River Valley Organics
Producer Profile
Producers: George and Apple Otte
Located in: Tonasket, Wash.
Supplying PCC since: 2000
Featured produce: Lapin cherries, Gala, Fuji, Honeycrisp and Cameo apples, Bosc pears.
What makes their fruit great: Says Apple “Honestly, I think it’s my husband. He’s just an amazing farmer. He’s always had a green thumb even before we had the orchard, when we were just gardening. He can just make things wonderful when he’s growing them.” See for yourself on this video tour of their orchards!
Thoughts on farming, gardening: “I noticed when our kids were young that having a garden really changes the way kids relate to food and vegetables. There’s nothing like being able to go out into the garden or the orchard and just pick things right off the bush or the tree.”
Fun fact: Mrs. Otte began going by the name “Apple” in the 1970s. She says she likes how the word (and the fruit) connotes both nature and domesticity. Her favorite apple is the Cameo because of its versatility.
Getting back to the land
Driving north up Highway 97 into the Okanogan Valley, it’s hard to imagine that sweet, juicy dark cherries, crisp apples and elegant Bosc pears emerge from such an arid, dramatic landscape. Massive slabs of rock scraped bare by ancient glaciers rise to meet the sky in this north-central patch of Washington.
On a slope near Tonasket, George and Apple Otte lovingly tend their orchard with careful attention to their land, their workers and their customers.
“We enjoy the connection with consumers, finding homes for our fruit,” says Apple, “With a variety of fruit we can satisfy different tastes, and we like having different fruits throughout the summer to offer.”
“ What I appreciate about PCC is its concern and care about where the food comes from — it's all part of the cycle. ” — Apple Otte
Variety also is practical. “From a pest perspective,” she says, “it’s better to have more variety of fruit so not all your eggs are in one basket. More variety leads to more biologic and economic sustainability.”
George likes to grow organically to take care of the earth and the environment. “You can walk into an organic orchard and see living things. In a non-organic orchard, it’s a sterile environment and you don’t see any signs of life [such as birds or insects],” says George. Chemical sprays are designed to kill living things and get into the food chain.
Back in 1976, the Ottes initially came to Tonasket to pick fruit. “We wanted to get back to the land,” says Apple. They settled in the area and started raising a family, with Apple involved in the local Head Start program and George working for different orchardists on contracts.
“We always thought about having our own orchard,” they say. But after the Ottes bought their orchard, River Valley Organics, in 1997, “We discovered with your own place you work twice as hard!” Apple laughs.
They actually picked fruit on the orchard they now own. “This piece of land always felt blessed by the love and care the people who owned it before us put into it. They planted more variety of trees, although they did not grow organically.”
During their first year as owners, it was too late in the season to switch to organic methods and some of the pickers got rashes on their arms. The next season George and Apple started the transition to organic. “Growing organically takes more effort because it requires careful monitoring of the trees, and the timing of treatments is important,” says Apple. Following organic standards, they use some plant-derived sprays and natural fish and kelp-based fertilizers.
“The goal with organic is to have many predator insects in your orchard.” George adds. “Predator insects don’t necessarily eat all of a pest insect population (such as aphids), but they keep the pests under control.”
Finding this balance is labor intensive, and the Ottes use numerous strategies. Apple points to tall grass growing at the base of a tree in their orchard and explains that the weeds are from a seed mixture they plant in the orchard that provides good predator insect habitat. “In conventional orchards, growers spray the weeds, but we cut them with a weed eater instead to maintain the habitat.”
Some other ways the Ottes attack pest insects include manually snipping off aphid infestations, putting pheromone strips in the trees to confuse the pest insects so they can’t mate, and stuffing wadded newspaper into the trees for an earwig habitat (they eat pest insects). Apple says they also conserve water by using low-pressure misters for irrigation.
With all the labor involved in growing organically, farm workers are an essential part of the operation. “We tend to pay as much or more than most orchardists because George was employed for so long as an employee and he knows it’s hard work,” says Apple. “Also, we believe if you treat people fairly, they’ll do a good job. Working with PCC has enabled us to pay workers more so they can survive and want to come back. Workers like working on organic farms for health reasons, also.”
With a relatively small orchard such as the Ottes (18 acres in fruit), they seem more directly and personally involved than you might find at bigger farms. “There’s a lot of waste in big operations,” says Apple. “A lot of what grows doesn’t make grade due to cosmetic reasons. We try to find homes for all our fruit. The top grades go to PCC, lesser grades go to farmers’ markets, and then we make cider with the cull fruit and drink it all winter,” she explains. “For small farms to compete, we build relationships. People like fruit grown by people they know.”
At the Otte farm, they also try to spread out the cherry harvest rather than picking all at once like some bigger, conventional farms. “The Lapin cherries don’t ripen up all at the same time, so we try to pick the cherries selectively at the right time and achieve more balance,” remarks Apple.
It’s clear their orchard is a labor of love for George and Apple. As Apple stands in their orchard on a breezy spring day and spontaneously touches the trees, she says with sincerity, “My relationship to the place is one of love and appreciation. I feel thankful to the trees. We are so fortunate how the orchard has done through the care of George, but there’s good energy here. It’s sort of a two-way thing — we take care of the trees and they take care of us.”
“I see it as a whole cycle,” says Apple, “growing fruit, marketing, selling and the connection with consumers is part of the cycle. What I appreciate about PCC is its concern and care about where the food comes from — it’s all part of the cycle.”
By Jill Irwin (Sound Consumer, July 2005. Updated December 2009.)
