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March 08, 2007

Italian Woman Escapes Lethal "Spud"

Ah, the lingering joys of war---last week Olga Mauriello bought some potatoes at her local market in the small town of San Giorgio a Cermano near Naples, Italy. Hand20grenade20ronald20bolender20around2 As she was washing her dirt-covered spuds, she discovered that one of them appeared to be a pine cone-shaped hand grenade. Police arrived and safely detonated the live grenade, and later reported that it was dug up in a potato field in France. The grenade was of a type commonly used in World War II.

( At right: Potato or grenade? www.bolender.com)

August 17, 2006

Happy Birthday, Monsieur Parmentier

Many thanks to the prolific food history blogger based in Brisbane, Queensland, The Old Foodie, for this entry about Antoine Auguste Parmentier, a potato hero of ours. Parmentier

"Today, August 17th …

If you haven’t yet met a potato you don’t like, today is a day to celebrate. It was the birthday in 1737 of Antoine-Augustin Parmentier, the French agriculturalist and apothecary who did more to popularise the potato in Europe than any other single individual in its history."

Please read the rest here. ( It includes recipes...)

During our lengthy research trip across France for our latest book, Gastronomie! Food Museums and Heritage Sites of France, we photographed the Parmentier Metro stop in Paris. Unique among subway stops we assume, it includes a mini museum exhibit about him.

June 28, 2006

Explosive chips

Mashergrenade_2 Workers at a factory making chips were evacuated two days running last month after bomb parts turned up in potatoes imported from France and Belgium, the site of battles in World War One and Two. The Scarborough plant, owned by Canada’s McCain Foods, the world’s largest producer of frozen chips, was emptied on Friday after a worker spotted a shell tip among the potatoes as they were being cleaned for slicing. “The police were called and the bomb squad advised a 100 metre exclusion zone should be set up,” said a McCain spokesman.

An entire hand grenade was discovered in the potatoes and the Yorkshire plant was evacuated again. “The army took the device away and blew it up in a controlled explosion in a field nearby,” a spokeswoman for the North Yorkshire police said. The Scarborough plant was opened in 1969 and uses 1,400 tonnes of potatoes every week. Production is back to normal.

McCain’s Whittlesey plant near Peterborough has also been evacuated several times this year after World War Two ordnance was found in batches of potatoes. “Occasionally during the use of imported potatoes from Belgium and northern France, ordnance debris from the First and Second World War is found,” McCain said.

January 17, 2006

More Crisps, Please

Crisps_1 Pepsico's Walkers Crisps have crushed Golden Wonder, the crisp champion of Britain for decades. GW has gone bust, in part due to the powerful sales push of Walkers, currently holding a 50 percent share of Britain's 2 billion pound crisps market.

Huh? Potato chips, people. Foodie's pal Rose sent us a link to a piece in the Jan 11 Guardian recounting the history of the crisp/chip ( born in the USA) and its subsequent journey into the hearts, minds and arteries of the British public.  When Foodie read the account of the potato chip's birth in 1853 in Saratoga, New York it sounded extremely familiar, even to phrasing, as well it should as Foodie wrote it somewhere, sometime.  BUT, alas, the Guardian piece omitted the bit where George Crum, native American, tried to pass off the potato chip thang as his doing when in fact it most likely was his niece who did the deed, sweating over the fat vats while George took the credit.

The first  Brit crisp was being sold in 1913, but the real factory variety came along in 1920 when Frank Smith packaged up in bags the potatoes his wife had peeled, sliced and fried. Smith added " a pinch of salt in a twist of blue paper," to each bag. In any event, to this day Brits love their crisps, especially cheese and onion-flavo(u)red, and many even have the palate for "prawn cocktail, Worcestershire and Marmite" chips.

October 08, 2005

Potato Birthplace Identified

Potatooriginscientists Finding Rewrites The Evolutionary History Of The Origin Of Potatoes

MADISON - Humans have cultivated potatoes for millennia, but there has been great controversy about the ubiquitous vegetable's origins. This week, writing in the Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences, a team led by a USDA potato taxonomist stationed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has for the first time demonstrated a single origin in southern Peru for the cultivated potato.

The scientists analyzed DNA markers in 261 wild and 98 cultivated potato varieties to assess whether the domestic potato arose from a single wild progenitor or whether it arose multiple times - and the results were clear, says David Spooner, the USDA research scientist who led the study.

