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Potato Care How
to Select Your Potato:
Select loose
potatoes that are well formed, smooth, firm, with eyes, and no
discoloration, cracks, bruises or soft spots. Red potatoes and some whites
are sometimes treated with colored or clear wax to make them appear
fresher that they are. Also avoid "green" potatoes. They have been exposed
to light and have a bitter taste.
Potatoes are classified by shape,
skin color and use. The long brownish ones are good for a variety of uses
but are best for baking. Rounded or long whites are preferred for boiling
and baking, and the small red ones are ideal for boiling. "New" potatoes,
the small ones that are dug early before the skins have set, are best
boiled or steamed.
How
to Store Your Potato:
Do not wash
your potato before storing. Washing speeds decay. Potatoes can be safely
stored in a dry, dark place for three months at 45 to 50 degrees
Fahrenheit. Buy only a week's supply if you must store them at higher
temperatures, which cause sprouting and shriveling. Do not store potatoes
in the refrigerator. Below 40 degrees, potato starch turns to sugar,
making the potato too sweet. Too cold of storage also darkens potatoes
during cooking.
How
to Prepare Your Potato:
Bake, boil or
steam them in their skins. Some nutrients close to the skin are lost when
potatoes are peeled before cooking. If you must peel them, use a vegetable
parer and peel as thinly as possible. Do not soak peeled potatoes in cold
water to crisp them, since some nutrients will dissolve in the water. Some
recipes are provided on this site for you to prepare your
potato.
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