Sweet potato

















































Sweet potato

Ipomoea batatas (Sweet Potato) Flower.jpg
Sweet potato in flower in Hong Kong

Several elongated reddish brown tubers
Sweet potato tubers

Scientific classification edit
Kingdom:
Plantae

Clade:

Angiosperms

Clade:

Eudicots

Clade:

Asterids
Order:
Solanales
Family:
Convolvulaceae
Genus:
Ipomoea
Species:

I. batatas

Binomial name

Ipomoea batatas
(L.) Lam.


The sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) is a dicotyledonous plant that belongs to the bindweed or morning glory family, Convolvulaceae. Its large, starchy, sweet-tasting, tuberous roots are a root vegetable.[1][2] The young leaves and shoots are sometimes eaten as greens. The sweet potato is only distantly related to the potato (Solanum tuberosum) and does not belong to the nightshade family, Solanaceae, but both families belong to the same taxonomic order, the Solanales.


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 yellow, orange, red, brown, purple, and beige. Its flesh ranges from beige through white, red, pink, violet, yellow, orange, and purple. Sweet potato cultivars with white or pale yellow flesh are less sweet and moist than those with red, pink or orange flesh.[3]


Ipomoea batatas is native to the tropical regions in the Americas.[4][5] Of the approximately 50 genera and more than 1,000 species of Convolvulaceae, I. batatas is the only crop plant of major importance—some others are used locally (e.g., I. aquatica "kangkong"), but many are poisonous. The genus Ipomoea that contains the sweet potato also includes several garden flowers called morning glories, though that term is not usually extended to Ipomoea batatas. Some cultivars of Ipomoea batatas are grown as ornamental plants under the name tuberous morning glory, used in a horticultural context.




Sweet potatoes with different skin colors


Although the sweet potato is often called a "yam" in parts of North America, it is botanically very distinct from a genuine yam (Dioscorea).




Contents






  • 1 Naming


  • 2 Origin, distribution and diversity


    • 2.1 Transgenicity




  • 3 Cultivation


    • 3.1 Production and yield


    • 3.2 Diseases




  • 4 Nutrient content


    • 4.1 Comparison to other food staples




  • 5 Culinary uses


    • 5.1 Africa


    • 5.2 Asia


    • 5.3 Europe


    • 5.4 United States


    • 5.5 New Zealand




  • 6 Other


    • 6.1 Nonculinary uses




  • 7 Notes


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





Naming



Although the soft, orange sweet potato is often called a "yam" in parts of North America, the sweet potato is botanically very distinct from a genuine yam (Dioscorea), which is native to Africa and Asia and belongs to the monocot family Dioscoreaceae. To add to the confusion, a different crop plant, the oca (Oxalis tuberosa, a species of wood sorrel), is called a "yam" in many parts of Polynesia, including New Zealand.


Although the sweet potato is not closely related botanically to the common potato, they have a shared etymology. The first Europeans to taste sweet potatoes were members of Christopher Columbus's expedition in 1492. Later explorers found many cultivars under an assortment of local names, but the name which stayed was the indigenous Taino name of batata. The Spanish combined this with the Quechua word for potato, papa, to create the word patata for the common potato.


In Argentina, Venezuela, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic the sweet potato is called batata. In Mexico, Peru, Chile, Central America, and the Philippines, the sweet potato is known as camote (alternatively spelled kamote in the Philippines), derived from the Nahuatl word camotli.[6]


In Peru, the Quechua name for a type of sweet potato is kumar, strikingly similar to the Polynesian name kumara and its regional Oceanic cognates (kumala, umala,  'uala, etc.), which has led some scholars to suspect an instance of pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact.


In New Zealand, the most common cultivar is the red (purple) cultivar called kumara (now spelled kūmara in the Māori language), but orange ('Beauregard') and gold cultivars are also available.[7] Kumara is particularly popular as a roasted food, often served with sour cream and sweet chili sauce. Occasionally, shops in Australia will label purple cultivars as "purple sweet potato" to denote the difference to the other cultivars. About 95% of Australia's production is of the orange cultivar named 'Beauregard', originally from North America, known simply as "sweet potato". A reddish-purple cultivar, 'Northern Star', is 4% of production and is sold as "kumara".