"In contrast to all prior hypotheses of multiple origins of the cultivated potato, we have identified a single origin from a broad area of southern Peru," says Spooner, who is also a UW-Madison professor of horticulture. "The multiple-origins theory was based in part on the broad distribution of potatoes from north to south across many different habitats, through morphological resemblance of different wild species to cultivated species, and through other data. Our DNA data, however, shows that in fact all cultivated potatoes can be traced back to a single origin in southern Peru."

The earliest archaeological evidence suggests that potatoes were domesticated from wild relatives by indigenous agriculturalists more than 7,000 years ago, says Spooner. Today, the potato - an international dietary staple - is a major crop in both the United States and in Wisconsin, which is fourth in the nation for potato production.

Potato diseases such as late blight can cause significant economic damage to farmers in America and throughout the world.

"As a taxonomist, my job is to help determine what is a species and to classify those species into related groups," Spooner explains. "Other scientists use these results as a kind of roadmap to guide them in the use of these species based on prior knowledge of traits in other species." Spooner spends about two months each year trekking through the mountains of South America, collecting and identifying wild potatoes and researching them.

"When researchers discover an important trait - for example, that a certain species is resistant to disease - then everything related to that species becomes potentially useful," Spooner says. "We can screen samples to see if related germplasm has similar resistance, in which case we may be able to guide plant breeders to germplasm to use in breeding programs."

And beyond the agricultural benefits, Spooner's study has helped to rewrite a small but important chapter of evolutionary history.

"Books are written about questions of how crops originate," he says. "Sometimes statements are repeated so often that they are accepted as fact. This is a way to get people to reconsider long-held assumptions of the origin of the potato, and stimulate us to reconsider the origins of other crops using new methods."

Spooner's collaborators included colleagues from the Genome Dynamics Programme at the Scottish Crop Research Institute in Scotland. The work was supported financially by the USDA Agricultural Research Service, by the USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service, and by the Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department.

Photo: Botanist David Spooner (right) and Alberto Salas, plant genetic resources specialist with the International Potato Center, Lima, Peru, collect potato germplasm in Peru for deposition in national and international gene banks. (Photo by Alejandro Balaguer)


Editor's Note: The original news release can be found here.


This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University of Wisconsin-Madison.

August 28, 2005

Dr. John S. Niederhauser--In Memoriam

Niederhauserwithlittlejohn_1 No brief obituary could possibly do justice to the memory of John Niederhauser, potato scientist, World Food Prize Laureate 1990, and founding board member of The Potato Museum, The FOOD Museum's originating source. John was 88 when he died in his sleep on August 12, 2005 at his home in Tucson, Arizona.

We last saw him in March, and he was up to his usual hilarious and insightful quips and quirks, discussing politics, world hunger, his beloved Mexico, and, of course, the potato, the vegetable that claimed his attention throughout his long career.

There was never a quality shaggy dog story or brief one-liner John did not appreciate, and worse, remember, in full detail. We doubt anyone ever stopped him when he would begin genially," You know the one about the duck and the anti-freeze.......please tell me if you've heard this..." because his story-telling skills were superlative.

A tall man who had been a precocious boy in Central Washington State, and top student at Cornell, earning his PhD in plant pathology in 1943, he went on to be a Rockefeller-funded scientist based in the highlands west of Mexico City. There he determined that the potato strain responsible for late-blight had originated in Mexico where wild varieties had genetic resistance to the pathogen. For 30 years he and his team worked to develop resistant potato varieties that subsistence farmers could grow, thus cutting down on expensive fungicides while also reducing their environmental impact. ( While in Mexico he also found time to become the founder and president of Little League baseball  from 1954 to 1969,  and the Latin American Commissioner from 1957 to 1969. )

Not only was potato production hugely increased in Mexico, but programs in Turkey, Bangladesh, India, Colombia and Pakistan were able to boost production four to eight times. John went on to help establish the International Potato Center in Lima, Peru, and several other global agriculture initiatives.

John's wife, Ann Faber Niederhauser, with whom he raised six children, was his  companion and support in all endeavors. A gifted weaver not only of rugs and cloth, but also of memorable  gatherings of family and friends, Ann died in 2000.