Greengrocer flogging UK’s most expensive apples for eye-watering sum as rival scoffs ‘are you serious?’

A GREENGROCER is flogging Britain’s most expensive apples — for £15 each.

The fruit, flown in by Notting Hill Fish + Meat Shop from Japan, costs the equivalent of nearly £42 a kilo — 14 times the price at a market stall within half a mile.

Produce displayed outside a Notting Hill shop.
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Notting Hill Fish + Meat Shop is selling £15 apples flown in from JapanCredit: Ray Collins
Man holding an apple and a receipt showing it cost £30.00.
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Sun man Tom Seaward forked out for the fruit, loved by celebs like David BeckhamCredit: Ray Collins
A hand holding a red apple with a sticker.
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The apples weigh about 12oz, roughly twice the size of a braeburnCredit: Ray Collins

A melon — also imported from the Far East — will set shoppers back almost £100, while a punnet of extra-large grapes is £80.

Despite the eye-watering cost, the West London shop is a favourite with celebrity locals, including David Beckham, 49, and Margot Robbie, 34, while singer Dua Lipa, 29, is also said to be a fan.

But Meraj Eshagh, 59, who runs a stall at nearby Portobello Road Market, scoffed at the sky-high prices, saying: “You must be joking

"Are you serious? I have no clue why they’d be selling them for that.

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"We sell apples for £3 a kilo.”

Grown in the Aomori prefecture, 400 miles north of Tokyo, the apples weigh about 12oz, roughly twice the size of a braeburn.

They are thought to be Fujis, which usually cost a few pounds online.

Yet the fruit is proving a hit — Becks is said to be a regular at the shop, loading his basket with the pricey produce, including the £15 apples and £50 punnets of strawberries.

A source said: “He spends an absolute fortune on the Japanese apples and other fruit — I suppose he can afford it.”

One shopper, 56, who comes in three to four times a week to buy groceries and salmon for her dog, said: “It’s delicious.

"I would rather spend the money and have a memorable experience."

Consultant Kirill Voronin, 30, who travelled from Richmond to pick up his £300 haul, said: “We’ve got a lot of stuff.

"It’s convenient and it’s good.”

  • Additional reporting: Harriette Boucher
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A kilo of the apples will set you back nearly £42Credit: Ray Collins