How the Potato Changed the World
Brought to Europe from the New World by Spanish explorers, the lowly potato gave rise to modern industrial agriculture
- By Charles C. Mann
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
The statue was pulled down by Nazis in early 1939, in the wave of anti-Semitic and anti-foreign measures that followed the violent frenzy known as Kristallnacht. Destroying the statue was a crime against art, not history: Drake almost certainly did not introduce the potato to Europe. And even if he had, most of the credit for the potato surely belongs to the Andean peoples who domesticated it.
Geographically, the Andes are an unlikely birthplace for a major staple crop. The longest mountain range on the planet, it forms an icy barrier on the Pacific Coast of South America 5,500 miles long and in many places more than 22,000 feet high. Active volcanoes scattered along its length are linked by geologic faults, which push against one another and trigger earthquakes, floods and landslides. Even when the land is seismically quiet, the Andean climate is active. Temperatures in the highlands can fluctuate from 75 degrees Fahrenheit to below freezing in a few hours—the air is too thin to hold the heat.
From this unpromising terrain sprang one of the world’s great cultural traditions. Even as Egyptians built the pyramids, Andeans were erecting their own monumental temples and ceremonial plazas. For millennia, contentious peoples jostled for power from Ecuador to northern Chile. Most famous today are the Inca, who seized much of the Andes in a violent flash, built great highways and cities splendid with gold, then fell to Spanish disease and Spanish soldiers. The mountain cultures differed strikingly from one another, but all were nourished by tuber and root crops, the potato most important.
Wild potatoes are laced with solanine and tomatine, toxic compounds believed to defend the plants against attacks from dangerous organisms like fungi, bacteria and human beings. Cooking often breaks down such chemical defenses, but solanine and tomatine are unaffected by heat. In the mountains, guanaco and vicuña (wild relatives of the llama) lick clay before eating poisonous plants. The toxins stick—more technically, “adsorb”—to the fine clay particles in the animals’ stomachs, passing through the digestive system without affecting it. Mimicking this process, mountain peoples apparently learned to dunk wild potatoes in a “gravy” made of clay and water. Eventually they bred less-toxic potatoes, though some of the old, poisonous varieties remain, favored for their resistance to frost. Clay dust is still sold in Peruvian and Bolivian markets to accompany them.
Edible clay by no means exhausted the region’s culinary creativity. To be sure, Andean Indians ate potatoes boiled, baked and mashed, as Europeans do now. But potatoes were also boiled, peeled, chopped and dried to make papas secas; fermented in stagnant water to create sticky, odoriferous toqosh; and ground to pulp, soaked in a jug and filtered to produce almidón de papa (potato starch). Most ubiquitous was chuño, which is made by spreading potatoes outside to freeze on cold nights, then thawing them in the morning sun. Repeated freeze-thaw cycles transform the spuds into soft, juicy blobs. Farmers squeeze out the water to produce chuño: stiff, styrofoam-like nodules much smaller and lighter than the original tubers. Cooked into a spicy Andean stew, they resemble gnocchi, the potato-flour dumplings in central Italy. Chuño can be kept for years without refrigeration—insurance against bad harvests. It was the food that sustained Inca armies.
Even today, some Andean villagers celebrate the potato harvest much as their ancestors did in centuries past. Immediately after pulling potatoes from the ground, families in the fields pile soil into earthen, igloo-shaped ovens 18 inches tall. Into the ovens go the stalks, as well as straw, brush, scraps of wood and cow dung. When the ovens turn white with heat, cooks place fresh potatoes on the ashes for baking. Steam curls up from hot food into the clear, cold air. People dip their potatoes in coarse salt and edible clay. Night winds carry the smell of roasting potatoes for what seems like miles.
The potato Andeans roasted before contact with Europeans was not the modern spud; they cultivated different varieties at different altitudes. Most people in a village planted a few basic types, but most everyone also planted others to have a variety of tastes. (Andean farmers today produce modern, Idaho-style breeds for the market, but describe them as bland—for yahoos in cities.) The result was chaotic diversity. Potatoes in one village at one altitude could look wildly unlike those a few miles away in another village at another altitude.
In 1995, a Peruvian-American research team found that families in one mountain valley in central Peru grew an average of 10.6 traditional varieties—landraces, as they are called, each with its own name. In adjacent villages Karl Zimmerer, an environmental scientist now at Pennsylvania State University, visited fields with up to 20 landraces. The International Potato Center in Peru has preserved almost 5,000 varieties. The range of potatoes in a single Andean field, Zimmerer observed, “exceeds the diversity of nine-tenths of the potato crop of the entire United States.” As a result, the Andean potato is less a single identifiable species than a bubbling stew of related genetic entities. Sorting it out has given taxonomists headaches for decades.
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Additional Sources
“Potayto, potahto either way you say it they a'ppeal” by Meredith Sayles Hughes, Smithsonian magazine, October 1991









Comments (20)
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i read this for a science fair project when i was smaller i had to summerize some paragraphs for a 5 page paper.
