Potato perfection
Amateur Gardening|February 12, 2022
Toby considers his best options for garden-grown spuds and eagerly anticipates those first tasty beauties…
Toby Buckland
Potato perfection

WHEN ‘The Cod Father’, ‘Fishcotheque’ and the ‘Hippie Chippy’ takeawaysclosed during lockdown, potato-producing farmers had a surfeit of spuds that they sold at farm gates.

And that’s where my friend Caroline stumbled across a new (to her and me) variety, famed for its fried chip-shop crispiness and fluffy centres.

‘Sagitta’, as it’s known, has been a chippies’ go-to spud for years, but hasn’t made it to many veg plots where standard September croppers like ‘Maris Piper’ and ‘Cara’ are still firm favourites.

This reticence to grow a variety that so many eat for a treat could be due to gardeners sticking to what we know – or because commercial varieties, if available at all, don’t always succeed outside of mechanised farms where pesticides and fungicides are applied.

But what gardens lose against the homogeneous, sun-soaked and huge farm fields, they gain in other spud-growing advantages. Because jobs such as planting and lifting potatoes are done by hand, gardeners can grow a range of varieties in a small area, even pots, increasing the diversity of what we put on our plates and hedging bets against late cold snaps and wet summers.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 12, 2022-Ausgabe von Amateur Gardening.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 12, 2022-Ausgabe von Amateur Gardening.

Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.