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The Rural Voice, 1999-03, Page 43By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger Last November a friend offered me a gift that brought a rush of memories of something I had not enjoyed for a long time. Wrapped carefully in tissue was a large round golden fruit, very firm, almost waxy to the touch, which was topped off with a pair of sage coloured leaves, fuzzy and soft to the touch on the underside and almost fabric -like in texture on the topside. It was a ripe quince and its perfume was sweet and exotic. My senses immediately took me back to the kitchen of my childhood with my great grandmother standing over a steaming kettle of quince with rows of jars filled with pink quince jelly. I haven't enjoyed that flavour since she died. I immediately decided that I should have a quince tree in our garden in memory of "Gommie". It would seem the quest will be easier said than done. It you are not familiar with quince it is a novelty now but once was a piece de resistance on the pioneer table. Quince were first introduced to western Europe via the Arab culture. During the first millennium B.C. the warriors of Islam swept over the Mediterranean countries bringing with them foods for their own enjoyment that later became commercial crops. Quince arrived with honey from Isfahan (Caucasus region). Its Latin name Cydonia oblonga comes from Cydon, a city in Crete, where the quince seems to have first attracted attention, at least the attention of someone able to publicize it. The Greeks and Romans associated quince with love, happiness and fruitfulness and dedicated it to Venus. There has been a hint that these were the golden apples awarded to victorious warriors. A hard, astringent, dry fruit, it looks somewhat like a squat knobby pear with a fuzzy skin that gets smoother as it ripens. You cannot pick one up and munch away on it Gardening Romance of the Quince like an apple or pear as it has the power to pucker the sweetest of faces. The yellow flesh cooks to a pale pink and makes delicious jelly. It can be cooked the same as apples in pies and cobblers but needs a little extra time in the oven. It is unusual to find quince today and it could be due in no small part to the invasion of convenience foods. There have been a number of years where Mom didn't make jam and jellies since it was cheaper to buy them ready made. And since quince are only edible when cooked it makes them a poor choice for quick. convenient snacks. The tree itself is dwarf in height (10 to 20 feet although I have never seen it over 10 feet) and very thickety in appearance. Very well behaved, it doesn't drop branches, send up excess water shoots, or off shoots at the base. It makes a splendid focal point in the garden or a wonderful old -fashioned hedge. Since the quince has this marvelous dwarf habit it has been used to develop dwarf pear trees. In fact in researching this column my first resources were only concerned with its dwarfing ability on pears. Quince prospers in well -drained warm soil although it will get along in other soils including heavy clay. It enjoys a bit of shallow cultivation and mulching is preferred although any of the trees I have seen are grown in the lawn and are neither cultivated nor mulched. It requires very light if any, pruning and keep in mind that it ' fruits on new wood. Keep an eye out for fire blight, promptly breaking off any blackened branches and burning them. Don't confuse this with the blackish knots of the trunksand branches, which are normal characteristic of old trees and should not be cut off. It is hardy to zone 5 and needs only itself to set fruit. Quince ripen very late into the year and are ready for picking v. hen they turn yellow. While they niay be hard to the squeeze the skin is easily bruised. So where do you get a quince tree? You just don't see them at your local nurseries and have to go one step further and call a grower. My quest took me to Shelly Paulocik of Woodwinds Nursery near Bluevale. If you are looking for heirloom fruit trees or fruit trees suitable to your space and garden conditions, Shelly is the lady to talk to. Woodwinds did work with quince rootstock a few years ago with an eye to developing a line of dwarf pear trees but were not very successful. Shelly did refer to a publication Fruits of Ontario published at the turn of the century, where two varieties of quince were listed. The Orange variety ripened in late September or October and the Champion variety in midwinter. Both varieties can be found in old gardens today. Shelly did offer me a nursery in Montreal that carried the rootstock of the Orange Quince. I could try rooting a cutting from another quince tree. Apparently it can be successful with one to two year-old wood. In the meantime I am going to try growing a quince tree from the seeds of my gift. 1 know the seeds may be a fickle source, not growing true to its parent, but it is worth a try. After all don't alt gardeners enjoy challenges like this'?0 Rhea Hamilton -Seeger and her husband raise two children at their home near Auburn. She is a skilled cook and gardener. MARCH 1999 39