The humble and mighty potato

laurel love

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Dec 2, 2010
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So, one day, in an idle moment, I paused to wonder what the Irish ate before potatoes came along. Read a whole bit of interesting history.

They ate the same wheat crops all the other Europeans ate, except, the British kept coming over and burning their crops down and starving them. Then the potato came along and here was a crop you could grow underground in small spaces, most often less than an acre.

The Irish turned to baked potatoes with buttermilk and were the healthiest poor in Europe...until the blight of course!

So I looked up the nutritional value of the lowly potato, the one all dieters despise and shun, and I was surprised.

The potato is a locally grown (within a hundred mile radius) staple and so much less of a foot print than rice or wheat...and they store well if you remember how :)

They are very fast to cook in the micro and fluff up well with low fat buttermilk...very tasty...sometimes I use rice milk.


Here is the link to a site and I will post a bit of it. I don't normally post such long sites but the info is interesting in the way it is written.

http://www.slhfarm.com/spudfacts.html

"THE NUTRIENT-DENSE POTATO

The potato is a nutrient-dense food. It provides good nutritional return for the calories. Why is nutrient density important? Our need for calories has probably decreased by one-third since the turn of the century because we aren't as active. But in general we still need about the same amount of nutrients as we did then. This means that in order to get all the nutrition we need without consuming too many calories, we must include many nutrient dense foods like potatoes in our diets.

A medium-size potato (one third pound or 150 grams) has only about 110 calories, four to five percent of the average adult's total daily intake of calories, but provides much higher percentages of our needs for many nutrients. (See 'Nutrition in a Raw Potato') For a real potato lover, a medium-size potato may not be enough of a good thing. But even a 250-gram potato (a little over one-half pound) has only about 160 calories, and the larger size gives you a real nutrition bonus. The potato gives us a wide spectrum of valuable nutrients, including complex carbohydrates, often lacking in the American diet.

The potato is a good source of vitamin C and hard to get B6 and has long been known to be a storehouse of minerals. Exact needs for all minerals are not established yet. But, for example, the potato contains valuable supplies of such essential trace elements as manganese, chromium, selenium and molybdenum.

LOW SODIUM HIGH POTASSIUM POTATO

One current nutritional goal is to reduce the amount of sodium consumed. While research is not complete, it indicates that a typical potato provides less than 1 0 mg. of sodium - compared to a typical daily intake of more than 4,000 mg. On the other hand, many Americans need to be concerned about adequate supplies of potassium. Here again, it appears that for the typical potato-eating American, the potato supplies about 20 percent of the daily potassium needs.

FIBER

Fiber, almost entirely complex carbohydrates, has been the subject of renewed interest. Fiber is that part of the food we eat is not digested by the body but travels through and holds water, forming the bulk we need for eliminating solid waste. While official recommendations for fiber haven't been established, about six grams daily is considered desirable. Most Americans fall short of this amount. Potatoes can add to the overall fiber intake. An average serving provides about 10 percent of a desirable daily intake of fiber.

PROTEIN

Potatoes contain small amounts of protein. In fact, the protein in potatoes is among the best to be found in vegetables.
(Swiss Chard is the best at 4.5 grms of protein per cup)
So, potatoes offer a good inexpensive supplementary source of protein in menu planning.


IRON

Iron is a mineral that's hard to get in sufficient amounts and is lacking in many diets, particularly those of women, teen-age girls and young children. Although few foods contain large amounts of iron, potatoes are a very good source. When consumed on a daily basis (5 1/3 oz. average per person), potatoes furnish more iron than any other vegetable. And, whereas not all the iron content in all foods is available for body use, the iron in potatoes is highly usable by the body.

CARBOHYDRATES

The potato has been criticized for being "just a starch." There's a lot more to potatoes, of course, but the carbohydrates in potatoes are the most common form of complex carbohydrates and as such are important to a good diet. Carbohydrates are the body's primary source of fuel for energy. Experts say at least 50 percent of our daily body fuel should come from carbohydrates. Carbohydrates are of several types. Sugars are the most basic carbohydrates, the building blocks of complex carbohydrates. Complex carbohydrates are longer chains of sugars, such as starches and fiber. Contrary to popular belief, gram for gram, carbohydrates have no more calories than protein and less than half that of fat. In fact, potatoes are virtually fat-free.