Origin, distribution and diversity


The origin and domestication of sweet potato occurred in either Central or South America.[8] In Central America, domesticated sweet potatoes were present at least 5,000 years ago.[9] It has been suggested that the origin of I. batatas was between the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico and the mouth of the Orinoco River in Venezuela.[10] The cultigen was most likely spread by local people to the Caribbean and South America by 2500 BC.[11]


In 2018, a 57 million year old Paleocene fossil leaf having the morphology of a plant from the morning glory family, from which the later-cultivated sweet potato evolved, was found in Meghalaya (northeast India), suggesting that the morning glory genus may have first appeared in East Gondwana (now Asia), not the Americas.[12][13]


Sweet potatoes are cultivated throughout tropical and warm temperate regions wherever there is sufficient water to support their growth.[14]
Due to a major crop failure, sweet potatoes were introduced to Fujian province of China in about 1594 from Luzon. The growing of sweet potatoes was encouraged by the Governor Chin Hsüeh-tseng (Jin Xuezeng).[15]


The sweet potato was grown in Polynesia before western exploration. Sweet potato has been radiocarbon-dated in the Cook Islands to 1000 AD. A popular hypothesis is that it was brought to central Polynesia around 700 AD, possibly by Polynesians who had traveled to South America and back, and spread across Polynesia to Hawaii and New Zealand from there.[16][17] It is possible, however, that South Americans brought it to the Pacific, although this is unlikely as it was the Polynesians, and not the native South Americans, who had a strong maritime tradition. Another point is that the sweet potato in Polynesia is the cultivated Ipomoea batatas, which is generally spread by vine cuttings and not by seeds.[18] However, recent divergence time estimates suggest that sweet potatoes were present in Polynesia thousands of years before human settlement. Additionally, there is evidence of long-distance dispersal from North America to Hawaii of other species of Ipomoea. This suggests natural long-distance dispersal of Ipomoea batatas is not implausible and may be the most parsimonious explanation for its presence in Polynesia.[19][20]





































Sweet potato production – 2016
Country

Production (millions of tonnes)

 China

70.6

 Nigeria

3.9

 Tanzania

3.8

 Indonesia

2.3

 Uganda

2.1

 Ethiopia

1.9
World
105.2


Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations[21]



The sweet potato was introduced to Okinawa, Japan in the early 1600s.[22][23][24] Sweet potatoes became a staple in Japan because they were important in preventing famine when rice harvests were poor.[24][25] Sweet potatoes were later planted in Shōgun Tokugawa Yoshimune's private garden.[26] It was also introduced to Korea in 1764.[27]


Sweet potatoes became common as a food crop in the islands of the Pacific Ocean, South India, Uganda and other African countries. In the Caribbean, a cultivar of the sweet potato called the boniato is grown. The flesh of the boniato is cream-colored, unlike the more common orange hue seen in other cultivars. Boniatos are not as sweet and moist as other sweet potatoes, but their consistency and delicate flavor are different than the common orange-colored sweet potato. Sweet potatoes have been a part of the diet in the United States for most of its history, especially in the Southeast. The average per capita consumption of sweet potatoes in the United States is only about 1.5–2 kg (3.3–4.4 lb) per year, down from 13 kg (29 lb) in 1920. “Orange sweet potatoes (the most common type encountered in the US) received higher appearance liking scores compared with yellow or purple cultivars.”[28] Purple and yellow sweet potatoes were not as well liked by consumers compared to orange sweet potatoes “possibly because of the familiarity of orange color that is associated with sweet potatoes.”[28]



Transgenicity


The genome of cultivated sweet potatoes contains sequences of DNA from Agrobacterium, with genes actively expressed by the plants. Transgenes were observed both in the sweet potato's closely related wild relatives, and in more distantly related wild species. This observation makes cultivated sweet potatoes the first known example of a naturally transgenic food crop.[29][30]



Cultivation




























































































































Raw sweet potato
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy
359 kJ (86 kcal)

