BRONX/NYC.....
This year the fig season was short, lousy, and, now it's over. Spring weather was so cold, for so long, that trees just started to sprout leaves in May! For the first time since 2007, "Atreano" produced NO figs! I lost a larger 6 ft. "Red Italian", and the rest of my trees were too small for any sizable main-crop.
But wait, there's more! The star-of-the-season, was a unknown variety, that a forum member, Pete (ascpete), 'discovered' growing in a Bronx, NY yard. I had the opportunity to grow a 5 stem bush, and to taste about about two dozen figs, some from my tree, and some off the original, established tree(s).
These medium-large, purple-black figs, about the same size of "Black Mission", had a wonderful flavor which reminded me of "Hardy Chicago" but with a more pronounced jammy, tangy, peach-apricot finish. The figs were dead-ripe, and I saw no splitting from the rainy weather that we had in the days just before the harvest. The tender skins and nutty crunchiness of the seeds added to the treat. Just sweet enough to make you want to just keep eating more, and more.
Leaves: thick, leathery, dark, spinach-green, shaped like a "Hardy Chicago" leaf, remarkably free of rust, and showing zero symptoms of FMV - which is a disease typically not found in NYC, and surrounding areas. My small tree/bush is growing in a 5-gallon bucket, planted into a modified 5:1:1 mix. Fertilized with "Espoma, Iron-Tone", supplemented with a diluted tonic of Miracle-Gro/24-8-16 once/month. Main crop figs ripened by mid/late-August. Grown in full sun.
I would give this fig at least a 7/8 on a scale of 1-10. I enjoyed eating "Bryant-Dark" figs as much as eating "Hardy Chicago"...but the "Bryant-Dark" has a slightly more of an apricot flavor, and tang.
Just my opinions.
Frank