco-pop or non-alcoholic juice-in-a-jug that passes for cider today."
Early Americans consumed an average of 35 gallons of cider per year, in part because it was much safer to imbibe than water. "Up until Prohibition, an apple grown in America was far less likely to be eaten than to wind up in a barrel of cider," as author Michael Pollan noted. "In rural areas cider took the place of not only wine and beer but of coffee and tea, juice, and even water."
Proverbs 27 intones: "If you care for your orchard, you'll enjoy its fruit." But America didn't care for its orchards. At the very moment cider, and the apple, were becoming hard-wired pieces of Americana, everything began to change. First, the European revolutions of 1848 spurred a wave of German immigration to the United States. Unsurprisingly, more Germans meant more beer, which provided a ready challenger to contest cider's heavyweight title as America's alcoholic beverage of choice. Around the same time, the Industrial Revolution led to America's first great urbanization push—and German immigrants themselves were part of this trend, choosing to settle in Upper Midwest cities like Milwaukee.
This provided a natural competitive advantage for beer over cider, as grains like barley and wheat were cheaper to grow, easier to haul into urban environs, and less perishable than the apple. "Beer was made in breweries, which are like factories—they're modern," as William Kerrigan, author of Johnny Appleseed and the American Orchard: A Cultural History, pointed out. "Beer seemed cleaner and a more efficient, modern drink."
Prohibition Enters the Picture
As cider declined in prominence, the bucolic rural apple orchard became less important to the American lifestyle. But while the apple was already declining across the nation's cultural landscape, it was the U.S. government that delivered the coup de grâce to this noble fruit.
With Prohibition's advent in 1920, not only alcohol but also the ingredients that made alcohol became public enemy No. 1. As Smithsonian Magazine recounts, FBI agents took to chopping down acres and acres of backwoods apple orchards, "effectively erasing cider…from American life."
Even if they escaped the G-men's axes, orchard owners had little incentive to maintain their orchards in the absence of cider. "[Prohibition] caused orchards to stop growing cider apples altogether, dealing our cider tradition—and the apples themselves—a death blow," writes Jonathan Frochtzwajg of Modern Farmer.
Whether at the foot of an ax, or via the headwinds of the temperance-induced gutting of the apple's highest and best economic use as a progenitor of cider, the American apple would never be the same. "Among the causes that contributed to the demise of cider in the United States, without question the Temperance Movement belongs near the top of the list," according to David R. Williams of George Mason University.
By the time Prohibition ended nearly 14 years later, America's cider and apple culture had been decimated. Part of this is attributable to the fact that mechanized urban breweries were better positioned to weather Prohibition, given that the factory setting allowed for a more ready transition to other product lines like soft drinks or selling ice during the country's dry spell.
An additional factor is inherent to the apple itself. Barley and wheat grow as annual crops, which allows their production to be curtailed or ramped up on relatively short notice, thereby allowing breweries to spring back into action quickly once Prohibition ended. In contrast, planting a new orchard means committing to a 25-year investment—one which, quite literally, takes at least three to six years to bear fruit. "When prohibition ended in the 1930s, there was neither the desire nor the means to resuscitate the cider industry," notes Williams.
To the extent the apple maintains its titular banner today as America's most popular fruit, it is only in the form of those aforementioned, depressingly bland grocery store varietals. These homogeneously boring modern apples are a poor substitute for their pre-Prohibition ancestors. By the 1990s, commercial orchards were growing fewer than 100 types of apples, with a mere 11 varietals constituting 90 percent of grocery sales. Over 10,000 apple varieties are believed to have gone extinct since Prohibition.
Apples Bounce Back
Were the story to end there, we would likely be forever condemned to a never-ending conveyor belt of Galas and Granny Smiths in the produce aisle. But just as the apple's fall came at the very moment it reached its apex, its resurrection began only once it hit its nadir. For while the government nearly killed the apple, the free market is saving it.
As America's modern craft cider boom took hold in recent decades, cidermakers began scouring the countryside for those unique, flavorful, spectacularly named apple varietals of yesteryear. Often called "spitter apples'' since they are less sweet than the standard grocery store offerings, thousands of heirloom apple varietals thought to be lost are being rediscovered, and saved, by American cidermakers.
Stories abound of Appalachian apple enthusiasts who have saved thousands of "lost" apple varieties and now work closely with craft cidermakers. Famed cidermaker Diane Flynt of Foggy Ridge Cider, whom many consider the founder of today's craft cider movement, has credited cider's modern rise as being built "on the backs of these old fashioned apples…. If I didn't have these apples, my cider wouldn't taste very good."
Flynt, who won a James Beard Award in 2018, recently took things even further by shuttering Foggy Ridge to concentrate solely on apple growing. Other Virginia cideries, like Blue Bee Cider and Albemarle Ciderworks have helped save the Hewes Crab apple—a favorite of both Washington and Jefferson. The Hewes Crab was presumed to be extinct before a solitary tree was discovered near Williamsburg in the 1990s. Other heirlooms are similarly enjoying a renaissance, such as the Arkansas Black, another beloved cider-making apple.
Slowly but surely, the epic names are reentering the American lexicon: Bitter Buckingham, White Winter Jon, Royal Lemon, Candy Stripe, and Black Winesap. For that, we can thank Adam Smith's invisible hand—which, a hundred years later, has finally stayed the hand of the government's apple ax.