Carbohydrates

20.1 g

Starch
12.7 g
Sugars
4.2 g
Dietary fiber
3 g


Fat

0.1 g



Protein

1.6 g



Vitamins
Quantity %DV

Vitamin A equiv.
beta-Carotene


89%
709 μg

79%
8509 μg

Thiamine (B1)

7%
0.078 mg
Riboflavin (B2)

5%
0.061 mg
Niacin (B3)

4%
0.557 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)

16%
0.8 mg
Vitamin B6

16%
0.209 mg
Folate (B9)

3%
11 μg
Vitamin C
3%
2.4 mg
Vitamin E
2%
0.26 mg


Minerals
Quantity %DV
Calcium
3%
30 mg
Iron
5%
0.61 mg
Magnesium
7%
25 mg
Manganese
12%
0.258 mg
Phosphorus
7%
47 mg
Potassium
7%
337 mg
Sodium
4%
55 mg
Zinc
3%
0.3 mg




Link to USDA Database entry




  • Units

  • μg = micrograms • mg = milligrams

  • IU = International units




Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient Database

The plant does not tolerate frost. It grows best at an average temperature of 24 °C (75 °F), abundant sunshine and warm nights. Annual rainfalls of 750–1,000 mm (30–39 in) are considered most suitable, with a minimum of 500 mm (20 in) in the growing season. The crop is sensitive to drought at the tuber initiation stage 50–60 days after planting, and it is not tolerant to water-logging, as it may cause tuber rots and reduce growth of storage roots if aeration is poor.[31]


Depending on the cultivar and conditions, tuberous roots mature in two to nine months. With care, early-maturing cultivars can be grown as an annual summer crop in temperate areas, such as the northern United States and China. 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 shoots called "slips" that grow out from the tuberous roots during storage. True seeds are used for breeding only.


They grow well in many farming conditions and have few natural enemies; pesticides are rarely needed. Sweet potatoes are grown on a variety of soils, but well-drained, light- and medium-textured soils with a pH range of 4.5-7.0 are more favorable for the plant.[2] They can be grown in poor soils with little fertilizer. However, sweet potatoes are very sensitive to aluminum toxicity and will die about six weeks after planting if lime is not applied at planting in this type of soil.[2] 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. A commonly used herbicide to rid the soil of any unwelcome plants that may interfere with growth is DCPA, also known as Dacthal. 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 first frosts.


In the Southeastern United States, sweet potatoes are traditionally cured to improve storage, flavor, and nutrition, and to allow wounds on the periderm of the harvested root to heal.[32] Proper curing requires drying the freshly dug roots on the ground for two to three hours, then storage at 29–32 °C (85–90 °F) with 90 to 95% relative humidity from five to fourteen days. Cured sweet potatoes can keep for thirteen months when stored at 13–15 °C (55–59 °F) with >90% relative humidity. Colder temperatures injure the roots.[33][34]




Production and yield


In 2016, global production of sweet potatoes was 105 million tonnes, led by China with 67% of the world total (table).


In 2016, the world average annual yield for sweet potato crop was 13 tonnes per hectare. The most productive yield of sweet potatoes was in Senegal, where the nationwide average annual yield was 39 tonnes per hectare.[21]



Diseases




Nutrient content
























































































































Sweet potato, cooked, baked in skin, without salt
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy
378 kJ (90 kcal)

Carbohydrates

20.7 g

Starch
7.05 g
Sugars
6.5 g
Dietary fiber
3.3 g


Fat

0.15 g



Protein

2.0 g



Vitamins
Quantity %DV
Vitamin A equiv.
120%
961 μg
Thiamine (B1)

10%
0.11 mg
Riboflavin (B2)

9%
0.11 mg
Niacin (B3)

10%
1.5 mg
Vitamin B6

22%
0.29 mg
Folate (B9)

2%
6 μg
Vitamin C
24%
19.6 mg
Vitamin E
5%
0.71 mg


Minerals
Quantity %DV
Calcium
4%
38 mg
Iron
5%
0.69 mg
Magnesium
8%
27 mg
Manganese
24%
0.5 mg
Phosphorus
8%
54 mg
Potassium
10%
475 mg
Sodium
2%
36 mg
Zinc
3%
0.32 mg




