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Dried Cherry.
Prunus avium · Prunus cerasus.

Two genetically separate species share the dried-cherry category. Tart Montmorency cherry from Michigan and Poland is the volume backbone and the bakery and breakfast-cereal default. Sweet cherry from Turkey's Aegean coast and Chile's Maule region carries the premium retail and gift-pack segment. The species choice drives 60% of the price spread.

Top Origin
USA (tart) · Turkey (sweet)
Form
Whole / Halves
Packaging
10kg Cartons
Availability
Year-round (Jul-Aug harvest)
Chapter 01

Two cherries, one supermarket aisle

Prunus avium and Prunus cerasus are different species. Prunus avium (sweet cherry, Bing, Rainier, Lapins, Sweetheart) carries 14-20% sugar and 0.4-0.7% acid on the fresh fruit, sweet enough to eat off the tree. Prunus cerasus (tart cherry, Montmorency, Morello, Balaton) carries 10-12% sugar and 1.4-2.0% acid, too sour to eat fresh but ideal for processing.

The dried-cherry trade splits along this line. Tart cherry, particularly the Montmorency cultivar, dominates the US dried-cherry industry and feeds the bakery, energy-bar, and ice-cream-inclusion channels. Sweet cherry dominates the Mediterranean and Latin American dried-cherry trade, supplying retail snack and confectionery applications.

Like cranberry and blueberry, both species require infusion before drying. Tart cherry's high acid would make a straight-dried product unpalatable; sweet cherry's lower acid still benefits from infusion to balance the dried-fruit sweetness and texture. Sucrose infusion is the standard process across both species.

Tart cherry is the bakery raisin substitute that built itself a clinical literature on sleep and joint inflammation. Sweet cherry is the candy-grade premium that prints money on the gift-pack channel.

Commercial drying ratio runs roughly 4 to 1 on infused product (accounting for sugar weight), 7 to 1 on the rare no-infusion natural product.

Chapter 02

Growing regions: USA, Turkey, Poland, Chile

Michigan owns the US tart cherry crop. Turkey owns the sweet cherry crop. Poland is the second-largest tart cherry producer globally and a major dried-cherry exporter. Chile ships counter-season sweet cherry in growing volumes.

Global dried cherry export share
🇺🇸USA (tart)
38%
🇹🇷Turkey (sweet)
28%
🇵🇱Poland (tart)
14%
🇨🇱Chile (sweet)
11%
🌍Others
9%
2024/25 estimates · Source: ITC Trade Map, USDA NASS, Turkish Statistical Institute, ODEPA Chile

Michigan grows roughly 70% of US tart cherry, mostly along the Lake Michigan western shore (Traverse City the heritage center). Wisconsin and Utah round out US production. Polish tart cherry runs across Świętokrzyskie and Lublin provinces. Turkish sweet cherry concentrates on the Aegean coast (Manisa, Izmir, Afyon) and the Black Sea region. Chilean sweet cherry runs from Maule south through Bío-Bío.

Trade desk note

The US Michigan tart cherry harvest is one of the most weather-exposed crops in North America. The 2012 spring frost wiped out roughly 90% of the Michigan crop and pushed Montmorency prices up 4x within twelve months. Polish substitution is available but the Polish drying culture targets a different (typically smaller, slightly drier) finished product than the Michigan standard.

Chapter 03

From IQF cherry to infused-and-dried

Dried-cherry production runs almost entirely on IQF (individually quick frozen) input. Fresh cherry harvest concentrates in a 3-4 week window each July; processors freeze the crop and run year-round.

Frozen pitted cherries enter an osmotic infusion tank. Sucrose syrup or fruit-juice concentrate flows counter-current against the thawing cherries over 16-36 hours. The cherry absorbs sugar and releases water. Exit Brix on the cherry runs 60-72 degrees depending on infusion target.

After infusion, cherries are tunnel-dried at 65-75°C for 8-14 hours to a finished moisture of 14-18%. Most processors finish with a light sunflower-oil coating (0.5-1%) to prevent clumping.

