NO THERE IS NOT! It is Apples to Apples! That's it! The game is so much fun!
The phrase "comparing apples to apples" means that you are comparing two or more things that are as similar as possible without being the same thing. Conversly, the phrase "comparing apples to oranges" means that you are trying to compare two or more things that are quite different from each other. A more stringent comparison is that you cannot compare apples and oranges by size, taste, or use, because each is distinct. Comparing apples to apples would be valid because some apples may be preferable to others in these or other ways.
The farmer's market.
To be an idependent clause a phrase would need a conjugated verb. i.e "a bushel of apples to take home" is a phrase. "I need a bushel of apples to take home" is a complete sentence.
I would have 7 apples because I have 1 apple in my house
There is an expression "like comparing apples to oranges," which is used of false comparisons and inaccurate analogies. "Apples to apples" comparison would mean comparing things that really are similar.
cousin comes from the Canadian phrase apples
An alternative sentence
King David in Psalms
C = 1.69 P where P = pounds of apples and C = total cost.
Ten Apples Up On Top!"
Your phrase is correct if you remove the word "of" and leave everything else alone.
Statistically, it's likely that you do. Most people like apples of one kind or another.