In his home in northwest China, these were known as the fruits of immortality. Their skin was like velvet, and their flesh held the sweetness of a summer sunset. Li Wei was bound for the great markets of the West, following a path that would one day be called the Silk Road.
It was through these Persian gates that the fruit finally reached Europe. When the Greeks and Romans first tasted the sweet, fuzzy stone fruit, they looked to the land it had come from. They named it Malum persicum —the Persian apple.
Centuries passed. The trees multiplied, their descendants lining the walls of grand estates from Susa to Persepolis. When the Greek physician Ctesias arrived at the court of King Artaxerxes II, he saw these trees everywhere. He wrote of the land's wonders in his famous Persica , a massive 23-volume history that would eventually be lost to time, leaving only fragments behind.