In
Austria, Gravensteins are used for the production of high-quality brandy (
Obstler) that is particularly popular in the southern
Steiermark. In
Australia, they are available for a few weeks early in the apple season—late January and early February—from the Blue Mountains region west of Sydney. In
Denmark, Gravensteiner is picked in the second half of September. Danish Food Minister
Hans Christian Schmidt proclaimed the Gravenstein to be the "national apple" on 18 September 2005, although its market share has since decreased in relation to imported apples. In the United States, Gravensteins are found most widely on the west coast, and in particular, around the
Sonoma County, California, town of
Sebastopol.
Luther Burbank praised the apple, "It has often been said that if the Gravenstein could be had throughout the year, no other apple need be grown." In
Canada it is widely grown on both coasts, although more in old farmstead orchards and back yards than in commercial orchards. During the first half of the 20th century, Gravenstein was the major apples cultivar grown in western
Sonoma County, California, and was the source for
apple sauce and
dried apples for the U.S. troops in
World War II. Most of the orchards in Sonoma County are now gone due to a combination of a shift to
wine production, and economic changes in the
apple industry. Only six commercial growers and one commercial processor remained in Sonoma County as of 2006. In 2005,
Slow Food USA declared the Gravenstein apple a heritage food and included it in their
Ark of taste. Slow Food USA reports that production in Sonoma County is currently 750,000 boxes (15,000 tons) of Gravenstein apples a year; a third of the fruit (250,000 boxes) is of premium market quality.
California State Route 116 through portions of western Sonoma County is designated "Gravenstein Highway" to commemorate the industry. Gravenstein is not a production apple in
New Zealand and is not available in grocery stores anywhere in the country. There are a few trees here and there, though, and on occasion a small fruit grower or farmer's market will either have them for sale or allow a u-pick. On the North Island of New Zealand, they are ready for picking around the last week of February to the first week of March. In Nelson in the northern region of the South Island, Gravenstein apples may be picked as early as mid-January as a cooking apple. In New Zealand, two red sports were selected from the more stripey "common" Gravenstein: Albany Beauty and Oratia. In
Norway, Gravensteins are grown particularly in the regions of
Telemark and
Hardanger. In Hardanger, a memorial has been erected for Johannes Pedersen Aga who planted the first Gravenstein tree in Norway in 1792.
Sogndal Municipality, home to numerous orchards, named one of the streets in
Sogndalsfjøra Gravenstein Street. ==History==