Friday, July 6, 2007

Jain Potato




I have never eaten a potato. Now Mai has sent me this link about a potato that grows on a vine. I don't think any are available here, but she has some idea of trying to grow a vine potato herself. If I know Mai, she'll probably figure out some way to do it.

For 50 years, I have been hearing how wonderful French fries, chips, taste. They do smell good. Maybe someday I'll find out!
I know that self indulgence is a sin, but I'm not really the saint she thinks I am.

Here is this article from the Times of India:

Now, Jain potato in pav-bhaji


6 Dec 2006, 0241 hrs IST , TNN

JUNAGADH: The Jain pav-bhaji may no longer come sans potatoes. A farmer in
a village in Junagadh claims to have come up with a wonder potato - one that
grows above the ground.

For Girish Akbari, it's the fruit of months of
research in his farm in Patarpur village in Una taluka. For Jains, it could be
the freedom to enjoy the potato, with their religion keeping them from having
any vegetable that is grown underground. Akbari, who hails from Rajkot, has even
named his find the 'Jain potato'.

"We have been experimenting for the
past 18 months. We used a grafting technique and succeeded. We have also grown
gourd in a similar way.We created this hybrid by grafting a potato onto a grape
vine. It grew best during the monsoons," adds Akbari.

While about 80 to
10 kg of potatoes grew on one vine alone last year, he expects the yield to be
about 400 kg per vine. "They are initially green but turn brown on ripening.
They even last for over a year after they are picked," he says.

And,
they are more nutritious. Testing at the Saurasthra University's biotechnology
department found this variety to have significantly more protein than those
grown underground. It also contained less starch and calories while it had
similar amount of fibre.

And the taste? Akbari says there is no
difference. "All regular dishes - from curry to potato vada and chips - taste
the same. You cannot tell the difference," claims Akbari.

However, some
experts have expressed doubts. "Grafting will change the characteristic of the
potato. It is not possible to have potatoes through grafting," says P Butani,
principal of the Agriculture College, affiliated to the Junagadh Agriculture
University.

Akbari has sent the potato to a Central laboratory in Delhi
for confirmation.

2 comments:

Dating said...

Excellent potato!

Mai said...

Dear,
Lilly is dead and had no interest in dating when she was alive.

Ah, me, I've fallen to answering spam comments. Ah, shucks.