Adirondack Red potato
Adirondack Red | |
---|---|
Adirondack Red potato tuber | |
Species | Solanum tuberosum |
Cultivar | 'Adirondack Red' |
Origin | United States, 2003 |
Adirondack Red Potato is a potato variety with red flesh and skin, bred by Cornell University potato breeders Robert Plaisted, Ken Paddock and Walter De Jong and released in 2004.
The Adirondack varieties are unusual because both the skin and the flesh are colored and have high levels of anti-oxidants.[1] They are described as "Early- to mid-season, medium- to high-yielding variety. Dark green decumbent to spreading vines bear oblong to long, slightly flattened, purplish-red-skinned tubers with shallow eyes and pink to red flesh."[2]
See also
References
- ↑ "Adirondack Red; a red fleshed, red-skinned, specialty potato variety". Cornell University. Retrieved 2010-04-21.
- ↑ "Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners". Cornell University. Retrieved 2010-04-21.
External links
- Harrison, Christy, "Heirlooms-to-Be", Gourmet Magazine, 2/21/2008
- Washington State University, Potato Varieties: Red-skinned Varieties
- "Adirondack Reds are not experimental", Times Union' (Albany, NY), 12/10/2008
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