Link to USDA Database entry




  • Units

  • μg = micrograms • mg = milligrams

  • IU = International units




Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient Database

Besides simple starches, raw sweet potatoes are rich in complex carbohydrates, dietary fiber and beta-carotene (a provitamin A carotenoid), with moderate contents of other micronutrients, including vitamin B5, vitamin B6 and manganese (table).[35] When cooked by baking, small variable changes in micronutrient density occur to include a higher content of vitamin C at 24% of the Daily Value per 100 g serving (right table).[36][37]


The Center for Science in the Public Interest ranked the nutritional value of sweet potatoes as highest among several other foods.[38] In addition, their leaves are edible and can be prepared like spinach or turnip greens.[39]


Sweet potato cultivars with dark orange flesh have more beta-carotene than those with light-colored flesh, and their increased cultivation is being encouraged in Africa where vitamin A deficiency is a serious health problem. A 2012 study of 10,000 households in Uganda found that children eating beta-carotene enriched sweet potatoes suffered less vitamin A deficiency than those not consuming as much beta-carotene.[40]



Comparison to other food staples


The table below presents the relative performance of sweet potato to other staple foods. While sweet potato provides less edible energy and protein per unit weight than cereals, it has higher nutrient density than cereals.[41]


According to a study by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, sweet potatoes are the most efficient staple food to grow in terms of farmland, yielding approximately 70,000 kcal/ha d.[42]






























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Nutrient content of 10 major staple foods per 100 g portion,[43] in order of rank
Nutrient
Maize (corn)[A]

Rice, white[B]

Wheat[C]

Potatoes[D]

Cassava[E]

Soybeans, green[F]

Sweet potatoes[G]

Yams[Y]

Sorghum[H]

Plantain[Z]

RDA
Water (g) 10 12 13 79 60 68 77 70 9 65 3000
Energy (kJ) 1528 1528 1369 322 670 615 360 494 1419 511 8368–10,460

