Sunday, July 3, 2022

Coffee Cup Root

 Note: This entry was originally posted on my "main" blog Environmental Geography, but is included here because the non-potato plant in question does have some potato-like properties. 

Many people know that my #CoffeeMaven priorities are more about the farmers than the coffee itself (though I love the coffee itself!). I use the tag #ThankTheFarmers on many of the words and images I share; this little story is an example of gratitude that extends to all kinds of farmers – not just the beloved cafeteros in my life.

Two of those farmers are Ron and Connie of Maribett Farm, with whom we have many kinds of connections, agricultural and otherwise. While helping us with some permaculture projects in our back yard, they recently left this gift on our back porch. They even sent the photos, since we were not home at the time.

The plant is Colocasia esculenta. It immediately reminded me of a plant I know as elephant ear, but I thought I was mistaken because this plant is pretty small, and the elephant ear I have seen in Nicaragua has individual leaves almost as big as I am. 

A quick internet search confirmed my original hunch, and browsing my Flickr albums of Nicaragua travels brought me to the comparison I was thinking of.


I think our farmer friends chose this plant because of the name used by the vendor: Coffee Cups. Even if they did not intend this, it was the first thing I noticed! This was the first time I had seen or heard that name. The gift is a great example of how my friends have helped me to develop my #CoffeeMaven identity – that of a completist who endeavors to learn about all possible aspects of coffee

The notes from the Proven Winners company mentions that the plant is toxic to both pets and humans, even though the Latin name of the species indicates that it is edible. In fact, Colocasia esculenta is a leading food crop throughout the tropics. The top is known as elephant ear, but the bottom is known as taro (malanga in Spanish), a root that is readily edible and resembles a potato.

It is, in fact, one of several tubers in the lineup of potato-esque roots from which the popular snack Terra Chips are made.

In fact, a friend who joined me on a Nicaragua tour loved malanga so much that she makes fried malanga slices a routine part of her vegan, gluten-free breakfast. 

Lagniappe: Thirsty Plant

Long before I saw – and ate – this plant in Nicaragua, I had learned that it can be a problematic invasive plant, at least in one setting. When we took a glass-bottom boat tour of San Marcos Springs in Texas, we learned that hydrologists had calculated how much the Edwards Aquifer was losing through the evapotranspiration from the enormous leaves of plants that surrounded the spring-fed waterways along the escarpment. I do not remember the number, of course, but they were making comparisons to the water demand of a small city.


Saturday, July 2, 2022

Potato Places

 From our friends at Atlas Obscura -- by way of my favorite librarian -- comes the perfect first post for this blog. Food editor Sam O'Brien offers "a global tuber tour" of 10 Places That Will Take You to Potato Paradise

We have driven past one of these sites many times, completely unaware of what we were missing. The Potato Shed Memorial is located at the northern end of the Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge. Its location amidst in the morass of highway ramps bring to mind the famous New England phrase "you can't get there from here." But we are intrepid enough that we will figure it out!

As with many unusual landmarks, this one is about much more than it seems: the potato sheds were part of a fascinating part of the local landscape that disappeared a year or so before I was born, and that landfill and transportation developments have almost entirely erased. 

We have been to one of the places on O'Brien's list: a  highway rest stop and museum in Idaho, where we enjoyed "free taters for out-of-staters" on a long-ago road trip.

Hayes-Bohs Abroad in 2011

Another site that would be a fitting entry is Potato World in New Brunswick, which our family enjoyed while on a Bridgewaters Project adventure in Maine

Lagniappe

Another item that I should include in this inaugural post is some explanation for the Coffee Maven's sudden interest in budayduhs -- again my favorite librarian is involved. The Bridgewater One Book One Community committee has selected Voyage of Mercy for its fall 2022 read. It is a tale both local and global, but nautical and humanitarian. Stephen Puleo (of Dark Tide fame) describes an 1847 humanitarian voyage from Boston to Ireland at the height of the potato famine. The author will be visiting our community to talk about the book, and the committee has asked me to discuss the geography of potatoes more broadly. Thus is Doctor Potato Head -- a.k.a. the Potato Maven -- born!