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Old August 26, 2013   #4
Tom Wagner
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: 8407 18th Ave West 7-203 Everett, Washington 98204
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The colors should remain intact after cooking and make especially beautiful potato chips. The flavors of the S. phureja/stenotomum complex are without a doubt some of the best in the potato world. The nutrition from the colors is dramatic.

I provided Wingnut with some of the best tubers lines during the growing season of 2011 and the majority of what Wingnut is from the more colorful tuber lines that are majority phueja and stenotomum from Colombia, Peru, and Bolivia.

I provide the TPS of similar lines on my websites...most know them as newworldcrops.com and tomwagnerseeds.com and those sites will be updated for next spring's sales. Potatoes will be more interesting as folks realize the value of TPS. There is whimsical art and fabulous flavor in these new potential varieties.

I don't read tea leaves but I do find it interesting to "read" the designs within the cut tuber pieces.

4 o’clock potato

[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/6PVmASb.jpg?1[/IMG]


Artwork within a tuber

[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/deJrIP7.jpg?1[/IMG]

I don't know...but what do you see from this drawing I made? A spider? A man with four legs, or a Nazca figure of ancient times?
[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/tzLfDJ9.jpg?1[/IMG]


Nazca lines in Peruvian desert

[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/M3svXUd.png?2[/IMG]


According to a Scottish report....
Quote:
"We found that the Phurejas always had more of the umami compounds and that there was a correlation with the taste-panel score,"
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