Protein (g)
9.4 7.1 12.6 2.0 1.4 13.0 1.6 1.5 11.3 1.3 50

Fat (g)
4.74 0.66 1.54 0.09 0.28 6.8 0.05 0.17 3.3 0.37 44–77

Carbohydrates (g)
74 80 71 17 38 11 20 28 75 32 130

Fiber (g)
7.3 1.3 12.2 2.2 1.8 4.2 3 4.1 6.3 2.3 30

Sugar (g)
0.64 0.12 0.41 0.78 1.7 0 4.18 0.5 0 15 minimal
Minerals

Calcium (mg)
7 28 29 12 16 197 30 17 28 3 1000

Iron (mg)
2.71 0.8 3.19 0.78 0.27 3.55 0.61 0.54 4.4 0.6 8

Magnesium (mg)
127 25 126 23 21 65 25 21 0 37 400

Phosphorus (mg)
210 115 288 57 27 194 47 55 287 34 700

Potassium (mg)
287 115 363 421 271 620 337 816 350 499 4700

Sodium (mg)
35 5 2 6 14 15 55 9 6 4 1500

Zinc (mg)
2.21 1.09 2.65 0.29 0.34 0.99 0.3 0.24 0 0.14 11

Copper (mg)
0.31 0.22 0.43 0.11 0.10 0.13 0.15 0.18 - 0.08 0.9

Manganese (mg)
0.49 1.09 3.99 0.15 0.38 0.55 0.26 0.40 - - 2.3

Selenium (μg)
15.5 15.1 70.7 0.3 0.7 1.5 0.6 0.7 0 1.5 55
Vitamins

Vitamin C (mg)
0 0 0 19.7 20.6 29 2.4 17.1 0 18.4 90

Thiamin (B1) (mg)
0.39 0.07 0.30 0.08 0.09 0.44 0.08 0.11 0.24 0.05 1.2

Riboflavin (B2) (mg)
0.20 0.05 0.12 0.03 0.05 0.18 0.06 0.03 0.14 0.05 1.3

Niacin (B3) (mg)
3.63 1.6 5.46 1.05 0.85 1.65 0.56 0.55 2.93 0.69 16

Pantothenic acid (B5) (mg)
0.42 1.01 0.95 0.30 0.11 0.15 0.80 0.31 - 0.26 5

Vitamin B6 (mg)
0.62 0.16 0.3 0.30 0.09 0.07 0.21 0.29 - 0.30 1.3

Folate Total (B9) (μg)
19 8 38 16 27 165 11 23 0 22 400

Vitamin A (IU)
214 0 9 2 13 180 14187 138 0 1127 5000

Vitamin E, alpha-tocopherol (mg)
0.49 0.11 1.01 0.01 0.19 0 0.26 0.39 0 0.14 15

Vitamin K1 (μg)
0.3 0.1 1.9 1.9 1.9 0 1.8 2.6 0 0.7 120

Beta-carotene (μg)
97 0 5 1 8 0 8509 83 0 457 10,500

Lutein+zeaxanthin (μg)
1355 0 220 8 0 0 0 0 0 30 6,000[*][44] + 0[*]
Fats

Saturated fatty acids (g)
0.67 0.18 0.26 0.03 0.07 0.79 0.02 0.04 0.46 0.14 minimal

Monounsaturated fatty acids (g)
1.25 0.21 0.2 0.00 0.08 1.28 0.00 0.01 0.99 0.03 22–55[*][45]

Polyunsaturated fatty acids (g)
2.16 0.18 0.63 0.04 0.05 3.20 0.01 0.08 1.37 0.07 13–19
































































A raw yellow dent corn


B raw unenriched long-grain white rice

C raw hard red winter wheat


D raw potato with flesh and skin

E raw cassava


F raw green soybeans

G raw sweet potato


H raw sorghum

Y raw yam


Z raw plantains

/* unofficial


Culinary uses


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.



Africa


Amukeke (sun-dried slices of root) and inginyo (sun-dried crushed root) are a staple food for people in northeastern Uganda.[46]Amukeke is mainly served for breakfast, eaten with peanut sauce. Inginyo is mixed with cassava flour and tamarind to make atapa. People eat atapa with smoked fish cooked in peanut sauce or with dried cowpea leaves cooked in peanut sauce. Emukaru (earth-baked root) is eaten as a snack anytime and is mostly served with tea or with peanut sauce. Similar uses are also found in South Sudan.


The young leaves and vine tips of sweet potato leaves are widely consumed as a vegetable in West African countries (Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, for example), as well as in northeastern Uganda, East Africa.[46] According to FAO leaflet No. 13 - 1990, sweet potato leaves and shoots are a good source of vitamins A, C, and B2 (riboflavin), and according to research done by A. Khachatryan, are an excellent source of lutein.


In Kenya, Rhoda Nungo of the home economics department of the Ministry of Agriculture has written a guide to using sweet potatoes in modern recipes.[47] This includes uses both in the mashed form and as flour from the dried tubers to replace part of the wheat flour and sugar in baked products such as cakes, chapatis, mandazis, bread, buns and cookies. A nutritious juice drink is made from the orange-fleshed cultivars, and deep-fried snacks are also included.


In Egypt, sweet potato tubers are known as "batata" (بطاطا) and are a common street food in winter, when street vendors with carts fitted with ovens sell them to people passing time by the Nile or the sea. The cultivars used are an orange-fleshed one as well as a white/cream-fleshed one. They are also baked at home as a snack or dessert, drenched with honey.


In Ethiopia, the commonly found cultivars are black-skinned, cream-fleshed and called "bitatis" or "mitatis". They are cultivated in the eastern and southern lower highlands and harvested during the rainy season (June/July). In recent years, better yielding orange-fleshed cultivars were released for cultivation by Haramaya University as a less sugary sweet potato with higher vitamin A content.[48] Sweet potatoes are widely eaten boiled as a favored snack.



Asia






Jjin-goguma (steamed sweet potatoes)


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gungoguma, roasted sweet potatoes




"gungoguma drum" for roasting sweet potatoes






Goguma-mattang (candied sweet potatoes)




Japanese pastry




Tong sui, a sweet potato-based soup popular in China during winter.




