In the last 10 years, collecting apples has been getting a bit depressing. Bell's Orchards succumbed to ills of their own making. Even before they lost it all, they were slowly carving pieces of their orchard away for home developments. Another large orchard west of Libertyville closed last year, sold all their land for development. Every year I have to go a little further to get my 2-3 bushels of apples I need. I think thanks to Jlawrence I have found a new orchard, which will be around for some time to come. Yesterday, I drove 55 miles north and west to Royal Oak Farm in Harvard, Illinois.
Royal Oak Farm is only 12 years old and opened to the public 7 years ago. They planted 1,000 apple trees this year and plan to plant an additional 1,000 trees next year. They plant disease resistant apple trees, then use integrated pest management to minimize the use of pesticides. The trees I saw were of smallish stature to make them easy to pick from and minimize injuries. This is a very well thought out orchard using cutting edge information to maximize yield and minimize maintenance.
As of yesterday, they still had trees available for picking apples. These are not cheap apples, they were $36 per bushel. I bought utility apples that were either dinged or thrown to the ground before collecting at $9 per half bushel. Immediately, one bushel (half Empire/half Gala) is going to applesauce. The rest will be eaten directly or made into pies over the next few weeks.
The orchard also has u-pick raspberries in mid-July, peaches in early August and pumpkins and gourds beginning in early September. Peach trees are not really recommended for this region because their bloom time is in the period where frost can still occur. Maybe they found a variety which blossoms in a sequence workable for this region. I cannot wait to do that next August.
They make pies on the premises, including the crust. I chatted up the ladies to learn they make 6 piecrusts at a time. Their dough is flour, Crisco, salt, water, an egg and vinegar. I'm still puzzling over the addition of vinegar, which the lady admitted she does not use at home. I noticed the apples in their pies had collapsed quite a bit while cooking because the crust was higher than the pies filling. I inquired what they used, because I wanted to avoid using it myself. They use whatever apples come for the orchard and mix them. From the varieties available that day, I will guess they used a Gala.
They have a small cafeteria with food, which seems more made on the premises than from an institution. Since I already had lunch, I split a slice of Pecan Pie and Apple Slice with Cream Cheese Frosting with my Mom. Usually, apple slices have a confectioner's sugar glaze, so the cream cheese was an improvement.
They have a play area for the children and gift shop for bigger people. A retail barn where you can purchase pre-picked fruits or arrange to pick them yourselves.
Ironically, to me anyway, the owner was a home developer before he started the orchard. He bought plenty of land to allow for expansion and plans to keep it as an orchard. The large lovely home behind the active commercial area appears to be the owners.
The owners observe the Sabbath, so they are closed on Sunday.
Please note they were selling apple wood useful for smoking in $5 bundles. Each bundle had roughly 5 logs about 2 feet long and 3-5 inches in diameter. They may not always be available, however it is a source.
Royal Oak Farm Orchard
15908 Hebron Road
Harvard, IL
Tel: 815/648-4141
www.royaloakfarmorchard.com