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potato |
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potato![]() Potatoes planted early, in March or April, can be ready for harvesting by late June. Commercially-grown potatoes are mechanically harvested. The same machine digs the potatoes out of the ground, cleans them of most of the dirt, then carries them by means of conveyor chains up to a grading table, where they are cleaned and sorted by hand before being loaded into a truck. Perennial plant with edible tuberous roots that are rich in starch and are extensively eaten as a vegetable. Used by the Andean Indians for at least 2,000 years before the Spanish Conquest, the potato was introduced to Europe by the mid-16th century, and reputedly to England by the explorer Walter Raleigh. (Genus Solanum tuberosum, family Solanaceae.) In Ireland, the potato famine of 1845, caused by a parasitic fungus, resulted in many thousands of deaths from starvation, and led to large-scale emigration to the USA.
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An old man, with his face turned to the sea, was making a weary attempt at digging upon a small potato patch. Only a narrow potato patch separated him from the adventure. He said he would split open a raw Irish potato and stick the quarter in between and keep it there all night, and next morning you couldn't see no brass, and it wouldn't feel greasy no more, and so anybody in town would take it in a minute, let alone a hair-ball. |
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