Dried Cherry History
In the late 1970’s an experiment was done on the campus of Utah State University. A group of food scientists along with some faculty and
staff from the Horticulture department decided to see if they could dry some tart cherries in one of the ovens located in the food science
department on campus. It was a very small scale operation but yielded some very promising dried cherries. The group rolled them in sugar and
called them snow cherries. They began to hand out samples of these snow cherries around campus to see if the reaction to them was positive. It
was.
Soon after one of the professors from Utah State University attended a Payson Fruit Grower board meeting to introduce the “snow cherry” to the board. I was on the board and was impressed along with the other members of the Payson Fruit Grower board. Payson Fruit Growers at that time was one of the newest members of Cherry Central, a marketing co-op for cherries and other fruits and was based in Michigan. Read More
The new Super Fruit
A Few years ago we were growing tart cherries primarily for the dessert trade. We would pack our red tart cherries in 30
pound containers that contained 25 pounds of red tart cherries and 5 pounds of sugar. This was the industry pack and was called 5+1, meaning
five pounds of red tart cherries to every pound of sugar. We used pure granulated sugar. These buckets of cherries would be purchased by various
pie filling companies or jam companies to be used in mostly desserts and preserves.
As time went on the American public became more and more health conscious and didn’t eat as many red tart cherries. Demand was down and so was the cherry prices. As an industry we have worked hard to change the image of red tart cherries. Through a lot of study and experimentation the red tart cherry has now emerged as the "New Super Fruit".
It has so many health benefits, is loaded with antioxidants, melatonin, and many other anti inflammatory properties. It is so gratifying to be growing red tart cherries, the new "Super Fruit".

Helping the local economy is not the only reason to buy fruit from Utah. It is the knowledge that fruit from Utah is fresher and tastes
better then other fruit that can be found in the produce isle. This can be attributed to many things such as shorter shipping time from the orchard to
the consumer.