Posted by rainbow dash on December 18,2012 | 02:30 PM
Hello, Do you know the tradition of potato Truffole ? I think the potato (Solanum tuberosum) was in France (northern region Vivarais 1540) in the first half of the 16th century and soon after its introduction in Europe after 1532. www.truffole.fr best regards Joël FERRAND = = =
Posted by FERRAND on December 7,2012 | 12:29 AM
This is not very interesting... back to youtube.
Posted by Emily Smith on October 6,2012 | 10:57 PM
I think the potato famine was mostly caused by unjust taxation by the English, if I got my history right. The crop failed but taxes and or rents were demanded.
Posted by Jack on September 27,2012 | 06:48 PM
"Many researchers believe that the potato’s arrival in northern Europe spelled an end to famine there." This statement doesn't correlate with the historical evidence.The Irish potato famine, for example, killed more than 12% of the population.
Posted by Charles Mount on June 8,2012 | 04:09 AM
I agree, it is an extraordinary article based on a research for a great book. I am Peruvian and know something about the issue because have traveled to several places in the country. What was new is the detail about the impact of the spuds on Europe and the use of guano from the islands. After thirty years of using guano, near 1870 nitrate fields in the Bolivian and Peruvian coast began to replace it. They both pased to Chilean control due to a war that began in 1879.
Francis Drake "visited" Peru without asking permision to the Spaniards; may be that the ocassion for him to know the spud. Brilliant!
Posted by Alfredo Gonzales on March 3,2012 | 09:49 PM
I read this for a school assignment and I learned a lot. I didn't realize that the potato came in so many different varieties and that it was originally toxic. This article seemed to cover the entire history of the potato as well as how it helped improve the world.
Posted by Cassie on January 3,2012 | 07:31 PM
A cconsequence of the introduction of the poatato was a drastic change in Europe's strategic balance: France had been for centuries the dominant or at least the intrisically dominant (when its affairs were not badly mismanaged) powerr in Europe: when nations depended on wheat France's population was three or four times larger than the one of any of its neighbours: at the time of the French revolution its population was about as large as all of its potential enemies oustside Russia _combined_ and thus could field as many soldiers than the coalitions trying to bring down the Revolution all while fighting internal uprisings. But the potato allowed other countries to grow larger populations while benefitting France in a far lesser degree so by WWI its population was about two thirds the population of the British islands and less then half of Germany's...
Posted by JFM on December 19,2011 | 07:45 AM
The sentence about Drake and the Andean peoples is political correctness at its highest peak of ridiculouness: the statue was about Drake introducing tyhje potato in Europe right? So the Andean peoles had no share in it. Period. If anything it should be remembered that Drake never went into the Andes where the potato was cultivated so it must have taken it from the coast and it is higly probable it was the Spaniards who introduced it there (the highly vulnerable to disease Incan armies never managed to conquer the coast so I doubt the potato was cultivated in it bedore Pizarro). Also the Spaniards tell they introduced the potato in Europe and they are probably right so either the merit of Drakke must be restricted to having been a key link in its introduction to Northern Europe and Germany or the artist didn't want to honor some popist Spaniard.
Posted by JFM on December 19,2011 | 07:12 AM
Excellent read. I half expected you to mention the Prussian influence on artificial fertilizers. I don't recall the man's name, but the father of modern industrial fertilizer was a Prussian who feared for his country's survival in the War to End Wars once they were cut off from natural sources of bound nitrogen. He invented the basic methods of artificially binding nitrogen through the use of hydrocarbons. Strange fellow. Tried to weaponize anthrax - that particular venture was a complete failure which lead to his arrest by the French? artillery MPs (he was trying to kill off their mules). Anyhow, his little invention of anhydrous ammonia - intended to keep potato crops going strong for Prussia - might have found a spot in your short history.
Posted by TubbyHubby on December 9,2011 | 11:55 PM
Van Gogh's painting The Potato Eaters raises the question of class and potato dependency. The setting is Dickensian. People of the upper class used to refer to potato-eaters as some kind of vermin. There seemed to be an irritation that this upstart vegetable had saved the poor from extinction.
Posted by Marjorie Stewart on November 21,2011 | 12:41 PM
Jeez, how pathetic you people are with a political axe to grind can't just read an interesting article about the potato without spraying everyone around you with your noxious gas.
Posted by Ben on November 6,2011 | 11:59 AM
I wonder if any portraits from the late 1700s show an aristocrat wearing a potato blossom or potato leaves on his or her clothing. Or perhaps a planter holding a potato plant in the background? Or did French still-life painting start to include potatoes as part of the subject matter at that time?
Posted by Marc on November 5,2011 | 12:05 PM
Great article on the history of the potato. I only wish that the full journey of the "tuber" was included. The first five ship loads of Scotch-Irish immigrants to North America brought the potato over to Boston in 1718. They eventually settled in NH and made the first planting. My great, great, great, great, great, great grandfather Samuel Houston was among those who planted the first "common field" in what is now East Derry, New Hampshire. Please see the link below for a photo of the historical marker. The history classes that I teach at Harwich High School had just finished a discussion about the Columbian Exchange a couple of weeks before your issue arrived. Mr. Mann's article proved to be a great support to the learning experience. Thanks for another great issue. Sincerely, Richard Houston, Harwich, MA
Photo: http://harwich.edu/depts/history/ederry.htm
Posted by Richard Houston on November 1,2011 | 04:36 PM
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