|
 "Galaxy," nicknamed the "Bagel Peach" for its shape and size, is
a sweet-tasting, white-fleshed fruit from ARS plant breeders in Parlier, Calif.
Click the image for more information about it.
Read the
magazine
story to find out more. |
New Peach Looks Funny, Tastes Great
By Marcia
Wood April 5, 2004
A fun-to-eat peach called "Galaxy" has a great taste and an
amusing, flat shape. It looks something like a bagel, and tastes sweet and
juicy.
Offered to nurseries and researchers for the first time last
year by Agricultural Research Service tree fruit breeders in California, Galaxy
is what fruit fanciers will recognize as a "peento" peach, short for the
original Chinese "Pan Tao."
Galaxy has a delightful, delicate aroma; light-cream skin
accented with an attractive red blush; and pleasantly firm-textured white
flesh. It ripens at the same time of year--the third to fourth week of June--as
a popular peento peach called Saturn. But Galaxy is bigger.
Geneticist David W. Ramming and colleagues at the ARS
Postharvest Quality and
Genetics Research Unit in Parlier developed Galaxy in 10 years of fruit
breeding and testing. The new peach's lineage includes a nectarine developed by
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
researchers and a peento peach from Rutgers
University.
In 1994, Ramming hybridized, or crossed, the parent peaches that
would yield Galaxy. The following year, he singled out Galaxy for further study
in his research orchards at the ARS San
Joaquin Valley Agricultural Sciences Center in Parlier and those of the
neighboring Kearney
Agricultural Center.
So far, Ramming's team has provided more than 33,000 buds for
staffers at tree fruit nurseries to graft to familiar rootstocks. Galaxy
peaches may begin showing up in supermarkets in 2006.
Like most peaches, Galaxy is self-pollinating, so it doesn't
require proximity to other peach trees--a boon for backyard gardeners who don't
have room for more than one peach tree. And, although not yet tested outside of
California, Galaxy might do well in southern peach-growing states such as
Georgia and South Carolina
Read more
about the research in the April 2004 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture's chief scientific
research agency. |