Bottle and two cartons of Japanese sweet potato shōchū spirits.


In East Asia, roasted sweet potatoes are popular street food. In China, sweet potatoes, typically yellow cultivars, are baked in a large iron drum and sold as street food during winter. In Korea, sweet potatoes, known as goguma, are roasted in a drum can, baked in foil or on an open fire, typically during winter.
In Japan, a dish similar to the Korean preparation is called yaki-imo (roasted sweet potato), which typically uses either the yellow-fleshed "Japanese sweet potato" or the purple-fleshed "Okinawan sweet potato", which is known as beni-imo.


Sweet potato soup, served during winter, consists of boiling sweet potato in water with rock sugar and ginger. Sweet potato greens are a common side dish in Taiwanese cuisine, often boiled or sautéed and served with a garlic and soy sauce mixture, or simply salted before serving. They, as well as dishes featuring the sweet potato root, are commonly found at bento (Pe̍h-ōe-jī: piān-tong) restaurants. In northeastern Chinese cuisine, sweet potatoes are often cut into chunks and fried, before being drenched into a pan of boiling syrup.[49]


In some regions of India, sweet potato is roasted slow over kitchen coals at night and eaten with some dressing while the easier way in the south is simply boiling or pressure cooking before peeling, cubing and seasoning for a vegetable dish as part of the meal. In Indian state of Tamil Nadu, it is known as 'Sakkara valli Kilangu'. It is boiled and consumed as evening snack. In some parts of India, fresh sweet potato is chipped, dried and then ground into flour; this is then mixed with wheat flour and baked into chapattis (bread). Between 15 and 20 percent of sweet potato harvest is converted by some Indian communities into pickles and snack chips. A part of the tuber harvest is used in India as cattle fodder.[3]


In Pakistan, sweet potato is known as shakarqandi and is cooked as vegetable dish and also with meat dishes (chicken, mutton or beef). The ash roasted sweet potatoes are sold as a snack and street food in Pakistani bazaars especially during the winter months.[50]


In Sri Lanka, it is called 'Bathala' and tubers are used mainly for breakfast (boiled sweet potato commonly with sambal or grated coconut) or as an supplementary curry dish for rice. There are many other culinary uses with sweet potato as well.


The tubers of this plant, known as kattala in Dhivehi, have been used in the traditional diet of the Maldives. The leaves were finely chopped and used in dishes such as mas huni.[51]


In Japan, both sweet potatoes (called "satsuma-imo") and true purple yams (called "daijo" or "beni-imo") are grown. Boiling and steaming are the most common cooking methods. Also, the use in vegetable tempura is common. Daigaku-imo is a baked sweet potato dessert. Because it is sweet and starchy, it is used in imo-kinton and some other traditional sweets, such as ofukuimo.
Shōchū, a Japanese spirit normally made from the fermentation of rice, can also be made from sweet potato, in which case it is called imo-jōchū. Imo-gohan, sweet potato cooked with rice, is popular in Guangdong, Taiwan and Japan. It is also served in nimono or nitsuke, boiled and typically flavored with soy sauce, mirin and dashi.
In Korean cuisine, sweet potato starch is used to produce dangmyeon (cellophane noodles). Sweet potatoes are also boiled, steamed, or roasted, and young stems are eaten as namul. Pizza restaurants such as Pizza Hut and Domino's in Korea are using sweet potatoes as a popular topping. Sweet potatoes are also used in the distillation of a variety of Soju.


In Malaysia and Singapore, sweet potato is often cut into small cubes and cooked with taro and coconut milk (santan) to make a sweet dessert called bubur caca or "bubu chacha". A favorite way of cooking sweet potato is deep frying slices of sweet potato in batter, and served as a tea-time snack. In homes, sweet potatoes are usually boiled. The leaves of sweet potatoes are usually stir-fried with only garlic or with sambal belacan and dried shrimp by Malaysians.