WHY THE FATTENING IMAGES

All too often the potato is guilty by allusion and association. Although the potato appears to be a bulky vegetable, it is 80 percent water, just a little less than in milk. Its association with high calorie toppings like butter, sour cream, gravy and mayonnaise dressing to name a few, puts the low calorie potato at a disadvantage. Just one tablespoon of butter will double the number of calories in a baked potato. There are many low calorie ways to prepare potatoes deliciously. Here are just a few tasty low/no calories ideas:

* Toasted sesame seeds
* Whipped butter and poppy seeds
* A spoon full of stewed tomatoes and a bit of grated cheese
* Melted butter or margarine thinned with lemon juice
* A mix of dried herbs: parsley, chives, basil, dill
* Mock sour cream (cottage cheese and lemon juice whipped in a blender)
* Chopped onion with coarsely grated black pepper
* Chive-spiked yogurt
* Salsa

ABOUT THE CALORIES

Dieting needn't mean giving up foods. Authorities are opposed to fad reducing diets that rule out whole categories of foods. These diets rob us of valuable nutrients and are often harmful to health. Low carbohydrate/high protein diets give us an overdose of fat-and may be hazardous for many people including pregnant women and those with heart and kidney disease or high blood pressure.

Fad diets force us to make needless sacrifices of foods we like to eat and, perhaps above all, do nothing to teach a plan for eating for-life that will prevent recurring bouts with excess weight.

The best diet is one based on a variety of nutritious foods, and the potato offers a high return of nutrients for relatively few calories.

(And the best part is you actually feel FULL after eating one)
 

ezsmile

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Jan 5, 2003
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From the Empire of the Sun

Basie: Jim, didn't I teach you anything?
Jim: Yes! You taught me that people will do anything for a potato.
 

Very Veronica

Banned
Aug 2, 2004
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Actually you will do well to add some healthy fats (and protein) to your potato to lower the glycemic index, increase nutrition & satiety. Within reason, fat doesn't make us fat..high glycemic carbs are the problem as are animal & chemically altered fats. So do drizzle on a little olive oil, mash with a splash of coconut milk or serve with fatty fish. And don't forget the most humble & mighty of all..dark leafy greens!
 

rat_fink

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Jun 2, 2006
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I am a potatoe eater too.
A cousin did a family history.
Between 1840 and 1850 my family came to Canada from Donegal in three trips.
First three brothers, then wives and children, then parents and family.
Fleeing and facing scarlet fever and poverty

A part of my heritage I'm not so proud of is they were Orangemen.
I acknowledge that, and it helps me be the Canadian I am today
At least thats what I'm hoping

o7O
 

laurel love

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Dec 2, 2010
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I am half and half on that side: native Irish and Anglo-Irish.

Found out a few things I'm not proud of too...

Anyways, I had a nice baked potato for breakfast with a huge pile of Kale, Swiss Chard and lettuce wilted in the micro (I don't like cold greens in the winter brrr..) I was full for hours.

I like olive oil generally, but found rice bran oil which is rich in Vitamin E. It is also milder in flavour and tastes good as a replacement for butter in creamy oatmeal that good ole Scottish staple.

Good old comfort food in it's plainest form...yum
 

uncleg

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Jul 25, 2006
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So, rat_fink care to explain.........................



 

sevenofnine

Active member
Nov 21, 2008
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i love potatoe vodka

i remember reading a book on the irish potatoe blight a fungas was killing the potatoes and the brits were no help
good book but i can't remember the name.

and in general, root vegies aren't that good, spikes your blood surgar
something to think about,
but it is only a concern if you have other health issues like being over weight lack of excercise over eating etc etc
and perhaps its not the potatoe that is mostly the problem but we rarely eat a spud just plain, we smoother it with butter gravey, sour cream etc.

everything in moderation,
 

violetblake

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Jul 24, 2011
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It's funny you should mention potatoes. For about the past 5 years I had what many would call a potato obsession, lol. I literally ate potatoes for nearly every meal. I'd boil about 5 pounds and eat mashed potatoes or potato salad, but it'd be gone in a day or two! On top of that, I'd have hash browns nearly every day and baked potatoes on occasion. I literally ate potatoes for at least 2 if not 3 meals a day. Very strange, I know! Until last winter, I just stopped! I think I had finally had enough, so I took a few months off from the potato. Now I eat them once in a while, like a sane person :p
 

storm rider

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Dec 6, 2008
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It's funny you should mention potatoes. For about the past 5 years I had what many would call a potato obsession, lol. I literally ate potatoes for nearly every meal. I'd boil about 5 pounds and eat mashed potatoes or potato salad, but it'd be gone in a day or two! On top of that, I'd have hash browns nearly every day and baked potatoes on occasion. I literally ate potatoes for at least 2 if not 3 meals a day. Very strange, I know! Until last winter, I just stopped! I think I had finally had enough, so I took a few months off from the potato. Now I eat them once in a while, like a sane person :p
A friend of mine was like that but with butterfinger chocolate bars....all he would scoff down when he had the ganja induced munchies was butterfingers....I think he ate too many of them and can no longer stand them and has thusly switched to crunchie's

Totally unrelated to the potatoe but I felt compelled to post this.

SR
 

Smilf

Banned
Jun 29, 2011
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Calgary
It's such a shame with how the potato is getting treated in the media these days. How they are encouraging people to not eat the potato, but at the same time (congress) telling children pizza is a vegetable, just boggles my mind.
Yeah that is definitely mind boggling, more tax dollars not well spent.
 
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