Tart cherries are typically dried in halves; sweet cherries can ship whole pitted or in halves depending on the channel. Some Turkish processors ship sweet cherries with the stem intact for premium retail presentation.

Chapter 04

Montmorency, Morello, and the cultivar map

The cultivar carried in the bag tells you what the product is for.

Montmorency Tart Cherry (USA, Poland)
The US tart cherry. Bright red, bakery and energy-bar default.

The dominant US tart cherry cultivar, planted across 95% of Michigan acreage. Bright red, 18-22mm fresh, harvested mechanically. Dried Montmorency runs 4-6g per piece in halves form. The reference grade for US bakery, granola, and energy-bar inclusion. Carries the clinical sleep and inflammation research.

Species: P. cerasus (tart)
Color: Bright red
Use: Bakery, bar, cereal
Morello / Balaton Tart Cherry (Poland, Eastern Europe)
Darker, slightly less acidic, the European tart standard.

Eastern European tart cherry cultivars. Deeper burgundy color, slightly lower acid than Montmorency. The European tart-cherry dried product. Used in the same bakery and confectionery applications, plus traditional Polish and German cake fillings. Slightly larger piece size than Montmorency.

Species: P. cerasus (tart)
Color: Burgundy
Use: European bakery, traditional
Sweet Cherry (Turkish 0900 Ziraat, Bing, Lapins)
The premium retail dark cherry. Mediterranean and Latin origin.

Sweet cherry (P. avium) dried in halves or whole pitted. Turkish 0900 Ziraat is the export workhorse from the Aegean coast. Chilean Bing and Lapins ship counter-season. Soft, sweet, dark mahogany color. The premium retail and gift-pack format. Higher per-kilo price than tart.

Species: P. avium (sweet)
Color: Dark mahogany
Use: Premium retail, gift
Juice-Infused Tart Cherry
Clean-label. Apple, white grape, or cherry juice carrier.

Montmorency or Morello, infused with fruit-juice concentrate (apple, grape, or cherry juice itself) rather than sucrose. Labels as "no added sugar" in EU markets. Premium runs 20-30% over sucrose-infused. Cherry-juice-infused product carries the cleanest label claim.

Carrier: Juice concentrate
Premium: +20-30%
Use: Natural retail, clean-label
Freeze-Dried Cherry
Premium light-and-crispy. Smoothie, baby food, gourmet.

Sweet or tart cherry, pitted, freeze-dried whole or sliced. 2-3% moisture. Retains nearly all original color, flavor, and anthocyanin content. No added sugar. Cost runs 4-6x infused equivalent. Used in instant smoothie blends, baby food, gourmet cereal.

Moisture: 2-3%
Premium: +300-500%
Use: Premium, smoothie, baby food
Organic Dried Cherry
EU and USDA NOP. Michigan and Polish organic orchards.

Certified organic dried cherry, primarily Montmorency from Michigan and Morello from Poland. Infused with organic cane sugar or organic juice. Premium runs 35-50% over conventional. Growing share of natural-channel retail volume.

Premium: +35-50%
Stack: EU + NOP
Use: Natural retail, baby food
Chapter 05

The Montmorency clinical story

Tart Montmorency cherry sits on one of the most-funded clinical research programs in the dried-fruit category. Two endpoints carry most of the marketing weight.

Sleep and melatonin. Montmorency cherry contains roughly 13 ng/g of melatonin, the highest documented natural-food source. Several trials have shown small but consistent sleep-onset improvements from tart-cherry juice and dried-cherry consumption.

Joint inflammation and exercise recovery. Anthocyanin and cyanidin content in Montmorency drives an anti-inflammatory mechanism documented in clinical trials on runner recovery, gout symptom reduction, and post-exercise muscle soreness.

The Cherry Marketing Institute (the Michigan growers' co-op) funds an active clinical research program around these endpoints, and the literature carries meaningful marketing weight on US retail packaging. Sweet cherry has not generated a comparable research base.

Chapter 06

The specs that move the contract

Dried cherry contracts run on a tight spec sheet keyed to species, infusion grade, and piece integrity.