Camote tops, a Philippine salad made from young sweet potato leaves (talbos ng kamote)


In the Philippines, sweet potatoes (locally known as camote or kamote) are an important food crop in rural areas. They are often a staple among impoverished families in provinces, as they are easier to cultivate and cost less than rice.[52] The tubers are boiled or baked in coals and may be dipped in sugar or syrup. Young leaves and shoots (locally known as talbos ng kamote or camote tops) are eaten fresh in salads with shrimp paste (bagoong alamang) or fish sauce. They can be cooked in vinegar and soy sauce and served with fried fish (a dish known as adobong talbos ng kamote), or with recipes such as sinigang.[52] The stew obtained from boiling camote tops is purple-colored, and is often mixed with lemon as juice. Sweet potatoes are also sold as street food in suburban and rural areas. Fried sweet potatoes coated with caramelized sugar and served in skewers (camote cue) are popular afternoon snacks.[53] Sweet potatoes are also used in a variant of halo-halo called ginatan, where they are cooked in coconut milk and sugar and mixed with a variety of rootcrops, sago, jackfruit and bilu-bilo (glutinous rice balls).[54] Bread made from sweet potato flour is also gaining popularity. Sweet potato is relatively easy to propagate, and in rural areas that can be seen abundantly at canals and dikes. The uncultivated plant is usually fed to pigs.


In Indonesia, sweet potatoes are locally known as ubi jalar (lit: spreading tuber) and are frequently fried with batter and served as snacks with spicy condiments, along with other kinds of fritters such as fried bananas, tempeh, tahu, breadfruits, or cassava. In the mountainous regions of West Papua, sweet potatoes are the staple food among the natives there. Using the bakar batu way of cooking (free translation: burning rocks), rocks that have been burned in a nearby bonfire are thrown into a pit lined with leaves. Layers of sweet potatoes, an assortment of vegetables, and pork are piled on top of the rocks. The top of the pile then is insulated with more leaves, creating a pressure of heat and steam inside which cooks all food within the pile after several hours.


Young sweet potato leaves are also used as baby food particularly in Southeast Asia and East Asia.[55][56] Mashed sweet potato tubers are used similarly throughout the world.[57]



Europe


The sweet potato arrived in Europe with the Columbian Exchange. It is recorded, for example, in Elinor Fettiplace's Receipt Book, compiled in England in 1604.[58][59]



United States




Sweet potato fries with a vegetarian burger


Candied sweet potatoes are a side dish consisting mainly of sweet potatoes prepared with brown sugar, marshmallows, maple syrup, molasses, orange juice, marron glacé, or other sweet ingredients. It is often served in America on Thanksgiving.
Sweet potato casserole is a side dish of mashed sweet potatoes in a casserole dish, topped with a brown sugar and pecan topping.[60]Sweet potato pie is also a traditional favorite dish in Southern U.S. cuisine. The fried sweet potatoes tradition dates to the early nineteenth century in the United States.[61] Sweet potato fries or chips are a common preparation, and are made by julienning and deep frying sweet potatoes, in the fashion of French fried potatoes. Roasting sliced or chopped sweet potatoes lightly coated in animal or vegetable oil at high heat became common in the United States at the start of the 21st century, a dish called “sweet potato fries”. Sweet potato mash is served as a side dish, often at Thanksgiving dinner or with barbecue. John Buttencourt Avila is called the "father of the sweet potato industry" in North America. Another variation on the typical sweet potato pie is the Okinawan (Sweet Potato) Haupia pie, which is made with purple sweet potatoes, native to the island of Hawaii and believed to have been originally cultivated as early as 500 AD.[62] The sweet potato became a favorite food item of the French and Spanish settlers and thus continued a long history of cultivation in Louisiana.[63] Sweet potatoes are recognized as the state vegetable of North Carolina.[64]



New Zealand



Before European contact, the Māori grew the small, yellow-skin, finger-sized kūmara known as taputini,[65]hutihuti and rekamaroa[66] that they had brought with them from east Polynesia. Modern trials have shown that the taputini was capable of producing well,[67] but when American whalers, sealers and trading vessels introduced larger cultivars in the early 19th century, they quickly predominated.[68][69][70][71]


In New Zealand, Māori traditionally cooked the kūmara in a hāngi earth oven. This is still a common practice when there are large gatherings on marae.


