No fig war and no offense. I'm not upset, definitely not trying to squabble or argue and I don't feel like anyone else here is either.
Brown Turkey figs I know rarely looks that fuzzy inside when properly ripe. Chalk it up to bad selection of photos. Ive got pics of ones who arent fuzzy. I have seen that fuzzy-inside thing happen with BT, but it is not the norm, it only occurs in maybe 1 out of 20 fruits on my tree.
I tend to agree with George. There are so many different "Brown Turkey" strains out there (just like Celeste), who knows which is which and what is what? (more on that later)
My point is - just like with Celeste - there are dominant "never fails" qualities that scream "I am this specific variety". I say that as someone in an area where BT and Celeste make up 75% or more of the local trees, and there is a tree on every other block (thousands in Atlanta). With Celeste, that unique teardrop shape, small fruit size, often dusted lookin skin that tends to crack and wrinkle when ripe, elongated neck or long stem, all these the strongest characteristics of Celeste. When you see a Celeste, there is no doubt (for me, at least) that it is a Celeste variant.
If I am to trust that Monrovia has a "true" Brown Turkey, and what's been sold in Georgia as "Brown Turkey" the last century is actually "the" original Brown Turkey, then i will be the first to exclaim the original "true" Brown Turkey has many telltale characteristics that make it fairly easy to identify (just like Celeste has its unique characteristics that define its variety). I say this as someone who has driven around north GA and documented dozens (maybe hundreds) of similar trees in Atlanta.
The fruit pictured in the first post of this thread has the prominent white freckles over the purple skin (fading to green at top) which many BT here have, typical fruit shape and size, a big open eye that will crack a bit when ripe to form a "star" sometimes, that same decent sized interior void which is so common in BT, although some are different sizes and textures, same interor color (pinkish and sometimes tan when over-ripe), along with that general 5-lobe leaf that is predominate on most BT near me... It is all there.
If I saw this tree in my area, I'd have probably called it a BT (or BT variant). Of course, I would have never made the definitive call locally until I sampled the fruit and noticed it had that characteristic, piss-poor "sweet but watery" taste that BT figs always have. It is truly the worst, most boring tasting fig I have ever had and you know it well when you taste a few dozen. With that said....
If the fruit is sweet and watery with no richness whatsoever, there is no doubt to me that this is a variant of the original "Brown Turkey" or possibly "the" original Brown Turkey. Not EBT or California BT or one of the other fig which is supposedly a BT variety but doesn't necessarily look or taste like plain old "Brown Turkey".
I would just add one thing - ask any of the other guys here at F4F who live in Georgia and they'll probably confirm - when you ask most people in Georgia what kind of fig tree they have, many will say "it's a Brown Turkey" or "Turkey fig". When you ask why they think that, they will tell you, "well, the fruit is brown, must be a Brown Turkey!". Truth is, many people are ignorant to the fact there's more than two or three types of fig tend to think every fig is a "Turkey fig" or "Brown Turkey" because they have no idea that the variety most often sold as Brown Turkey isn't actually a "brown fig".
With this in mind, I must say that I (personally) doubt whether some varieties with "Brown Turkey" in the name are really a "Brown Turkey". I am skeptical that maybe California Brown Turkey, EBT, Improved BT and others probably got "Brown Turkey" attached to the name because someone saw they were sort of brown, reddish brown or brownish purple and figured, "must be a Brown Turkey!".
This is only a guess, and until genetic testing is widely done on every possible variety, we may never know just how "wrong" the current naming is. This is why I tend to go by characteristics rather than name. I tend to think Monrovia has a true Brown Turkey because - I kid you not - it tastes like crap, worse than any other fig, and this is a common comment about Brown Turkey.
And the fig confusion continues to expand out of this world.... ;)