SpecStandardWhat it Measures
Moisture14-18%Residual water; texture and shelf life
Brix72-78°Total soluble solids
Water Activity0.55-0.62Microbial stability window
Added Sugar (infused)35-50%By weight of finished product
Oil Coating0.5-1.0%Sunflower or canola, anti-sticking
Pit Fragment≤1 piece / kgMandatory metal detector pass
Foreign Matter≤0.05%Stem, leaf, other plant material
Damaged / Crushed≤5%Premium grade; standard ≤10%
SalmonellaNegative / 25gMandatory retail contracts

Pit fragment is the historical contamination risk on dried cherry. Mechanical pitting before freezing is reliable but not perfect; metal-detector and X-ray inspection at the back end of the dryer line are standard at every export-grade plant.

Compliance note

FDA Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) rules require documented metal-detector inspection on every dried-cherry lot destined for US retail. EU Reg 1881/2006 sets ochratoxin A limits on dried fruit including cherry. Confirm pit-fragment cert and OTA testing on every lot before booking.

Chapter 07

What's in the kilo: anthocyanins, melatonin, sugar

Dried tart cherry carries the densest concentration of anthocyanins on the standard dried-fruit shelf, plus the unique melatonin signature.

325
Calories (infused)
per 100g
77g
Carbohydrates
natural + added
3.0g
Dietary fiber
soluble + insoluble
1,500mg
Anthocyanin (tart)
per 100g
35ng/g
Melatonin (tart)
concentrated from fresh
730mg
Potassium
per 100g

Tart cherry anthocyanin density at 1,500mg per 100g of infused dried product places it ahead of dried blueberry on the same basis. Cyanidin-3-glucoside is the dominant pigment.

Melatonin survives infusion and tunnel-drying well; finished dried tart cherry typically tests at 25-40 ng/g, a meaningful concentration on a serving basis. The sleep-research literature is built around 30g servings delivering 0.7-1.2 mg melatonin.

Chapter 08

Market dynamics: Michigan weather, Turkish premium, 2026 outlook

The dried-cherry market splits along the two species lines. Tart cherry is a Michigan weather play; sweet cherry is a Turkish lira and Chilean counter-season play.

Montmorency dried halves FOB Detroit ran $5,200-7,800 per ton through 2024-2025, with weather-driven swings the dominant variable. The 2024 Michigan crop came in 15% below trend; pricing ran above the 5-year average through the back half of the year.

Sweet cherry dried FOB Izmir ran $4,800-6,500 per ton on the same period. Turkish lira weakness through 2022-2024 made Turkish sweet cherry one of the best-value premium dried products on the global market.

Chilean counter-season sweet cherry ships February-May, into the Northern Hemisphere offseason. Volume has grown roughly 20% per year over the last five years.

Polish tart cherry capacity is expanding. Lublin and Świętokrzyskie growers have planted significant Montmorency-compatible acreage. By 2027 Polish dried tart cherry should approach Michigan on volume.

The Michigan tart-cherry crop is one of the most weather-volatile dried-fruit origins in the world. Buyers placing 2026 cover should consider dual-sourcing Michigan and Polish Montmorency-equivalent product to spread the frost risk.

Chapter 09

How Blue Star sources dried cherry

We carry direct contracts with two Michigan-based Montmorency processors, a Polish Morello packer near Lublin, and Turkish sweet-cherry coverage out of Manisa. Seasonal Chilean coverage out of Maule. Every container is third-party tested at origin and re-tested on arrival.

Standard offering: Montmorency tart cherry halves, sucrose-infused, 14-18% moisture, 35-45% added sugar, 0.5-1% sunflower oil coating, in 10kg carton liners. Full COA per lot including pit fragment, water activity, microbiology, ochratoxin, and pesticide residue.

Premium offering: juice-infused tart cherry (apple, grape, or cherry concentrate), freeze-dried tart and sweet cherry, Turkish sweet cherry halves and whole pitted, EU and USDA NOP organic certified lots. Private-label retail packing in 100g, 200g, and 500g formats.

Lead time: 20-25 days from order confirmation to port of discharge on US origin. 25-35 days on Turkish and Polish. CIF, FOB, and DAP terms all available.

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