Currently there are three main cultivars or groups of cultivar (red, orange and gold) grown in the subtropical northern part of the North Island near Dargaville[72] and widely available throughout New Zealand year-round, where they are a popular alternative to potatoes.[73] The red cultivar has dull red skin and purple-streaked white flesh, and is the most popular. The orange cultivar is the same as the American 'Beauregard'. The gold kumara has pale, yellowish skin and flesh.


Kumara are an integral part of roast meals in New Zealand. They are served alongside such vegetables as potatoes and pumpkin and, as such, are generally prepared in a savory manner. Kumara are ubiquitous in supermarkets, roast meal takeaway shops and hāngi.



Other


Among the Urapmin people of Papua New Guinea, taro (known in Urap as ima) and the sweet potato (Urap: wan) are the main sources of sustenance, and in fact the word for "food" in Urap is a compound of these two words.[74]


In Spain, sweet potato is called boniato. On the evening of All Souls' Day, in Catalonia (northeastern Spain) it is traditional to serve roasted sweet potato and chestnuts, panellets and sweet wine. The occasion is called La Castanyada.[75] Sweet potato is also appreciated to make cakes or to eat roasted through the whole country.


In Peru, sweet potatoes are called 'camote' and are frequently served alongside ceviche. Sweet potato chips are also a commonly sold snack, be it on the street or in packaged foods.


Dulce de batata is a traditional Argentine, Paraguayan and Uruguayan dessert, which is made of sweet potatoes. It is a sweet jelly, which resembles a marmalade because of its color and sweetness but it has a harder texture, and it has to be sliced in thin portions with a knife as if it was a pie. It is commonly served with a portion of the same size of soft cheese on top of it.


In the Veneto (northeast Italy), sweet potato is known as patata mericana in the Venetian language (patata americana in Italian, meaning "American potato"), and it is cultivated above all in the southern area of the region;[76] it is a traditional fall dish, boiled or roasted.



Nonculinary uses




Sweet potato, Moche culture, 300 AD, Larco Museum Collection


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 black can be obtained.[77]


Purple sweet potato color is used as food coloring.[78]


All parts of the plant are used for animal fodder.


Sweet potatoes or camotes are often found in Moche ceramics.[79]


Several selections are cultivated in gardens as ornamental plants for their attractive foliage, including the dark-leafed cultivars 'Blackie' and 'Ace of Spades' and the chartreuse-foliaged 'Margarita'.


Cuttings of sweet potato vine, either edible or ornamental cultivars, will rapidly form roots in water and will grow in it, indefinitely, in good lighting with a steady supply of nutrients. For this reason, sweet potato vine is ideal for use in home aquariums, trailing out of the water with its roots submerged, as its rapid growth is fueled by toxic ammonia and nitrates, a waste product of aquatic life, which it removes from the water. This improves the living conditions for fish, which also find refuge in the vast root systems.


Researchers at North Carolina State University are breeding sweet potato cultivars that would be grown primarily for biofuel production.




Notes





  1. ^ Purseglove, John Williams (1968). Tropical crops: Dicotyledons. Longman Scientific and Technical. New York: John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0-582-46666-1..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
    [page needed]



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  32. ^ North Carolina Sweet Potato Commission (NCSPC)


  33. ^ "Sweetpotato: Organic Production - Publication Summary - ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service".


  34. ^ US Davis Archived 5 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine.


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References












  • Edmond, Joseph Bailey; Ammerman, Gale Richard (1 November 1971). Sweet potatoes: production, processing, marketing. Major Feed and Food Crops in Agriculture and Food Series. Westport, Connecticut: The Avi Publishing Company.


  • Hartemink, Alfred E; Poloma, S; Maino, M; Powell, K.S; Egenae, J; O'Sullivan, J.N (2000). "Yield decline of sweet potato in the humid lowlands of Papua New Guinea" (PDF). Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment. 79 (2–3): 259–269. doi:10.1016/S0167-8809(00)00139-0.



External links






  • FAO Leaflet No. 13 - 1990 - Sweet Potato










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