Sweet potato

From New World Encyclopedia
Sweet Potato
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Sweet potato in flower
Hemingway, South Carolina
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Solanales
Family: Convolvulaceae
Genus: Ipomoea
Species: I. batatas
Binomial name
Ipomoea batatas
Linnaeus

The sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) is a member of the Convolvulaceae family, a family of flowering plants that includes the morning glory, chokeweed, and water spinach. The sweet potato has been cultivated for thousands of years for its tuberous roots. It is one of the most nutritious vegetables and is grown and eaten in many countries around the world. It is also used as animal feed and as the source of many other products.

The sweet potato is not closely related to the common potato, (Solanum tuberosum). In the United States it is sometimes confused with the yam (Dioscorea species) to which it is even less closely related.

Origin and History

File:Sweetpotato5162.JPG
Sweet potatoes in the field

The plant is a herbaceous perennial vine, bearing alternate heart-shaped or palmately lobed leaves and medium-sized sympetalous flowers. The edible tuberous root is long and tapered, with a smooth skin whose color ranges between red, purple, brown and white. Its flesh ranges between white, yellow, orange, and purple.

Sweet potatoes are native to the tropical Americas and were first cultivated there at least 5000 years ago. They spread very early throughout the region, including the Caribbean and what is now the southeastern United States. They were brought to Europe by Spanish and Portuguese explorers and sweet potato cultivation quickly spread throughout much of the Old World.

When Europeans first visited Polynesia they found sweet potatoes being grown. How and when they first got there is a subject of much debate among anthropologists and historians with some saying that this is evidence of early contact with the peoples of South America and others that the sweet potatoes arrived there as part of their world-wide diffusion after 1492.(CGIAR)

Nutrition and Uses

A sweet potato

The sweet potato is one of the most nutritious vegetables. Although the leaves and shoots are also edible, the starchy tuberous roots are by far the most important product. In some tropical areas, they are a staple food-crop. Besides starch, they are rich in dietary fiber, vitamin A, vitamin C, and vitamin B6. All cultivars are more-or-less sweet-flavored.

The roots are most frequently boiled, fried, or baked. They can also be processed to make starch and a partial flour substitute. Industrial uses include the production of starch and industrial alcohol. All parts of the plant are used for animal feed.

In South America the juice of red sweet potatoes is combined with lime juice to make a dye for cloth. By varying the proportions of the juices every shade from pink to purple to black can be obtained.(Verrill p. 47)

Cultivation

Freshly dug roots

Sweet potatoes grow best where the summers are long and hot and there is plenty of rain. The plant does not tolerate frost. It grows best at an average temperature of 24° C (75° F). Depending on the cultivar and conditions, tuberous roots mature in 2 to 9 months. With care, early-maturing cultivars can be grown as an annual summer crop in temperate areas, such as the northern United States. Sweet potatoes rarely flower when the daylight is longer than 11 hours, as is normal outside of the tropics. They are mostly propagated by stem or root cuttings or by adventitious roots called "slips" that grow out from the tuberous roots during storage. True seeds are used for breeding only.

Under optimal conditions of 85 to 90 % relative humidity at 13 to 16 °C (55 to 61 °F), sweet potatoes can keep for six months. Colder temperatures injure the roots.

Sweet potatoes are often considered a small farmer's crop. They grow well in many farming conditions and have few natural enemies, pesticides are rarely needed. They can be grown in poor soils with little fertilizer. Because they are sown by vine cuttings rather than seeds sweet potatoes are relatively easy to plant. Because the rapidly growing vines shade out weeds little weeding is needed, allowing farmers to devote time to other crops. In the tropics the crop can be maintained in the ground and harvested as needed for market or home consumption. In temperate regions sweet potatoes are most often grown on larger farms and are harvested before frosts set in.(CGIAR)

China is the largest grower of sweet potatoes; providing about 80 percent of the world's supply, which totaled 130 million tons in 1990 (about half that of common potatoes). In the past most of China's sweet potatoes were grown for food but now most (60 percent) are grown to feed pigs. The rest are grown for human food and for other products. Some are grown for export, mainly to Japan. China grows 100 varieties of sweet potato.(JRT)

Sweet potatoes very early became popular in the islands of the Pacific from Japan to Polynesia. One reason is that they were favored as an emergency crop which could be relied on if other crops failed, for instance because of typhon flooding. They are featured in many favorite dishes in Japan, Taiwan, and other island nations. The Solomon Islands, in the South Pacific has the world's highest per capita consumption of sweet potatoes, 174 kg (380 lbs). Indonesia, Vietnam, India, and some other Asian countries are also large sweet potato growers. Uganda (the third largest grower after Indonesia), Rwanda, and some other African countries also grow a large crop which is an important part of their peoples' diets. North and South America. the original home of the sweet potato, together grow less than three percent of the world's supply. Europe has only a very small sweet potato production.(JRT)(FAO)

Sweet potatoes were an important part of the diet in the United States for most of its history, especially in the Southeast. In recent years however they have become less popular. The average per capita consumption of sweet potatoes in the United States is only about 1.5-2 kg (4 lbs) per year, down from 13 kg (31 lbs) in 1920. Southerner Kent Wrench writes: "The SweetPotato became associated with hard times in the minds of our ancestors and when they became affluent enough to change their menu, the potato was served less often."(NCSPC)

North Carolina is the leading United States state in sweet potato production, providing about 40% of the annual United States' production.

Kumara (sweet potatoes) for sale, Thames, The North Island, New Zealand

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), "Sweet Potato"[1]
  • Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO), 1990, "Roots, tubers, plantains and bananas in human nutrition" [2]
  • The Japanese Society of Root and Tuber Crops (JRT), "Mini White Paper: Sweetpotato in Japan" 2000 [3]
  • North Carolina Sweet Potato Commission (NCSPC) Website.[4]
  • Verrill, A.H., Foods America Gave the World, 1937, Boston : L.C. Page & Co.
  • Wrench, K., "The Sweet Potato Patch"[5]

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