American '76 Recipe
A patriotic spin on the French 75, this libation celebrates cider's irreplaceable role in the American story.
3 ounces of craft cider
2 ounces of bourbon
½ an ounce of lemon juice
½ an ounce of maple syrup
Heirloom apple slice
Shake bourbon, lemon juice, and maple syrup in a shaker filled with ice. Double-strain into a rocks glass containing fresh ice; top with cider and give a quick stir. Garnish with a slice of your favorite heirloom apple varietal—and save the Red Delicious for the fruit salad.
Recipe adapted from Give Me Liberty and Give Me a Drink! by Jarrett Dieterle.
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Thanks for the story. I had no idea.
Having recently started exploring non-alcoholic beers for medical reasons, I wonder whether there are similar beginnings of a tasty, fermented, non-alcoholic cider movement?
They already do make non-alcoholic apple cider. Across the country, you can find small cider mills making fresh apple cider just like that, and the process is as old as the one for hard cider.
Here's one example: https://www.franklincidermill.com/
I see no indication of alcohol-free cider on the Franklin web site. Too bad.
Do you really not know about non-alcoholic cider?
Well, if I knew about it, I wouldn't have posted that comment, now, would I?
Maybe the medical condition is that he ages in reverse and, in another couple years, he'll need someone to provide him non-fermented wine... in a sippy cup.
I've never much cared for non alcoholic beverages any more than decafinated beverages. But I understand when the doctor gives you that look it's time to quit. I stopped brewing for damn near a decade because I went on dialysis. The more liquid goes in the harder they have to work to get it out. Now I've got a spare kidney and I'm back brewing.
Look into a place online Northern Brewing. You can find kits for non alcoholic beverages. They've always done good for me.
Uh, sure. If we only had 10,000 varieties of apples again, everything would be right with America.
And speaking of cocktails, seems like Reason staff have been spending too much time again on the cocktail party circuit.
A nice little article about how idiocy all but wiped out the apple and how now it's making a comeback and a nice little cocktail recipie at the end.
And you have to bitch about it too.
Does nothing make you happy?
I guess weekends are for Ladies' Home Reason, and readers who prefer that.
A happy success story once in a while makes the sting of reality not so bad.
Try pulling the stick out of your ass. It might just help you relax and be happy once in a while.
Yes. Very interesting article. Did not know any of this history. Thanks for publishing.
It's not often I get recipes from political magazines, but this one's definitely a keeper. Thanks!
Nevertheless, I've made a good, dry apfelwein from supermarket filtered apple juice, sugar, and baking yeast. I let it go until the fermentation considerably slows, then add more sugar and ferment again. The last 2 weeks of fermentation continues after decanting and is tightly capped to build a little fizz.
I use Northern Brewing as a source for Apple juice concentrate for my ciders. You can also get pear and other fruits for making cider. If you are feeling wealthy add around two pounds of honey per gallon of final product and make an old fashioned malomel.
Brewing yeasts also help get higher percentages of booze with less time. Worth the extra money.
If a Golden Delicious apple is yellow, it's too ripe and so, too sweet.
An apple should be crisp and at least a bit tart.
Grew up on an orchard; MacIntosh was my favorite for exactly the reason you mentioned. That tartness!
I've no clue what apples I ate as a kid. The orchard on the family farm was huge and just the windfalls made all the canned apple products 4 families could eat. We must have had a dozen varieties of apples out there.
"But just as the apple's fall came at the very moment it reached its apex, its resurrection began only once it hit its nadir."
I was finding the story interesting - after all, I live in the Apple Capital of the World - until the assertion above. I mean, DUH! If the apple hadn't fallen at the apex it wouldn't have been the apex, now would it? And if it hadn't been resurrected at its nadir, that wouldn't have been its nadir, amiright?
Not mentioned in this article is how the government almost destroyed the apple crop in Washington state by cracking down on the migrant apple pickers. All one needs to prove the stupidity of the American government is right there - watching a billion dollar crop of apples rotting on the trees.
Seems to me we used to have a thriving legal migrant picker system where they went home to Mexico after the season was over, rather than sticking around to collect social welfare benefits. Maybe that was the change, rather than the "crackdown".
Not sure if the derived from pre-prohibition apples, but as a kid I knew a family up in the Sierra Nevadas (just below Yosemite) that had an apple orchard, with each tree being a different varietal. It was not commercial, and it had gone a bit to seed, but I remember every tree had apples that tasted a bit different. And not one was a crabapple.
I had always thought it was industrialization that led to the homogenization of apples, just as it led to the homogenization of beer. Europe never got prohibition, but some sort of continental lager dominates all its countries (except for British Isles where a variety of ales clung on tenaciously). But prohibition still took it's toll in the US and there was not excuse for that brand of social conservatism using the boot of the state to stop people having some cheer.
There's a Heritage Apple Project at Washington State University. I contacted him before Covid because I have two hundred year old apple trees in my back yard. The lab he used wasn't available during the government Covid shutdown but I should contact him again. I read somewhere that he had over 400 apple trees, presumably multiple of each type so not sure how many heritage apples he's found.
https://genomics.wsu.edu/lost-apples-and-heritage-apples-of-the-palouse/
I also notice that I might not be commenting here much longer. Not planning on subscribing but for some reason i can still post here.