- 5-Color Quinoa Salad
- Almond Angel Food Cake with Port-infused Cherries
- Apple Chicken Salad
- Apple Chutney
- Apple Coriander Chutney
- Apple Dumplings with Cider-Cinnamon Sauce
- Apple or Pear Custard Tart
- Apple Quinoa Salad with Curry Dressing
- Apple Salad
- Apple, Bok Choy and Carrot Slaw
- Baked Apple French Toast
- Baked Apples with Maple-Cranberry Butter
- Baked Ginger Pears
- Baked Organic Washington State Apples with Ginger-Hazelnut-Cranberry Butter
- Baked Pears with Spiced Whipped Cream
- Beet and Apple Salad
- Bread Salad with Cherries, Goat Cheese and Arugula
- Brown Basmati Rice with Apples and Walnuts
- Butternut Squash-Apple Soup
- California Waldorf Salad
- Candied Pear Chutney
- Caramel Apple and Hazelnut Upside Down Tart with Berry Sauce and Crème Fraiche
- Caramel Apple Skillet Cake
- Caramel Upside-Down Cameo Apple Pie
- Caramelized Pear Sauce
- Charoset
- Cherry and Hazelnut Salad
- Chicken Cherry Pilaf
- Classic Apple Crisp
- Connemara Tart (Ireland)
- Cran-apple Crisp
- Cranberry & Apple Betty with Hard Sauce
- Cranberry-Pear Turnovers
- Creamy Butternut Squash and Pear Bisque
- Crispy Apple Triangles
- Crostata di Mele Apple Custard Tart
- Curried Chutney Spread on Crisp Apple Slices
- Danish Apple Pancake
- Double Apple Spice Muffins
- Dried Cherry Compote
- Easy New Taste Potato Salad
- Festive Fruit Chutney
- Fresh Summer Fruit Trifle
- German Cabbage
- Good Morning Coffee Cake
- Grilled Cherry-Pasilla Salsa
- Grilled Salmon Bistro Salad
- Handheld Apple Pies
- Homemade Apple or Pear Sauce
- Honey-Poached Pears with Crème Fraîche
- Hot and Bubbly Potato, Tart Apple and Cheese Gratin
- Humble Pumpkin Pudding
- Maple-roasted Brussels Sprouts with Cameo Apples and Delicata Squash
- Massaged Kale and Currant Salad
- Mixed Greens with Bosc Pears and Spicy Pecans
- Mousse au Chocolat with Dried Sour Cherry and Port Wine Sauce
- Old-Fashioned Applesauce
- Old-fashioned Brown Sugar and Cinnamon Apple Pie
- Organic Honeycrisp Applesauce
- Oven-poached Washington State Pears with Pecans, Blue Cheese and Balsamic Reduction
- Oven-roasted Pears with Caramelized Shallots, Figs and Gorgonzola
- Pan-seared Apples, Chanterelles, Hazelnuts and Pancetta with Zesty Apple Cider Reduction Glaze
- Pan-seared Brussels Sprouts with Apples, Bacon, Shallots and Rosemary
- Pan-seared Brussels Sprouts with Red Pears, Bacon and Cranberries
- Pan-seared Local Organic Brussels Sprouts with Organic Washington State Pears
- Pan-seared Organic Brussels Sprouts with Red Pears, Pancetta, Shallots and Rosemary
- Pan-seared Tender Chard with Apples and Hazelnuts
- PCC Apple Sage Stuffing
- PCC Maple-glazed Sweet Potato and Apple Bake
- Pear and Gorgonzola Pasta with Toasted Pecans
- Pear and Hazelnut Praline Puff Pastry Tarts
- Pear and Hazelnut Stuffed Pork Tenderloin with Sour Cherry Syrah Sauce
- Pear and Hazelnut Tarts with Cinnamon and Brandy
- Pear Crisp
- Pear Galette
- Pear Oatmeal Muffins
- Pear Tart
- Pear Vinaigrette
- Pear-Anise Muffins
- Poached Northwest Pears with Chocolate Sauce
- Poached Pears with Almond-Marmalade Cream
- Puff Pastry Canapés with Blue Cheese and Pears
- Quinoa Salad with Cherries and Arugula
- Roasted Apples and Butternut Squash
- Roasted Pear Salad
- Roasted Pears with Couscous and Winter Fruits
- Roasted Potatoes and Apples in Dijon Mustard Sauce
- Roasted Potatoes, Apples and Wilted Spinach
- Rosemary and Hazelnut Roasted Wild Alaskan Halibut with Sautéed Chanterelles and Pears
- Ruby Chutney with Warm Winter Spices
- Savory Cheesecake with Pear Compote Topping
- Savory Turnovers with Chard, Apples and Hazelnuts
- Seasonal Slaw
- Smoky Apple Compote
- Spice-candied Pears
- Spice-scented Butternut Squash and Apple Bisque
- Spicy Green Salad with Pears and Manchego
- Summer Fruit Chutney
- Summer Fruit Salsa
- Summer Fruit Sorbet with Cherries, Blueberries and Watermelon
- Three Local Cheese Fondue with Roasted Apples and Butternut Squash
- Toasted Cornbread and Apple Stuffing
- Upside-Down Caramel Pear Torte with Cinnamon and Fresh Cranberries
- Warm Cabbage Salad
- Warm Gingerbread with Pears
- Warm Pear and Hazelnut Tea Bread
- Warm Pear and Organic Baby Greens Salad with Primrose Chèvre Cheese Medallions
- Warm Pear Salad
- Warm Rhubarb Vinaigrette
- Whole Spice Roasted Winter Squash with Apple Cider Glaze
- Wild Mushroom, Pear and Goat Cheese Turnovers
- Yam and Apple Latkes



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